Theocat
Well-Known Member
I think you're best off selling. If she's not keen now, the horse won't do much until she disappears in October, then might not do much for the next three years while she's at university, then might not do much for the next X years while she travels / starts a career / finds herself living in a city with no way to keep a horse... if she wants to go back to it then, she can - but IMO it's unrealistic to expect this horse to still be right for her and whatever her ambitions are by that point after they have effectively been apart for several years, and the horse that she is so fond of will have had several years without being the highlight of someone's life. I think the best thing all round is to find it a new permanent home, so you don't have the worry, your daughter doesn't have the commitment, and the horse has 'a human of its own' - whatever it ends up doing for a career!