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Mine went cheap because oif the weather - was offered £500 for the pair so took it as nowhere to keep them after yard fell through due to the rain wrecking the timescale.
We have too many horses at the bottom of the pyramid.
We don't routinely slaughter horses for meat. In fact, I believe there are very few slaughterhouses who deal in horses.
Death is not the worst fate some of these animals face.
At a breeders event yesterday there was a talk about the current market for horses. The average price in the UK paid for a horse is about 1300 pounds if I recall correctly. It was under 2k anyway. That says so much about the state of the market and the number of horses that must change hands for under 1k. It makes them affordable for people who really can't afford them. Sadly this leads to all sorts of other problems, like a thread on a Facebook page I saw today regarding another yard closure in Essex and people moaning about finding DIY livery for less than £30 a week. Too many people want to buy cheap, keep cheap and then when something goes wrong have no way of paying the bills for it and we have welfare issues. Horses are a luxury item even if all one wants to do is hack around the roads or even pet it in the field and feed it carrots. One would be hard pushed to have a riding lesson for less than £25 an hour yet too many people think that should be their weekly budget for keeping their horse. And it encourages the horrid little back street dealers who are making a killing selling cheap horses, many of whom have issues or health problems and are suitable for little other than to be PTS. It's a real bugbear of mine. These issues are driving the welfare crisis.
That was up to €10,000 not Pounds!
Oh dear you have knocked 30% off already![]()
People expecting to get horses for half nothing have a very poor attitude. When someone has put a lot of effort and money into getting a horse experienced and 'making it' they are entitled to a fair price for that animal.
I'm currently looking for horses on behalf of clients and although I'm working for the buyer when an owner asks a fair price for the horse I'm not going to knock him down.
A good looking, well put together horse with a nice jump and movement; a six yr-old who has been hauled around the country to shows, hunts etc - why would anyone expect to buy him for a song! If the owner wants 8, 9, 10,000 - that's fair enough, he's earned it. Naturally there will be a few pounds off but why expect him to take less than that.
We don't expect anyone else to work for nothing, so why expect horse breeders and producers to do so.
I would say 90% of the people I have known have not been competitive riders, they want a horse that they can hack down the road, take to the odd show and it be good to load,shoe, have no vices and be sound. The misunderstanding is by many is that a 'happy hacker' costs less to produce and train than a competition horse. ' I only want to hack out once a week so I can only pay under £1000', not realising that this paragon is as rare as hen's teeth and should be in the region of 3k, so they go to a dealer that promises the earth for nothing and then complain when it dumps them, bites then and then costs them a huge amount it vets bills, dentist etc.
When I was 15 I did some work over my holidays with a producer & a lady bought all her horses from her. Paid about 8k for a horse who had done a bit of everything well & hunted a decent bit for her purpose of hacking. Her reason being she knew the horse had seen nearly everything and therefore was unlikely to do anything stupid hacking round her quiet country lanes & she knew if she wanted a days hunting then there was no issues.
A long time ago as well!
I would say 90% of the people I have known have not been competitive riders, they want a horse that they can hack down the road, take to the odd show and it be good to load,shoe, have no vices and be sound. The misunderstanding is by many is that a 'happy hacker' costs less to produce and train than a competition horse. ' I only want to hack out once a week so I can only pay under £1000', not realising that this paragon is as rare as hen's teeth and should be in the region of 3k, so they go to a dealer that promises the earth for nothing and then complain when it dumps them, bites then and then costs them a huge amount it vets bills, dentist etc.
It is for the horses posted. I wouldn't trust any of them around a cross country course. One of them will smack his head off the jumps, one is lazy and the third may or may not stop. All rounders for the average person they may be but who is gonna pay 5k for a horse they will probably hack more than compete? It's not a great investment.
Yes, of course you can pick up good horses for less - but my point is that £5k isn't "silly money" - any less, and the breeder / producer is making a huge loss. I'm interested in the mindset that £5k has become silly money, when in reality it's anything but.
I would say 90% of the people I have known have not been competitive riders, they want a horse that they can hack down the road, take to the odd show and it be good to load,shoe, have no vices and be sound. The misunderstanding is by many is that a 'happy hacker' costs less to produce and train than a competition horse. ' I only want to hack out once a week so I can only pay under £1000', not realising that this paragon is as rare as hen's teeth and should be in the region of 3k, so they go to a dealer that promises the earth for nothing and then complain when it dumps them, bites then and then costs them a huge amount it vets bills, dentist etc.
Yep, advertised correctly they are.Does this mean my scabby collection of ponies are valuable? Seriously, most horses make great happy hackers in the right home, but almost all are quickly ruined by a clueless owner. If what you're describing is an horse which cannot be ruined by bad riding and thoughtless handling, I don't think it was ever foaled. Hence the number of 'not as described' complaints you hear.
Does this mean my scabby collection of ponies are valuable? Seriously, most horses make great happy hackers in the right home, but almost all are quickly ruined by a clueless owner. If what you're describing is an horse which cannot be ruined by bad riding and thoughtless handling, I don't think it was ever foaled. Hence the number of 'not as described' complaints you hear.
No horse is a great investment.
Your comments about the three horses on a previous post are ridiculous and you are unable to actually see the way of going.
Horse number one is badly ridden by a heavy handed rider who is unable to ride forward from his seat. The result is a horse running on the forehand through no fault of his own and not a horse that will "smack his head off the jumps" whatever that may mean.
The second horse is weak and lacking impulsion. Time and appropriate work will be needed.
The third is a TB by Kayf Tara - you may want to educate yourself on this stallion, he is quite a progeny getter. As for the statement "he may or may not stop", I think that can be said for any horse, and I would hope a good sensible horse would stop if asked a stupid question in front of a fence.
A nice all round horse, capable of hitting 70% unaff and 65% aff, jumping a metre track, hunting well and safe on the road is worth a lot more than 5K. I would be looking at 7k for a nicely conformed quality horse.
Many people will pay 5k for a horse they will hack and compete occasionally. They will still be looking for soundness, quality and temperament. Dross is cheap quality is not, it all depends on whether you can tell the difference.
Well if I and others are that wrong then by all means go and tell the person that liked them to buy one of them. I don't look up tb lines as I doubt I will ever get a tb so will have to take your word on that I don't know if he is a good stallion. Maybe he is but I didn't like the fact the horse was hesitating before jumping some jumps. For cross country you want some bravery and if he is scared by fillers then you may have issues out on a course. And the one dropping his head going over fences is wrong but again if you think he is fine then go and let the person know as she has followed the advice of people like me and is looking for something with more experience.
I don't know many people who will pay*5k for a hacking horse and compete now and again but they tend to buy Highland ponies which are easy to find up here so they don't need to. Difference in markets between Scotland and England it seems.
I'm sure you didn't mean to sound like you were being very rude to one of the most experienced and knowledgeable posters on here...
Do u know her personally then? Thing is I wouldn't know her from Adam, as with most people on here
At a breeders event yesterday there was a talk about the current market for horses. The average price in the UK paid for a horse is about 1300 pounds if I recall correctly. It was under 2k anyway. That says so much about the state of the market and the number of horses that must change hands for under 1k. It makes them affordable for people who really can't afford them. Sadly this leads to all sorts of other problems, like a thread on a Facebook page I saw today regarding another yard closure in Essex and people moaning about finding DIY livery for less than £30 a week. Too many people want to buy cheap, keep cheap and then when something goes wrong have no way of paying the bills for it and we have welfare issues. Horses are a luxury item even if all one wants to do is hack around the roads or even pet it in the field and feed it carrots. One would be hard pushed to have a riding lesson for less than £25 an hour yet too many people think that should be their weekly budget for keeping their horse. And it encourages the horrid little back street dealers who are making a killing selling cheap horses, many of whom have issues or health problems and are suitable for little other than to be PTS. It's a real bugbear of mine. These issues are driving the welfare crisis.
Do u know her personally then? Thing is I wouldn't know her from Adam, as with most people on here
£5k to me personally is silly money and I wouldn't pay it for any horse I'm afraid.
Maybe there's to many lower level riders like me who don't care about the horses breeding as most well put together horses will do the job I want and don't need to pay £5k and just wouldn't.
I know plenty of folk paying in the vicinity of 5k for a safe, sane hack. Even without super
conformation and the potential, or schooling, to go out and compete at RC level successfully.
And a well put together, sound highland, young but not green, with correct schooling and good exposure to life will also command nearly 5k - north or south of the border. The ponies I see going cheap up there are not what I consider correct, either for the breed, or in their training.