Minnow
Member
What is your opinion? Running a diy shared grazing yard keeping everyone including your landlord happy. How to spot trouble makers who to believe. Tips welcome!
But it's the money issue that's the rub - like the Exchequer. My liveries always do pay in the end - there has never had to be a nastiness. But only one pays as I would like - i.e. bay BAC into my account on the first of the month (I will have emailed her her feed costs on top of the rent on the last day of the month). The others, bless them, have endless money difficulties inspite of working hard. So the money almost never turns up on the day it is due, and sometimes it's "Can I owe you the other £20 till I get xxx."
I do indeed have written agreements with them, but I know they're genuine people so am patient. But \I do sometimes feel that the Inland Revenue or, indeed, your local clothes shop, would be extremely surprised if you tried to put off payment for an indeterminate amount of time.
I have never even kept a horse on a livery yard, but I am curious to know if there are any rules as to what consists of "good care." What do you do if someone doesn't come and feed/muck out, etc. or doesn't give enough food or have the feet done. Or what happens if they don't pay for a month or two or they just stop coming and you are left keeping the horse. I have seen somethreads like this, when YO wonder if they can sell the horse to cover the costs.
How do you go on renting the yard out as a whole? We have way more stables than we need now, and I often think that we could build two for ours on a different plot and let the yard out. I couldn't be bothered with liveries again. What kind of rents do you get for a seperate yard? For example we would let out a yard of four stables and a foaling box plus a seven acre field.
Agree very difficult!
I'd always insist that every horse on the yard is insured for at least third party liability, but preferably including some veterinary cover and tack also.
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IMO if you offer DIY and part, thats when the hassles can start, when people cant be bothered to turn up they just phone and ask for horses to be brought in, mucked out, fed or whatever and as a yo you never really know whats happening as your daily workload can change quite a bit.
your thread title made me laughunfortunately its completely true.
Anyone who enters into running a yard thinking its going to be easy money is in for a big shock. Horsey folk as a general rule are not the easiest bunch to deal with,
I've seen it all in the last few years, its been a massive learning curve and i'll admit it took me a while to get it under control.
In my experience you need to choose you liverys as much as they need to choose your yard. You have to see them/deal with them everyday so you have to get along with them and they need to understand and agree with your methods/rules etc which brings me to my last point..........
Dont lie, or exaggerate on anything when they come to view. i.e. if all year turnout isnt available dont tell them it is. If your fields get muddy in winter etc (whos dont?!) tell them! Best to get it all out in the open from the offset and manage their expectations!
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Yes! Agree with all this. Its SO important to give consideration to not only your'e liveries but also their horses as well. Which is why you need to ask them and talk through what they expect from the yard etc etc.
Rise above the whispers. My yard isnt huge and I always know exactly whats going on even if someone does think they are pulling the wool over my eyes. We live on site and it never fails to amaze me the number of people who think they can talk about you in your own back yard without you finding out!
Well I have just had crap morning, one of my liveries(diy) was asked before new year if she could poop pick field and musck her two stables out as neither had been done since end of nov, she was deep littering(she wasn't just pure lazy) So in all fairness she duly did this so I thought great problem solved, but no she didn't continue, so today I asked her again and she turned around and said because I charged Too much for livery she couldn't afford to buy shavings to bed the ponies!!!!!(Its wasn't as polite as that either!)
Oh she also said she is leaving tomorrow and wont pay the remaining livery bill, to be fair Im glad she is leaving she makes more mess than the rest put together.
But thats it no more diyers here!!!!
What is your opinion? Running a diy shared grazing yard keeping everyone including your landlord happy. How to spot trouble makers who to believe. Tips welcome!