Queenbee
Well-Known Member
In light of the 'dying pony on dartmoor' thread, I just wondered what peoples opinions were on checking moorland ponies
Just wondering after sugar and spice post are you saying looking at horse to check its basically standing or do you mean caught etc?
I thought they were checked twice a year, rounded up, wormed, trimmed, and the spare ones sold. I assumed they collected any bodies of those who didn't make it, at the same time. I thought they were treated this way because they were semi feral.
As sheep farmers, we would never dream of leaving it more than 24hrs between checking our stock!
We walk all the flocks every day, even if its just a quick once round the field. During lambing we are in the fields more than at home!!
Surely if the owners of these horses had a riding horse at home it wouldnt take more than a couple of hours to go round their animals?
We are talking hundreds of acres of moorland here, not just a few acres of fields.
These ponies roam the moors, and while they will have a pattern of grazing, they will not always stick to it, so could be miles away in another direction and not easily found, probably easier to check in winter if owners put out hay. A lot of owners will be farmers so will not have half a day or more every day to check every pony!
As sheep farmers, we would never dream of leaving it more than 24hrs between checking our stock!
We walk all the flocks every day, even if its just a quick once round the field. During lambing we are in the fields more than at home!!
Surely if the owners of these horses had a riding horse at home it wouldnt take more than a couple of hours to go round their animals?
but once a week surely they should set this time aside?? Furthermore, I appreciate that it is a wide expanse of land, but its not generally an issue of looking for one horse since horses are herd animals, I also agree that incentives can be laid down for livestock to make checking them easier
Surely then if they wont all be together it will be more a case of looking for a straggler even if its a case of using binoculars.
Surely then if they wont all be together it will be more a case of looking for a straggler even if its a case of using binoculars.
I really surprises me that people wouldn't walk field daily even if you drive past you can spot the sick animal on its own. Do agree that animal care is getting worse.
I see your point it just seems strange that it seems acceptable for an animal to be loose and barely checked. All farmers i know check often and ones with larger farms put something out to attract animals so they can be monitored. Its a shame that as they are horses different rules apply.
I see your point it just seems strange that it seems acceptable for an animal to be loose and barely checked. All farmers i know check often and ones with larger farms put something out to attract animals so they can be monitored. Its a shame that as they are horses different rules apply.