R2R
Well-Known Member
I don’t know why you are speechless, as people are only speaking the truth. When you take on a 17 year old horse, with problems (be it on the ground or ridden) you should have been prepared that you will have to fix them – and fixing things costs money, especially with horses!
You said a couple of pages back that the horse had stood in an allotment doing nothing – sorry but if a horse was “competed” in the true sense of the word, and by anyone that had a clue, he would not be being kept in an allotment. Also, if he was any good at competition and remained sound and good with half a brain, chances are he would still be being used.
The key with horses is to go in with your eyes wide open – sorry but in this instance you blatantly haven’t. Loan or not, you took on the responsibility of a ‘project horse’ and in doing so, should have considered that his owners did not want to/could not afford to keep him (or else surely they would have kept him and he would be ridden) and, given his age/problems etc, probably new he was unsellable, so have loaned him out to you. One thing is 100% certain, they don’t want him back and they don’t want to pay for what you say he needs.
You have given him a chance by taking him on loan, now you have two choices – to continue pumping money into the horse, or to send it back.
My Dad’s favourite saying is “Horses are very efficient at turning hard earned cash into fertiliser, in most cases things grow from it, but in some it doesn’t – and in that case its worth giving up and growing something new”
You said a couple of pages back that the horse had stood in an allotment doing nothing – sorry but if a horse was “competed” in the true sense of the word, and by anyone that had a clue, he would not be being kept in an allotment. Also, if he was any good at competition and remained sound and good with half a brain, chances are he would still be being used.
The key with horses is to go in with your eyes wide open – sorry but in this instance you blatantly haven’t. Loan or not, you took on the responsibility of a ‘project horse’ and in doing so, should have considered that his owners did not want to/could not afford to keep him (or else surely they would have kept him and he would be ridden) and, given his age/problems etc, probably new he was unsellable, so have loaned him out to you. One thing is 100% certain, they don’t want him back and they don’t want to pay for what you say he needs.
You have given him a chance by taking him on loan, now you have two choices – to continue pumping money into the horse, or to send it back.
My Dad’s favourite saying is “Horses are very efficient at turning hard earned cash into fertiliser, in most cases things grow from it, but in some it doesn’t – and in that case its worth giving up and growing something new”