Ample Prosecco
Still wittering on
Discussion on FB about a person paying £1000 a month for producing a horse. Comments that she is being 'robbed'.
Another discussion on a separate thread on here that £250 a week for backing a horse is 'too expensive'.
I don't think £250 week is expensive at all! If the horse is sent away that is full livery. My dog carer who takes dogs into her own home charges £25 a day which is perfectly standard. = £175 a week. And dogs require a lot less work! And a LOT LOT LOT less space. Yes they need a walk each day but go out in group. No mucking out.
Then presumably each horse is worked for about an hour 5 days a week and requires skilled education with some added risks for the trainer. So that's 5 hours work a week on average. £250 a week minus the full livery fee, values your trainer's expertise at about £15 an hour.
Breeders can't make money breeding allrounders (what everyone actually wants) because no-one will pay what it costs to get them to 3, 4 or 5 healthy and calm. Producers can't make money starting horses to be safe, calm, educated with a great foundation (again what everyone wants). No wonder so many horses are broken young and/or with significant behavioural problems! In my view, dross sells because it's cheaper, but those horses break younger and are less temperamentally sound. And not enough money is spent on training for both horse and rider. Thoughts?
Another discussion on a separate thread on here that £250 a week for backing a horse is 'too expensive'.
I don't think £250 week is expensive at all! If the horse is sent away that is full livery. My dog carer who takes dogs into her own home charges £25 a day which is perfectly standard. = £175 a week. And dogs require a lot less work! And a LOT LOT LOT less space. Yes they need a walk each day but go out in group. No mucking out.
Then presumably each horse is worked for about an hour 5 days a week and requires skilled education with some added risks for the trainer. So that's 5 hours work a week on average. £250 a week minus the full livery fee, values your trainer's expertise at about £15 an hour.
Breeders can't make money breeding allrounders (what everyone actually wants) because no-one will pay what it costs to get them to 3, 4 or 5 healthy and calm. Producers can't make money starting horses to be safe, calm, educated with a great foundation (again what everyone wants). No wonder so many horses are broken young and/or with significant behavioural problems! In my view, dross sells because it's cheaper, but those horses break younger and are less temperamentally sound. And not enough money is spent on training for both horse and rider. Thoughts?
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