martinka
Well-Known Member
I have my 2 year old filly on grass livery where she has been without any harm for last 7 months and we were all happy. We had a woman who moved her 7 horses to our fields 2 months ago. She used to have her own yard and seemed to be a really nice person at first. I have told her specificaly as she brought 2 stallions that supposed to have been gelded prior to her coming but that did not happen, that the mother of my filly who is currently on breeding loan to my friend was injured and crippled for life as 2 y. old by a gelding that kept mounting her and I was anxious that she manages her stallions after they gelded carefully. The YO assured me that if there was at any point a problem, the problem horse would have to be either separated or leave. The stallions were kept along with 2 other geldings separately from the herd in a smaller field. Soon the grass in the smaller field run out and I was happy for the 2 geldings to join the mares as I was assured they were ok. The ex-stallions were still in the smaller field. Needles to say my filly was in season that week and few days after the geldings were put out, I found her with bite marks and scratches and massive swolen back leg. My gut instinct was telling me she was mounted on, but when I asked the woman if she noticed anything unusual or has she been runnning around more than usual, she said no. When the vet came, he asked the same Q. the woman was there and she again said no. The vet said the injury occured from some kind of stress on her leg and the vet bill came to over £100.
More to the point, my filly had to go to the small grazed off field to recover from her injury while the woman's ex-stallions went out with the herd.
few days later as I was leaving the yard early in the morning after giving my filly her antibiotics etc and I saw the woman's gelding mounting her own mare. And it was not the ex-stallion, but one of the original geldings. A big heavy skewbald. I phoned the YO immediately and she promised me she would deal with it as obviously it was a problem.
Last Fri I spoke to the YO in person and asked for my filly to join the herd again as her leg is ok now, but the skewbald would need to come out. She said it was absolutely ok and I should contact the woman and arrange for the swap around.
But the woman's response was a bit of a shocker, because she said she was happy to have her mares and geldings together and virtually she is not bothered if they are jumped on. And that I should speak to the YO.
suddenly the following day I was told that it is my filly that is going to be excluded from the herd and not the skewbald!!!
My filly has done absolutely nothing wrong yet she is being punished, being stuck in a field that with fairness was extended on Sat, but is grazed off, full of weeds and ragwort. Hardly a healthy environment for a growing horse.
Everybody I spoke to agrees with me that it is unfair for my filly being deprived of being in a big field with lots of grass and that she is excluded from the herd rather than the gelding.
Plus the other day I also saw one of her ex-stallions trying to climb on one of her mares as well.
I am so so so upset as I feel I am treated unfairly only because she has more horses than me.
More to the point, my filly had to go to the small grazed off field to recover from her injury while the woman's ex-stallions went out with the herd.
few days later as I was leaving the yard early in the morning after giving my filly her antibiotics etc and I saw the woman's gelding mounting her own mare. And it was not the ex-stallion, but one of the original geldings. A big heavy skewbald. I phoned the YO immediately and she promised me she would deal with it as obviously it was a problem.
Last Fri I spoke to the YO in person and asked for my filly to join the herd again as her leg is ok now, but the skewbald would need to come out. She said it was absolutely ok and I should contact the woman and arrange for the swap around.
But the woman's response was a bit of a shocker, because she said she was happy to have her mares and geldings together and virtually she is not bothered if they are jumped on. And that I should speak to the YO.
suddenly the following day I was told that it is my filly that is going to be excluded from the herd and not the skewbald!!!
My filly has done absolutely nothing wrong yet she is being punished, being stuck in a field that with fairness was extended on Sat, but is grazed off, full of weeds and ragwort. Hardly a healthy environment for a growing horse.
Everybody I spoke to agrees with me that it is unfair for my filly being deprived of being in a big field with lots of grass and that she is excluded from the herd rather than the gelding.
Plus the other day I also saw one of her ex-stallions trying to climb on one of her mares as well.
I am so so so upset as I feel I am treated unfairly only because she has more horses than me.