Miss L Toe
Well-Known Member
Seems to me there is a need for a cheap identification system, even farmers use chipped tags for sheep's ears (as seen on countryfile), not sure if police can check for all chips and all databases.
My OH started trying to do this as a part of his business (teaching, schooling etc) & we were up against a brick wall right from the word go. He was offering to chip & either provide saddle tags/engrave stirrup bars/stamp saddle flaps to say they'd been chipped, along with an official tag from the chip database to put on the tack too. I think he was charging about £20 for one down to about £15 for a few, & that was a one-off cost. With the way stuff gets nicked these days we thought as an idea it'd fly.
With loads of leaflets drops, demos & advertising I think he managed to do about 15. The main reponses we got were:
"it's insured anyway"
"I keep my tack at home" (what about shows?)
"it's not worth enough to bother"
"I'd sooner have it postcoded" (he offered that too & they all said no to that as well!)
So yes, although I agree completely - all of ours are done with signs on tack rooms & horse box - I think there's a general apathy in the horsey world about protecting your tack like this, it's beyond me why people will willingly spend £1000+ on a saddle then won't do anything to deter thieves!
Even when he tried to sell off the remaining chips at cost for people to insert themselves just to get rid of them nobody was interested. I even posted on here asking questions & didn't get any positive replies on here either so we gave up in the end.
And we're in an area where the police or anybody else don't offer any of these services so it's not even like they could have had it done cheaper elsewhere.
ETA - the chips used by anybody in this country will all scan using the same scanner they use for animals & I'm sure the police would have them for dangerous dogs etc, & even if you get your chip done & listed on a "private" database like a couple of the big firms do you can add it on to a national one for free, plus if the saddles are chipped there's only about 3 databases in the country to put them on so it wouldn't take much effort to check them. I do think some interest from second hand tack sellers would help though, if they scanned & visually checked any saddles going through it'd show that there was some interest in checking stuff wasn't stolen & then people might think it was worth doing.