MizElz
Well-Known Member
Just up from the road from me, there is a little paddock. It is 3 acres in total, and was sold by a small company who used it (and a neighbouring paddock) as a landfill. God knows how they managed to get permission to do it, but for the last year, it has been slowly heaped up with glass, plastic etc, until it stood about 4 ft above the road level. They then covered it in a thin layer of top soil, planted it with grass seed, left it to grow nice and lush, and then sold it for £25,000. (Excuse the inside knowledge - I work for the estate agents who sold it!!!)
Now it was sold to some people who fenced it, about 1 acre post and rail, the rest barbed wire. They then erected a fieldshelter in the railed section, and installed a little coloured cob mare. She was soon followed by a skinny, elderly looking apaloosa. Within days, there was no grass left; for the past two months, they have been stood in mud, mud and more mud. They are fed each day; the people come with mangers which they hook over the fence, and if I am honest, neither pony looks malnourished. They are never ridden; it would seem that they are pets only. I think they get some hay every now and again, but they don't have constant access to any, even though grass remains on the patch of land not designated for the horses. I just worry that, with no time for the ground to recuperate, they are never going to have any real grass, and if we have any more rain, surely the rubbish from the landfill is going to find its way up to the surface...
Now it was sold to some people who fenced it, about 1 acre post and rail, the rest barbed wire. They then erected a fieldshelter in the railed section, and installed a little coloured cob mare. She was soon followed by a skinny, elderly looking apaloosa. Within days, there was no grass left; for the past two months, they have been stood in mud, mud and more mud. They are fed each day; the people come with mangers which they hook over the fence, and if I am honest, neither pony looks malnourished. They are never ridden; it would seem that they are pets only. I think they get some hay every now and again, but they don't have constant access to any, even though grass remains on the patch of land not designated for the horses. I just worry that, with no time for the ground to recuperate, they are never going to have any real grass, and if we have any more rain, surely the rubbish from the landfill is going to find its way up to the surface...