Echo24
Well-Known Member
A friend's horse was suffering from colic a few years ago and someone on the yard told her to keep it lying down by sitting on top of it 
A friend's horse was suffering from colic a few years ago and someone on the yard told her to keep it lying down by sitting on top of it![]()
OMG is she still your friend? Was the shetty OK?
Then there was another livery who was so happy to have bought her pony a rug to wear in the field. Shame it was a quilted stable rug.....
But she once rented a third stable for a time and filled it with sand and pebbles so that it resembled some sort of beach... and both horses were each made to stand in the sandy/pebbly beach thing for an hour a day.
I'm not sure for what purpose as this happened before my time at the yard but the sandy-stable is no more.
"A woman who turned her horse out in high vis so that the other horses wouldn't accidentally bump into it."
Dab Dab, at my old yard the yard owner/ manager and another livery refused to put the horses out one day as it was a bit foggy and they might bump into each other!
What, and they didn't think of high vis - how unimaginative!
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Luckily his Horse has the patience of a saint.
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A few years ago when my pony went lame after a tendon injury, I was asked to ride someone's horse who was talented, well bred and absolutely stunning. When I arrived the horse was stabled, and apparently he had been all week! The owner proudly stated how much he horse loved him because he was so happy to see him at weekends. The horse was locked up all week and cared for by the YO until he got back from his lorry driving job at weekends and the horse was sooo pleased to see him . I got on the horse and the bloke hardly gave me a chance to ride because he was too busy telling me how he'd impressed Tim Stockdale at a show by telling him how to get a horse on the bit ! I then got told that you should NEVER start a horse with a snaffle, you should only use a Pelham on the bottom ring or else the horse will never learn how to go in an 'outline'. Anyway I was just dismounting and getting ready to leave when I hear a scream- the YO had decided to turn out her youngster who had also been left in all week she was in the stable throwing brushes at it and screaming because he didn't want to have a headcollar put on. The bloke went over and put a lead rope on its neck (once it had stopped rearing in the stable and charging at the door), then got dragged across the yard while it reared and kicked out before breaking off and charging towards it's mates in the field.
This wasn't in Leicestershire was it?!?!?! Sounds quite scarily similar to some-one I used to know.
That's the thing I find funny, often the clueless ones end up with absolute darlings of horses who put up with everything without batting an eyelid!