Sanversera
Well-Known Member
Consulting on closing two of their centres due costs. Very sad.
My thoughts too. It was supposed to be used to school and bring on horses and ponies but a big percentage of their rescues are non ridden so I do not know how useful it was. Seems a huge waste to me. Could they hire the school out to make some money? For things like dog agility etc. Small shows, clear round jumping, clinics etc.So very sad to read this news. I confess to being a lapsed supporter owing to my own equine commitments. So much for 'the horse welfare issue being over'. Mind you, did they really need a new indoor school? Perhaps a revaluation of how they operate is needed.
Such sad news.
My little Shetland found on side of road by a local charity which went bust was transferred to Redwings ownership. They are so lovely but their field officer who used to come out to see her had to stop his visits due to funding issues. We now email vax and dental records.
Unfortunately this has meant that some unscrupulous people have passed on their Redwings horses as not controlled.
Not assuming at all that not building it would solve the problems, but they're not cheap to build and that money could have been spent on rescues, feed, vet, farrier bills, staff etc. I'm honestly not knocking what they do just pointing out that there are essentials and lovely to have non-essentials when money is tight.A an indoor space is useful for more than just riding, especially if Oxhill makes significant revenue from visitors. You can take bookings reliably all year rather than just in the summer.
Maybe building it was a financial mistake but I wouldn't be assuming not building it would have solved all the problems.
I doubt building it was the only mistake but its free entry there and there is a gift shop and cafe. Seems a real shame to close it with all the improvements they have made there. Such a shame.A an indoor space is useful for more than just riding, especially if Oxhill makes significant revenue from visitors. You can take bookings reliably all year rather than just in the summer.
Maybe building it was a financial mistake but I wouldn't be assuming not building it would have solved all the problems.
Yes but at the time the decision to build it was made, it could have been a sounder financial investment that could have paid for itself eventually. Maybe.Not assuming at all that not building it would solve the problems, but they're not cheap to build and that money could have been spent on rescues, feed, vet, farrier bills, staff etc. I'm honestly not knocking what they do just pointing out that there are essentials and lovely to have non-essentials when money is tight.
We had a uni visit to Oxhill shortly before their indoor school was started. It was needed so that they could then break/produce rescues which could then be rehomed as ridden equines. Oxhill could only rehome non-ridden beforehand due to the lack of facilities.So very sad to read this news. I confess to being a lapsed supporter owing to my own equine commitments. So much for 'the horse welfare issue being over'. Mind you, did they really need a new indoor school? Perhaps a revaluation of how they operate is needed.
How are the rescues you work with run?This sounds like complete madness, its perfectly possible to back a horse without an indoor or even a school. Rearing in the field, like normal horse behaviour?
Its perfectly possible and indeed responsible to PTS horses with such difficult problems.
The people running this rescue sound like loons. Perhaps not so bad they are closing for the horses sakes.
Genuinely glad some rescues somewhere have the resources for training and backing but thats not universal. Both our local ones barely have the man hours to get basic jobs done.They take in horses and PTS when they nolonger have good quality of life. They rehome healthy individuals while retaining ownership. They train and back youngsters to make rehoming easier. They loan out youngsters.
You know normal horse rescue stuff.
I think that is very unfair to be honest. Redwings is a good rescue and cares for a lot of horses and ponies.This sounds like complete madness, its perfectly possible to back a horse without an indoor or even a school. Rearing in the field, like normal horse behaviour?
Its perfectly possible and indeed responsible to PTS horses with such difficult problems.
The people running this rescue sound like loons. Perhaps not so bad they are closing for the horses sakes.
Redwing are a fairly well known rescue and I would expect that the majority of donations they receive are not from people within the equine industry.This sounds like complete madness, its perfectly possible to back a horse without an indoor or even a school. Rearing in the field, like normal horse behaviour?
Its perfectly possible and indeed responsible to PTS horses with such difficult problems.
The people running this rescue sound like loons. Perhaps not so bad they are closing for the horses sakes.
I'm not going to say I've not also felt this way but there is also a reflexive instinct saying "well you bloody do it yourself then"It sounds like absolute tosh and my classmates and I were pretty disappointed with the whole thing as we could so clearly see where they could make changes to run it more efficiently. As a cohort, we really disappointed our behaviour lecturer who took us on the trip![]()
I know someone who worked for a large animal charity in the horse section, and when the animal was admitted it was assessed to see if it was practical to re home or use it on site as RDA, if not they kept it a few weeks if it had no severe health issues and had it PTS. She was the manager of the section. I do not give to horse charities because when you see what they are treating with no chance of a good outcome, its madness.How are the rescues you work with run?
In an ideal world. In reality, the more open you are, the more chances you give people to disagree and withdraw support. You've just said one charity has the right idea to PTS if it's not an easy rehome, and criticised another for doing the same thing. If a rehome is "easy" is entirely subjective. Your friends horse could have become less sound in between vet checks.I think charities have to be open about their policies
Completely agree.I'm not going to say I've not also felt this way but there is also a reflexive instinct saying "well you bloody do it yourself then"
If you don't like how things are run, don't support them. If you don't support them then don't complain when rescues aren't available and every horse, no matter if they are healthy, rideable, safe, sane or sound gets PTS when they are in an unlucky circumstance.