Tinypony
Well-Known Member
Disagree. 100%.
I imagine you are a pleasure rider/amateur competitor - as am I. Yours, and mine horse(s) are worth about 10% of what a horse like Toto is. The risk of injury is too great in relation to what is required of him. Edward Gal reported that when turned out Toto went absolutely beserk therefore heightening the likelihood of injury. Toto has enough variety in his work to keep his body and mind active - he does not act or look like a horse that is mentally ill and whose welfare has been compromised.
No. You wouldn't ever keep a horse on box rest unnecessarily, because it is your pet. Toto is a money maker, not somebodys precious little boy who can go and do whatever he wants. I actually agree that horses should be turned out as much as possible, but if my income and my career was dependent upon the ability of a horse like Toto - I assure you I wouldn't be turning it out in a field like a regular horse.
And for the record, we owned a TB cross pony, who hated being outside and was waiting at the gate to be brought in within the hour. You cannot generalize the demands and wants of an entire species and depict what is right or wrong.
Also, would you honestly say that your horse is a 'wild grazing animal'?? Isn't he your pet....or did you buy him, shove him in a field and leave him there to be a 'wild grazing animal'?....
Once a horse has been kept in for much of it's life you will obviously have trouble turning it out and yes, it probably will go "beserk". Surely that's just common sense? It doesn't mean it was right to keep them stabled in the first place, but the damage has been done. Moving to our more sympathetically kept horses and ponies, the ones that "want to be in". If you were to be motivated to get some good behaviour input then there are very few horses that woudn't stop wanting to come in if a few changes were made. (I'm not saying ALL before people jump in and say "Oh, but MY horse....", but really it is very few).
I can understand why someone might say that they wouldn't breed from a horse in heart bar shoes. How do you know if the reason he is wearing the shoes is down to nature or nurture? I have a horse that I have always accepted to have "wierd" feet, and farriers and trimmers have told me that it's just something we have to live with. Until recently when I met a truly skilled trimmer who said "boll**ks!" and has already made a huge improvement in the shape and way of going. So Totillas might have had lovely feet if they'd been cared for differently. I suspect that my horse's problems go back to when he was a valuable colt foal and stabled in a barn for much of his young life.
It is such a shame that horses will continue to be kept in conditions that are not optimal for their mental wellbeing juste because we humans put a price on their heads, but that's not going to change.
As for horses being happy with their stabled lives, and "loving" their work, I do sometimes wonder how that is judged. Certainly, from watching Totillas's ridden videos, I wouldn't have a clue if he loves his work or not. He has no choice about it.