bluewhippet
Well-Known Member
I am a reasonably experienced rider and after a lifetime (I am middle-aged now) of longing for a horse I am finally in a position to get one.
Everyone has advised me against young horses because I am a novice at the ownership side of things but...I went to see a cob/arab 6 year old who had only been backed last winter, last week - rode him twice, out hacking and although he was spooky, I really enjoyed riding him and agreed to buy subject to vetting.
He failed the vetting on Monday. I couldn't be there - school holidays - and the vet rung he had gone through the flexion and then had been lame trotting up. The owner said he was uneven rather than lame. The vet said he should be rested until sound but that then he should be ridden for a week before he could ascertain if he really was sound to work. The vet said he was not great to handle - more like a four year old - which makes sense since this is his age in handling terms..he advised me to keep looking, plenty more fish in the sea etc.
The woman then offered me the horse on loan. She is not well and needs to rehome him - he was bred from her stallion and mare - but given to a friend where he did nothing for 5 years. I said that he would need to be sound before I would loan him - I don't want to get fonder of him if he is unsound and I will still have to pay his livery.
She has come back today and said he is trotting sound today and she thinks it is just the way he is. she has often thought he seems footsore but that he does a lot of work on difficult terrain (he is shod) and that he has never been properly lame. She also said that she has entered him in the sale next week.
I am feeling very sad because I did think he was lovely, but his inexperience in combination with a failed vetting is too much and I don't want to be manipulated into taking him on loan and getting even fonder of him.
The livery where I would keep the horse is owned by a vet and his wife. The wife said she would walk away, and so I feel that I should be sensible!
I am going to see another horse tomorrow but I do feel torn...
Everyone has advised me against young horses because I am a novice at the ownership side of things but...I went to see a cob/arab 6 year old who had only been backed last winter, last week - rode him twice, out hacking and although he was spooky, I really enjoyed riding him and agreed to buy subject to vetting.
He failed the vetting on Monday. I couldn't be there - school holidays - and the vet rung he had gone through the flexion and then had been lame trotting up. The owner said he was uneven rather than lame. The vet said he should be rested until sound but that then he should be ridden for a week before he could ascertain if he really was sound to work. The vet said he was not great to handle - more like a four year old - which makes sense since this is his age in handling terms..he advised me to keep looking, plenty more fish in the sea etc.
The woman then offered me the horse on loan. She is not well and needs to rehome him - he was bred from her stallion and mare - but given to a friend where he did nothing for 5 years. I said that he would need to be sound before I would loan him - I don't want to get fonder of him if he is unsound and I will still have to pay his livery.
She has come back today and said he is trotting sound today and she thinks it is just the way he is. she has often thought he seems footsore but that he does a lot of work on difficult terrain (he is shod) and that he has never been properly lame. She also said that she has entered him in the sale next week.
I am feeling very sad because I did think he was lovely, but his inexperience in combination with a failed vetting is too much and I don't want to be manipulated into taking him on loan and getting even fonder of him.
The livery where I would keep the horse is owned by a vet and his wife. The wife said she would walk away, and so I feel that I should be sensible!
I am going to see another horse tomorrow but I do feel torn...