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An expert rider (who rides naughty horses for a living) is taking him out for me today or tomorrow, and then the following day will accompany me on a bike. Tonight, after repeated ground work and grooming, i am going to ride him round the field. She thinks what he did was unacceptable, given that he is used to hacking alone and has done all the PC things and travelled to many places and been ridden from a trailer in new places.
Good, sounds like the right move.
He really does seem like a completely different horse. I am considering getting the bloods tested from his 5-stage vetting last Thursday, but with no receipt i know i have no chance of proving much. I feel SO, SO stupid for being a trusting person with his sellers.
My costly lesson is learnt, for if he does not improve, with LOTS and LOTS of time and patience, taking it slowly, how on earth would I sell him?
My boys' little mare, who is older at 16, came here, settled, was hacked out lead rope and never really batted an eye lid. Is this just the luck of the draw, or have i bought a horse that was drugged?
Not necessarily drugged. Horse with issues don't necessarily display these issues every day in every situation. They're still issues and ethically should be disclosed. In practicality, a lot of sellers are just pleased that the horse behaved on the day of trial and what presents itself later is the purchaser's tough luck - sold as seen. Plus getting bloods tested costs an absolute fortune.
I've been on a lot of yards and known a lot of horses over the years and I can genuinely say the ones who were tw ats when they arrived stayed tw ats. Sometimes the owners learned to deal with it, sometimes they didn't.
OP, if he really bucked you off, ie you didn't just fall off because he had a bit of a moment, don't waste weeks persevering. In order to sell him you either sell him for a reduced price as a project disclosing what's happened, or trade him in or take what you can get from a dealer.