Mari
Well-Known Member
Can’t believe how many young riders, 11 - 16 yr olds, are posting on FB looking for loan horses. They all say how much experience they have but don’t say where. The photos / videos they share are very telling.
Can’t believe how many young riders, 11 - 16 yr olds, are posting on FB looking for loan horses. They all say how much experience they have but don’t say where. The photos / videos they share are very telling.
I don’t think it’s fair to be too critical of them; there’s plenty of us who were once pony mad teenagers without the funds for our own who took every chance we could get to spend more time in the saddle.Can’t believe how many young riders, 11 - 16 yr olds, are posting on FB looking for loan horses. They all say how much experience they have but don’t say where. The photos / videos they share are very telling.
Oh has your locale got one of these as well? I always said we should let the sanctuary say yes to him and make him useful. I'm sure there would be a pair of boots lying somewhere as a wee treat for him after he's done some stables.Sometimes I regret not taking one gentleman up on his offer to clean my boots though.
I sometimes worry about them - younger ones sharing stuff on public groups, the apparent lack of any parental support, the responses they get...
It's rubbish to be a kid and desperately want to do something - especially something as expensive and all consuming as horses - and not have the autonomy to pursue it. And for non-horsey family kids, more than most sports, you're stuck playing catch up in an RS, second best to all the kids who have been on ponies and competing since they were tiny.
It is rubbish but it is also an incentive to work hard. I worked as hard as I could at school, towards a career that would pay for a horse. I just wanted a horse/pony to love of my own, and that goal motivated me all through school and university.I sometimes worry about them - younger ones sharing stuff on public groups, the apparent lack of any parental support, the responses they get...
It's rubbish to be a kid and desperately want to do something - especially something as expensive and all consuming as horses - and not have the autonomy to pursue it. And for non-horsey family kids, more than most sports, you're stuck playing catch up in an RS, second best to all the kids who have been on ponies and competing since they were tiny.
It is rubbish but it is also an incentive to work hard. I worked as hard as I could at school, towards a career that would pay for a horse. I just wanted a horse/pony to love of my own, and that goal motivated me all through school and university.
For some kids, sure. For others, there will be other barriers to their success.
It’s life, it’s not fair - but you can still have sympathy for the kids you see in that situation.
(FTR: I had a pony as a teenager, and also worked hard in school. There are a lot of factors in the ability of any child to succeed in school, not just having a motivator like wanting to afford horses in future.)
Children from about 10 used to work at riding stables leading ponies on hacks, mucking out, moving hay bales, sweeping etc. Sadly H and S has put a stop to this. In return we rode to and from the field morning and evening.
Who are we as a society if we do not strive for what we want? If dreams are not motivators and there is no end goal for the daily slog?
Plenty of people from all walks of life have horses. Plenty of jobs require hard work but not qualifications.
I have known kids get weekend yard jobs to pay for a loan/share horse. One bought her own after saving for years. Not all were academically brilliant but they were all determined, hard working kids. My husband brought himself up and pulled his brother up with him. He drives for a living with no qualifications from school - but he earns a decent wage and can pay for his own equine.
Can’t believe how many young riders, 11 - 16 yr olds, are posting on FB looking for loan horses. They all say how much experience they have but don’t say where. The photos / videos they share are very telling.
Have you seen horse prices and the increase of livery prices it’s not a case of working hard it’s really just getting a job that makes you rich enough to buy horse and afford to keep a horse. Most people who don’t have a lot of money got their horses years ago cheap before horse prices went up massively and are barely affording there horses probably eventually have to sell them or not get another one after retiring them . When a lot of these kids are adults they probably won’t be able to afford a horse in the future it’s going to be impossible to afford one on a normal wage.Who are we as a society if we do not strive for what we want? If dreams are not motivators and there is no end goal for the daily slog?
Plenty of people from all walks of life have horses. Plenty of jobs require hard work but not qualifications.
I have known kids get weekend yard jobs to pay for a loan/share horse. One bought her own after saving for years. Not all were academically brilliant but they were all determined, hard working kids. My husband brought himself up and pulled his brother up with him. He drives for a living with no qualifications from school - but he earns a decent wage and can pay for his own equine.
As someone who works with young people professionally and has my own children, I spend my life giving realistic hope and help to achieve goals and a better future life through education and training. I cannot believe that everyone should just give up hope and resign themselves to a future just scraping by.
It still happens occasionally in places that preserve the old ways, and thank god for that! Lucky kids.Children from about 10 used to work at riding stables leading ponies on hacks, mucking out, moving hay bales, sweeping etc. Sadly H and S has put a stop to this. In return we rode to and from the field morning and evening.