Cheeky/ridiculous posts you see on Facebook.

It can be done considerably cheaper than that.

I spend about £500 a month on mine who is on Part livery (full during the week, assisted at the weekend) and if I went either just onto assisted or DIY it would be much cheaper.
But he is a little welsh fattie and not shod

I think it depends on the area of the country as well - my 5 day part livery is £625 and that's without any feed (£29), shoes (£120), insurance (£26), supplements (£27)
The purely DIY on our yard is £270pcm, so by the time you have added on the above un-negotiable extras (£202) and a bale of hay (£50 this year-ish) you are already at £522 and literally bare bones.
 
It probably can be done cheaper but if you're at the absolute top of your budget just for keeping your horse month-to-month what happens when you have an unexpected cost? I see it constantly and the horse always suffers. "The saddle fitter says my saddle doesn't fit but I can't afford a new one so we'll have to make do", "my horse has been lame on/off for a while but I just can't afford the cost for the vet to look at them", "I think my horse has ulcers but I can't afford the treatment, do I just give it a supplement and hope for the best?" etc.

I'm not saying every horse has to be kept in the lap of luxury and you're a bad owner if you can't afford Equitex pads, a sports massage every 3 weeks and a crystal healer than aligns your horses chakra with the cycle of the moon. But cheap-to-buy horses cost the same to keep in good health as expensive-to-buy horses.
 
It can be done considerably cheaper than that.

I spend about £500 a month on mine who is on Part livery (full during the week, assisted at the weekend) and if I went either just onto assisted or DIY it would be much cheaper.
But he is a little welsh fattie and not shod
Genuine question... how?

Assuming you meant £500 spent to keep your horse per month total, not just the livery.
 
Genuine question... how?

Assuming you meant £500 spent to keep your horse per month total, not just the livery.
I manage to "keep" my daughters 2 ponies for approx £650/month over winter, much less in summer when they are out 24/7 but then more of the budget goes on camp, competition fees etc.

Last month my livery bill for 2 on DIY with stables, hay bales for field and barn and wood pellet bedding came to £469. Add in approx £60 for feed and supplements, £30 for the wee ones Prascend, £60 insurance and £30 put aside for feet trims every 7 weeks.

I think it really does depend on where you are in the country
 
I spend about £500 a month on mine who is on Part livery (full during the week, assisted at the weekend) and if I went either just onto assisted or DIY it would be much cheaper.
But he is a little welsh fattie and not shod
5 day a week livery is £500-£600 a month in my area, so you're presumably somewhere cheaper. Typically there is also a restriction on hay/haylage/bedding so maybe enough for a pony but definitely not for a horse. I've hardly seen yards turning out round here recently so in most cases where they only supply one bale of bedding this wont be enough. DIY is £150 upwards and I'm spending ~£150 on hay and ~£100 on bedding for each horse.
 
Per month:
£420 on Part livery,
£20 on feed & vits (as I said, he is a fattie)
£35 every 8 weeks for the farrier
He is 25, so only insured for 3rd party through harry hall at £6 a month.


so thats £463.50

Other costs
Vaccines, Dentist, worming and saddle fitter all organised as a yard so costs kept minimal. Last time I had the saddle fitter it was £60, Vet for vaccines was £90 because of the split call out, same with the Dentist). We do FEC's which is £7.50 every 3 months and then a tapeworm wormer once a year. probably around £400 a year.
 
5 day a week livery is £500-£600 a month in my area, so you're presumably somewhere cheaper. Typically there is also a restriction on hay/haylage/bedding so maybe enough for a pony but definitely not for a horse. I've hardly seen yards turning out round here recently so in most cases where they only supply one bale of bedding this wont be enough. DIY is £150 upwards and I'm spending ~£150 on hay and ~£100 on bedding for each horse.
No restrictions on Hay or bedding at all, though only straw and rapestraw are included, the only caveat is be sensible and dont waste it. If you want shavings you have to pay extra. TBh I've found rape straw better than shavings.
He has had turn out all but 3 days this winter. He is turned out from about 7am to 3.30pm
 
Per month:
£420 on Part livery,
£20 on feed & vits (as I said, he is a fattie)
£35 every 8 weeks for the farrier
He is 25, so only insured for 3rd party through harry hall at £6 a month.


so thats £463.50

Other costs
Vaccines, Dentist, worming and saddle fitter all organised as a yard so costs kept minimal. Last time I had the saddle fitter it was £60, Vet for vaccines was £90 because of the split call out, same with the Dentist). We do FEC's which is £7.50 every 3 months and then a tapeworm wormer once a year. probably around £400 a year.
Do you have hay and bedding costs on top?

Thanks for replying - I know I'm being nosy! It's just I'm trying to work out how a part livery could be covering their costs at that price.

ETA - just seen answered above
 
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