Tinypony
Well-Known Member
This weekend a really nice lady has come to livery with us, with her nice sensible little cob mare. It is this lady's first horse, and she is a bit of a nervous owner, they suit each other really well. She's had this pony for about three weeks, and until now kept her at a big livery yard. Why has she moved to us? Because from the moment she got the pony the snidey comments started. Comments about cheap ponies, mad woman, that she was afraid to ride... and that was just the adults. When the teenagers followed their example it got to the point where she didn't want to go to the yard and enjoy her new friend. She had a little dabble with some gentle natural horsemanship stuff (which is great for people who need some confidence), and had a grown woman riding nearby making comments to her horse (Like "What IS she doing now?" about what she was doing. When you type all this out it sounds like something you'd get in some mad comedy sketch doesn't it? But it happened.
Well, their loss is our gain, because the lady is really nice, her pony is very easy, and we're all getting on very well. It just irritates me to think about the way she was treated though, she just needed some people to befriend and support her, and encourage her out on some little hacks. Nobody needs to be put down, especially when they are learning. What's wrong with being kind to someone who is setting out on the exciting experience of horse ownership, rather than seeking to undermine them?
My moan is... this is why so many people say they don't want to be on big yards, you hear so many people telling similar stories of being unable to fit into the clique in a new yard, which is double difficult when the YO joins in as she did in this case. What a wierd community the horsey lot can be sometimes.
Well, their loss is our gain, because the lady is really nice, her pony is very easy, and we're all getting on very well. It just irritates me to think about the way she was treated though, she just needed some people to befriend and support her, and encourage her out on some little hacks. Nobody needs to be put down, especially when they are learning. What's wrong with being kind to someone who is setting out on the exciting experience of horse ownership, rather than seeking to undermine them?
My moan is... this is why so many people say they don't want to be on big yards, you hear so many people telling similar stories of being unable to fit into the clique in a new yard, which is double difficult when the YO joins in as she did in this case. What a wierd community the horsey lot can be sometimes.