PolarSkye
Well-Known Member
OK, so a friend of mine (someone I like very much as a person but don't know THAT well) was recently in a pickle at her livery yard, needed to move quickly and I introduced her to my YO and, hey presto, she and her lovely horse are now on my yard. It is lovely to have her around . . . she is good company, kind and her horse is very sweet. However . . . there are a number of issues/teething problems - none of them particularly major on their own - but added together are annoying people and I'm getting stuck in the middle.
Issue One - Help . . . said friend - we'll call her R - doesn't work, but has a full and busy social life and has been used to having her horse on full/part livery enabling her to only be at the yard once a day. Before she moved, I said I'd be happy to turn her boy out in the mornings . . . and YO made sure she was introduced to the livery on our yard who will muck out, turn out/bring in, etc. (for a reasonable fee). Other than the aforementioned livery, our yard is strictly DIY . . . but friends do turn out/bring in for each other. All fine and dandy. Except I feel like now R is dropping hints (to me) that she needs more help . . . e.g., she has a bad back and really shouldn't be mucking out (did I mention I have fractured seatbones?), handling the hay is bringing her out in hives (I did suggest antihistamines). All I am willing to do is turn her horse out. I don't mind doing it. But I am not prepared to do anything else. Period.
Issue Two - Knowledge . . . she says she has worked with horses for years before owning her current gelding, but sometimes displays a cluelessness that just baffles me. Last night she actually left her boy's door open and, instead of a stall chain (although I wouldn't leave my boy's door open overnight or leave him unattended for any lengthy period of time even with his stallchain) she rigged some rope doodad from (closes eyes and takes a deep breath) a parelli line! Horse escaped, snaffled his immediate neighbours' breakfasts and was only discovered by chance by liveries closing all the gates before leaving the yard late at night. When the liveries who found him, rang her and pinged her on FB to let her know last night they got no answer . . . and this morning instead of being mortified (I would have wanted to crawl under the nearest rock) was rather breezy about the whole thing. Sigh. She was also worryingly vague/clueless about worming her boy before he went into his new field . . . couldn't tell her field sharers when he was last wormed and with what, didn't know where to get hold of a wormer, didn't know that she needed to wait 24 hours for the wormer to do its job before putting her boy in with the other two (or why) . . . I get that she's been used to being on full/part livery for a while and may be out of practice, and I'm not a horse expert by any means, but her apparent lack of knowledge could cause an accident
.
Issue Three - Her Posse . . . two of the liveries from her previous yard seem to stick to R like glue . . . they spend pretty much all day, every day together . . . walking, at the gym, at the pub and are ALWAYS up at our yard . . . we/I/YO don't mind visitors and I certainly have my fair share of friends who come up to see me/have a cuppa/help me with the GD especially while I'm crock . . . but not every day and certainly not for a few months while I settled in/made friends with/got to my fellow yard mates. From Day One, she is accompanied by The Posse . . . which is making it difficult for the people on the yard to actually get to know her and vice versa. This is a minor irritation, but the other day they made themselves very comfortable in the tack room . . . pulled up chairs, etc., which would be fine if the tack room was set up like that, but there simply isn't room . . . where they had chosen to sit blocks the way to the loo, people's tack lockers, the kettle . . . and it ISN'T THEIR YARD. This particular issue has irritated the YO too who has commented to me a couple of times.
I feel in a bit of a pickle. I could certainly take her aside and have a quiet word . . . but I really don't want to end up being the "go to" person when people have a problem with her . . . and I don't want to change our friendship by "policing" her (if that makes sense).
What would you do?
P
Issue One - Help . . . said friend - we'll call her R - doesn't work, but has a full and busy social life and has been used to having her horse on full/part livery enabling her to only be at the yard once a day. Before she moved, I said I'd be happy to turn her boy out in the mornings . . . and YO made sure she was introduced to the livery on our yard who will muck out, turn out/bring in, etc. (for a reasonable fee). Other than the aforementioned livery, our yard is strictly DIY . . . but friends do turn out/bring in for each other. All fine and dandy. Except I feel like now R is dropping hints (to me) that she needs more help . . . e.g., she has a bad back and really shouldn't be mucking out (did I mention I have fractured seatbones?), handling the hay is bringing her out in hives (I did suggest antihistamines). All I am willing to do is turn her horse out. I don't mind doing it. But I am not prepared to do anything else. Period.
Issue Two - Knowledge . . . she says she has worked with horses for years before owning her current gelding, but sometimes displays a cluelessness that just baffles me. Last night she actually left her boy's door open and, instead of a stall chain (although I wouldn't leave my boy's door open overnight or leave him unattended for any lengthy period of time even with his stallchain) she rigged some rope doodad from (closes eyes and takes a deep breath) a parelli line! Horse escaped, snaffled his immediate neighbours' breakfasts and was only discovered by chance by liveries closing all the gates before leaving the yard late at night. When the liveries who found him, rang her and pinged her on FB to let her know last night they got no answer . . . and this morning instead of being mortified (I would have wanted to crawl under the nearest rock) was rather breezy about the whole thing. Sigh. She was also worryingly vague/clueless about worming her boy before he went into his new field . . . couldn't tell her field sharers when he was last wormed and with what, didn't know where to get hold of a wormer, didn't know that she needed to wait 24 hours for the wormer to do its job before putting her boy in with the other two (or why) . . . I get that she's been used to being on full/part livery for a while and may be out of practice, and I'm not a horse expert by any means, but her apparent lack of knowledge could cause an accident
Issue Three - Her Posse . . . two of the liveries from her previous yard seem to stick to R like glue . . . they spend pretty much all day, every day together . . . walking, at the gym, at the pub and are ALWAYS up at our yard . . . we/I/YO don't mind visitors and I certainly have my fair share of friends who come up to see me/have a cuppa/help me with the GD especially while I'm crock . . . but not every day and certainly not for a few months while I settled in/made friends with/got to my fellow yard mates. From Day One, she is accompanied by The Posse . . . which is making it difficult for the people on the yard to actually get to know her and vice versa. This is a minor irritation, but the other day they made themselves very comfortable in the tack room . . . pulled up chairs, etc., which would be fine if the tack room was set up like that, but there simply isn't room . . . where they had chosen to sit blocks the way to the loo, people's tack lockers, the kettle . . . and it ISN'T THEIR YARD. This particular issue has irritated the YO too who has commented to me a couple of times.
I feel in a bit of a pickle. I could certainly take her aside and have a quiet word . . . but I really don't want to end up being the "go to" person when people have a problem with her . . . and I don't want to change our friendship by "policing" her (if that makes sense).
What would you do?
P