Ziggy_
Well-Known Member
Its eighteen months since I left my old job as a groom and I'm missing it like crazy. I'm wondering if anyone can suggest what my options are to go back to working with horses.
The problem is that I have my own horse and have no intention of parting with her, so I'll need either
a) a job that pays at least minimum wage (no apprenticeships!) and has vaguely sociable hours so that I can afford to keep her at livery and see to her either morning or evening
or b) be able to move her to the yard I'm working on. I'd be hesitant to do this as she's very happy and settled at her current yard and I'm always wary about getting too tied in with an employer - you hear so many stories of things going wrong and being left jobless and your horse homeless and its happened to me once before!
When I did it before I loved the job and the horses and for this reason accepted the long hours and terrible pay - this time I'd like to be taken for less of a mug! Does this sound realistic or is a 60 hour week for £100 the norm in the horsey world? Would it be better for me to study and gain qualifications and get a job 'higher up' the ladder ie an instructor or similar?
Any thoughts welcomed on how to go about getting back into horsey work. I don't have formal qualifications - I have 'most' of an NVQ level 2, have owned my own horse for a few years, have a years work experience as a groom and am a pretty decent rider. My current livery yard is an approved NVQ training centre so it might be plausible for me to finish my NVQ while still working at my current job.
The problem is that I have my own horse and have no intention of parting with her, so I'll need either
a) a job that pays at least minimum wage (no apprenticeships!) and has vaguely sociable hours so that I can afford to keep her at livery and see to her either morning or evening
or b) be able to move her to the yard I'm working on. I'd be hesitant to do this as she's very happy and settled at her current yard and I'm always wary about getting too tied in with an employer - you hear so many stories of things going wrong and being left jobless and your horse homeless and its happened to me once before!
When I did it before I loved the job and the horses and for this reason accepted the long hours and terrible pay - this time I'd like to be taken for less of a mug! Does this sound realistic or is a 60 hour week for £100 the norm in the horsey world? Would it be better for me to study and gain qualifications and get a job 'higher up' the ladder ie an instructor or similar?
Any thoughts welcomed on how to go about getting back into horsey work. I don't have formal qualifications - I have 'most' of an NVQ level 2, have owned my own horse for a few years, have a years work experience as a groom and am a pretty decent rider. My current livery yard is an approved NVQ training centre so it might be plausible for me to finish my NVQ while still working at my current job.