Well I have been to see her and she is really nice and sweet she has great manners and loves a cuddle and a stroke. The man said she had been backed at two then just ridden out on hacks so that's why she is so green I think. I took her for a hack she was ok a bit slow and I had to kick a lot but when she got going she was ok. She walked past other horses ok and is very good in traffic we had a bus and lots of very fast cars pass us and a bike she did not look once at them. I got her to trot it was very active and was really comfy she feels forward in trot but very ploddy in walk. The only issue I had with her was the amount of kicking to get her going but she did go as soon as I was given a whip. When i first got on i was nervous and she was more ploddy but as i felt more relaxed with her she started to listen more and got going more. She does not stand still when you mount. She also walked past a very scary plastic bag that was blowing but she did not spook at all she stopped to look at things but that was it. I am now really not sure what to do, i do think that we some more work she will be really good and will be just what i am looking for and she has great personality see seems like she would be very good fun and man did say she can jump. I am just worried if i would be able to get her going at home i think i will talk to my instructor about her as i would need lessons to help bring her on. She also had a very strong bond with the man and did want to be with him a lot which is why i think she went a bit ploddy with me. So yeah i am total stuck on what to do now i have told the people that i am going to think about it. They said she is £1850 but i would try to get that price down and she comes with no tack but the tack they used had a three different pads to get it too fit so i would not really want their tack anyway
The man rode her first up the road then I got on her and took her for a hack the owner was behind me she was very ploddy then the man stopped and took her off by myself down the road and she was fine and she picked up her pace. I will see some more horses if I see any advertised which sound suitable. I do really like her but I now how green she is and I am not total sure weather I am good enough to bring out the best in her.
The man rode her first up the road then I got on her and took her for a hack the owner was behind me she was very ploddy then the man stopped and took her off by myself down the road and she was fine and she picked up her pace. I will see some more horses if I see any advertised which sound suitable. I do really like her but I now how green she is and I am not total sure weather I am good enough to bring out the best in her.
Caveat Emptor.
She is an Irish Vanner, no doubt bred on a bog, roughly broken and shipped to the UK for someone to pay a silly price for. I would be looking very carefully at the date on her passport. She would be a typical 'how old would you like it to be'. Her mouth would be my first place to examine. I bet your 'man' has had her all of five minutes. Her passport should show when she came into his ownership.
Conformation wise she is very thick through the gullet and the back end does not match the front. I see a horse built so heavily on the forehand that is it dragging itself along. The walk is very difficult gait to improve regardless of the breed or type.
If she went through Brightwells she would be lucky to fetch £400.
It's a tough call. With the right help and support I would definitely say it's do-able, but from personal experience I know even after more than 20 years of riding and owning there have been times when my boy has reduced me to tears and made me question whether I made the right decision. That said, he is honestly the most rewarding little horse I've ever had as I know that every success we have is down to the hard work I've put in with him.
If you do take her on do you have the funds to have weekly lessons and perhaps pay your instructor to also ride her once or twice a week?
If I found out she was sold I would feel a little upset as I would be thinking maybe she was right. I have the time and I would be willing to work with her but again it comes down to the fact that I am not the mose experienced person in the world so maybe she would benefit from someone else. Then I think if she was the right horse then really should I have an doubts at all about buying her
Caveat Emptor.
She is an Irish Vanner, no doubt bred on a bog, roughly broken and shipped to the UK for someone to pay a silly price for. I would be looking very carefully at the date on her passport. She would be a typical 'how old would you like it to be'. Her mouth would be my first place to examine. I bet your 'man' has had her all of five minutes. Her passport should show when she came into his ownership.
Conformation wise she is very thick through the gullet and the back end does not match the front. I see a horse built so heavily on the forehand that is it dragging itself along. The walk is very difficult gait to improve regardless of the breed or type.
If she went through Brightwells she would be lucky to fetch £400.
I will defo look at more horses, when I brought my mare who I have now we just clicked and I knew straight away that she would be perfect I have no doubts at all about buying her.