It would depend on what I wanted the horse for. When I bought my last horse I went out looking for a horse between 6 to 8, I ended up with a just backed 4 yr old which looking back wasnt the best thing Ive done
. In hindsight I would have been much better buying a 10 to 12 yr old which had done a bit.
When I was looking I said I wanted something between 7 and 12 and George is 8 and as I want to keep him for life I hope we have many many happy years ahead of us.
i would say 17 sounds a weird inbetween kind of number but 18 sounds old lol
i was looking for a first horse between 6 and 9yrs old came back with a just rising 4yr old have never looked back and have always had youngsters ever since
id say between 15-18. my pony is 14 and you wouldnt think it-it frustrates me when people think my pony is old as he doesnt look it and has plenty of life left in him..he loves jumping, hunting and is still wizzy!!!
18-20 as you can still have many happy years with them I bought Ed at 18-19 and he is still doing fine.
Younger if I wanted to compete on a regular basis at a fairly high standard but not saying I wouldn't compete them at an old age so long as they could cope and was happy with it.
Just bought a 15yr old and she's giving me back my lost confidence from younger horses. Depends on the person but for me I need something thats been there and done it and gonna teach me.
haha-dont be fooled by age- got my pony aged 4, back then he was a very quiet pony- now at 14 he is not a novice ride due to being strong and very forward going!!!
hm... I like to back & bring them on myself so perhaps 4... though if I were looking for a schoolmaster type I would consider any age really as long as the price reflected the age.
I have my max age set at about 14-15. I would like a schoolmaster type who I can compete a little bit on, and hopefully one who would be sound for a long time.
I know, I know that they can go wrong at any age, but this is the sort of age that I feel comfortable with.