blackcob
🖖
As title, really. I've recently been appalled at the state of some of the other horses at the livery yard we are on, kept by people who are for the most part generally horsey and competent.
Said horses are often ridden out dirty, for example, brought straight out of the field with muddy patches on and have tack put straight on. Their coats are greasy to the touch, leave a residue on your hands when you pat them and they smell slightly offensive. Sort of a mix of musty old horsehair and urine.
They often have crusty eyes too.
My horse has a clean, silky, shiny coat that smells of warm clean hair, and I wouldn't dream of putting tack on her unless she was clean all over. I even brush the shavings out of her tail before leading her out to the field.
Am I in the minority or what? I find myself regularly ridiculed and put down on for having a clean smart horse which is beginning to make me seethe inside.
I enjoy the bonding time spent bodybrushing her, it leaves her clean and sparkly, feeling comfortable and gives me some good exercise to boot (it's not proper brushing unless you're in a sweat afterwards!).
Said horses are often ridden out dirty, for example, brought straight out of the field with muddy patches on and have tack put straight on. Their coats are greasy to the touch, leave a residue on your hands when you pat them and they smell slightly offensive. Sort of a mix of musty old horsehair and urine.
My horse has a clean, silky, shiny coat that smells of warm clean hair, and I wouldn't dream of putting tack on her unless she was clean all over. I even brush the shavings out of her tail before leading her out to the field.
Am I in the minority or what? I find myself regularly ridiculed and put down on for having a clean smart horse which is beginning to make me seethe inside.
I enjoy the bonding time spent bodybrushing her, it leaves her clean and sparkly, feeling comfortable and gives me some good exercise to boot (it's not proper brushing unless you're in a sweat afterwards!).