kittykatcat
Well-Known Member
I turned down a loan home as the stupid woman was going to keep my horse with a goat....erm....NO!
No definitely not.
It is very telling that many of those poster saying 'my horse is fine on his own' also say that they become more difficult when a companion comes on the scene. Does this not tell them that actually the horse can't believe his luck when he finally gets a companion of his own kind? And is desperate for that companion not to disappear again? How any-one can think that the 'companionship' of a human or dogs who can't possibly be with the horse 24/7 can make up for a herd, I cannot imagine.
IMO if you cannot afford/have the facilities to keep more than 1 horse, that horse should be kept at livery, where there will be company for it.
No definitely not.
It is very telling that many of those poster saying 'my horse is fine on his own' also say that they become more difficult when a companion comes on the scene. Does this not tell them that actually the horse can't believe his luck when he finally gets a companion of his own kind? And is desperate for that companion not to disappear again? How any-one can think that the 'companionship' of a human or dogs who can't possibly be with the horse 24/7 can make up for a herd, I cannot imagine.
IMO if you cannot afford/have the facilities to keep more than 1 horse, that horse should be kept at livery, where there will be company for it.
Nope! I have turned down loaners (at a time I was desperate) because of this. Sure he'd cope (he's one of those amazingly adaptable horses that always does) but I don't believe he'd be truly happy. I believe that it is a basic need of 99% of horses to have some company of their own kind (ideally in the field with them but I do understand this isn't always possible), there is the odd exception (such as horses who are severely bullied and so require individual t/o, ideally I think they should still be able to touch another horse over the fence if they so desire though).
Now now, not all horses crave for this "herd" feeling, my horse is out alone and before you say its cruelty, if any horse was to be put in her field she would chase and chase and chase until they are out of her field, this means pulling down fences, destroying anything in her way just to get the other horse away. She likes her space to herself.
I think selling is different to loaning. When I put my last horse out on loan, I insisted that he had company (she had to get another pony on loan!) as I felt that although I was no longer looking after him on a day to day basis, he was still my horse and his welfare was still ultimately my responsibility. but if you are selling then you have to hand over that responsibility to his new owners, in the same wasy as you can't dictate what food he eats, tack he wears or work he does. It's hard enough selling horses anyway, and if you've got an otherwise perfect buyer I would let the horse go to them.
I turned down a loan home as the stupid woman was going to keep my horse with a goat....erm....NO!