Squeak
Well-Known Member
I completely agree that well bred horses with a good confirmation and a good start in life should be worth a lot. However this attitude that as someone’s spent X amount on a stud fee/foaling/livery/training/their time every youngster should be 20k+ is ridiculous.
If you’ve chosen to put your broken mare to a BOGOFF stallion and it produces a horse that looks akin to one a child would draw or if you do an awful job of handling the foal and it turns into a bolshy thing that doesn’t understand pressure, you don’t then automatically get X price because it’s survived to a certain age. Equally your nicely bred horses that won’t stand up to their purpose bred job or isn’t talented enough and is essentially a cast off that is too sharp for most of the market but not good enough for a professional, should be priced accordingly.
In no other aspect of life do we take a big gamble on something and then expect someone to pay for every minute we have spent working on it. Racing very much understands this (although their cast off number is unacceptably high) so why don’t other equine sports?
I also think that anyone who's bought a horse for themselves can't put all the costs as what it costs to produce a horse and hence what it's value should be as some of it is the cost of our enjoyment and use - would it be akin to saying that our cars should all go up in value because we've paid for the petrol to go in it and for servicing, insurance etc? I can understand professionals need to cover all costs but they would have a very different business model, such as they wouldn't have them on full livery, would probably have a few at a time and unless they were aiming for a certain market they probably would train and sell them a lot quicker.
ASBMO - aware this might sound like it's aimed at you because of your earlier post on this thread but it's not meant to be


