Enfys
Well-Known Member
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Cattle & sheep going to market have far more protection than these ponies though.
You wouldn't get a cow with a new born calf in a pen with other strange adult bullocks, or cattle/sheep generally who've had absolutely no management or care whatsoever taken to market if they've managed to survive a winter on the Brecon Beacons.
These breeders should be forced to microchip/eartag & provide basic care for all their animals if they are going to do it for meat.
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You are right, they have far less protection, but it still doesn't make any difference as to how they are viewed by some farmers.
As far as I know, and I am out of date with UK rules admittedly, hill/moor farmers were exempt from passporting their pony stocks, whether it would make a difference if they had to I don't know, they are used to doing it to other livestock why not ponies?
I worked for a farmer on Dartmoor and although he had a barn full of hunters and chasers that lived like royalty, his ponies were just meat on the hoof to him, he treated them exactly like the cattle. We'd sell solid colts at Okehampton for less than 3 pounds a head, then he started breeding coloureds (shetland crosses) now, he'd get 30-50 pounds for a coloured that did make it worth his while. A great many of those coloured ponies went to private homes, I know that because I was the one doing the sales pen 'meet and greet' as it were.
Cattle & sheep going to market have far more protection than these ponies though.
You wouldn't get a cow with a new born calf in a pen with other strange adult bullocks, or cattle/sheep generally who've had absolutely no management or care whatsoever taken to market if they've managed to survive a winter on the Brecon Beacons.
These breeders should be forced to microchip/eartag & provide basic care for all their animals if they are going to do it for meat.
[/ QUOTE ]
You are right, they have far less protection, but it still doesn't make any difference as to how they are viewed by some farmers.
As far as I know, and I am out of date with UK rules admittedly, hill/moor farmers were exempt from passporting their pony stocks, whether it would make a difference if they had to I don't know, they are used to doing it to other livestock why not ponies?
I worked for a farmer on Dartmoor and although he had a barn full of hunters and chasers that lived like royalty, his ponies were just meat on the hoof to him, he treated them exactly like the cattle. We'd sell solid colts at Okehampton for less than 3 pounds a head, then he started breeding coloureds (shetland crosses) now, he'd get 30-50 pounds for a coloured that did make it worth his while. A great many of those coloured ponies went to private homes, I know that because I was the one doing the sales pen 'meet and greet' as it were.