MerrySherryRider
Well-Known Member
It's easy when you are not in the situation to claim you would have acted sooner blah, blah
No, not this specific situation, but have been there, done that several times and before crisis hit.
It's easy when you are not in the situation to claim you would have acted sooner blah, blah
No, not this specific situation, but have been there, done that several times and before crisis hit.
It has shocked me too. Well, saddened me mostly.
I guess all publicity is good publicity when it comes to cases like this.
Regardless this horse is being seen tomorrow.
Please update us. And thanks for caring x
Please update us. And thanks for caring x
Where does it say it had been this thin since the summer?![]()
I don't care what angle the photograph was taken from, it is obvious to anyone with half a brain that the horse is emaciated.
OP has anyone spoken to the owner?
You know what, when I hear people on this forum arguing the toss about whether a horse is emaciated or not and saying stuff like 'it's the angle of the photograph' etc. It really makes me wonder what state their own horses are in. Just telling it like it is...
Thanks
In 5 years, nobody ever did come looking for him, so I'm eternally grateful that I didn't just leave it to authorities...
Thank God for you!
I'm wondering whether a huge part of the problem is that the inspectors aren't sufficently trained to recognise when a horse is really in trouble
A few pages back.
Moomin1, Angelish, FionaM12 - it is just these kinds of attitudes that mean nothing gets done about these welfare cases.
I don't care what angle the photograph was taken from, it is obvious to anyone with half a brain that the horse is emaciated.
OP has anyone spoken to the owner?
I hasten to add that I did not say that the horse was thin since summer