Would you take the plunge? Do go-carts and horses mix?

Chunky_Monkey

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I moved my horse to full livery in October, but it is just not working out for me forlots of reasons (the final straw was YO putting prices up by 20% after Xmas!).

Until this move to full livery, I'd always been on DIY with no problems at all. I only moved to full livery cos I needed to move from old yard (been there for 4 years). The full livery place was the best yard I could find locally, but they only did full livery.......I could afford it, so I went for it!

Anyway, a friend and I have spent weeks and weeks looking for a new yard to move our 3 horses to, but everything locally is either full up, a complete dump, too difficult to get to, or too expensive.

Then last week, we were very lucky to find a wonderful little self-contained place to rent all to ourselves.......4-5 acres, 3 brand new stables and tack/feed room, mains electric and water, excellent fencing, fab grazing, great hacking area, easy to get to, new land drains installed, very cheap, secure.

This 'yard' belongs to a vague acquaintance of mine, and it's located behind his house (with access via his huge wrought iron gates). When I went to take him a deposit yesterday (just to secure the place, cos everyone I've told about the yard seems to want to snatch it out of our hands!) he said he needed to tell me something which might make me change my mind about the yard........

Turns out he's buying his (young) son a petrol go-cart for Xmas, with the intention of him driving it in the paddock. I told him no way! But he then said that he only wanted to section off a bit at the end of the paddock for his son to use. I was put 'on the spot' a bit (we were having this conversation while he was at work and he had customers queuing up and getting impatient!) so I reluctantly agreed to this. When I told my friend, she said her brother has a go-cart and moans about only having an acre to drive around.....she was concerned (as I am also, of course), firstly about the safety of the horses, and secondly about how much of the paddock he'd want to use and how much the ground would be trashed by the go-cart.

Now, I have a son, and I know that the novelty of these new 'toys' soon wears off (aparantly, the YO's son also has a quad bike, which he never uses......spoiled child syndrome, maybe?
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). I also know that go-carts aren't really designed to use on grass, so that would spoil the fun. I also know that YO is a bit anal about his paddock looking 'tidy' so I'm not sure about how he'd react to his son tearing it up with a go-cart!

So we find ourselves in a very difficult position.....despite driving the length and breadth of the local area for weeks on end, we couldn't find a suitable livery yard, until we found this (apparently) perfect little set-up, so we gave our months notice to current YO, and now the YO drops this bombshell on us.

Our choices are.....keep looking for another yard (worst time of the year for that!) in the hope that we can find somewhere before the end of our notice period, move to the self-contained yard and see how it goes, or grovel to current YO and ask her if we can stay on there (and pay the 20% increased prices!)

What would you do.....take the plunge and 'suck it and see', or would you have serious alarm bells ringing?

Tracey x
 
I think i would have alarm bells ringing. He told you about it very last minute and in fornt of lots of people - and you say he's precious about his land so it seems abit strange that he's going to let his kid wreck it. Could be one rule for you and one for him! I'd think very carefully and ask a few more questions.
 
Take the plunge - you can always continue looking but I think if the kids behaviour with the quad bike is anything to go by, he'll soon get bored of the go-cart! Also, you might find you can come to some compromise like he uses the go-cart while you are out riding so it won't be a problem. Being in a self-contained yard myself, you would not believe the difference it makes and it is often worth putting up with a couple of little niggles to get everything else right
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To be honest, I don't think the time and place he told me about the go-cart was a 'set up'....I really think it had just slipped his mind.

He wasn't pro-actively advertising the yard, I just happened to remember him telling me about it in the past. My friend and I were driving past on our epic yard-search last weekend, and I thought I'd take a chance by asking him if it was available, and it was!

x
 
Hi Panda2007, that's what my friend and I decided to do in the end........take the plunge, see how it goes, but keep one eye open for somewhere else in case it all gets to be a problem!

I really do think the go-cart will be rusting in the shed by the end of January, and he'll be back indoors playing on his Wii or something!
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Like you say, in every other way, the place is perfect (we are the envy of all our horsey friends!).

x
 
He won't want to use it in winter I doubt as it will get stuck in the mud.

As long as he doesn't roar it round your horsey's paddocks then it might be good in some ways as your horses wil soon be blase about the noise.

At my farm the owners sons have got trail motorbikes. They're really really loud and whizz up and down beside the field where my horses live. The lads are really good about not doing that when I'm riding though and it has helped the horses become less worried about noisy things coming up behind them on the road.
 
Hi there....yep, my very first thought was "great, that'll bombproof the horses"!

I agree with you - I don't think he'll be using a go-cart in the winter....to cold, wet and muddy. Not to mention that the grass in the paddock is quite long (not been grazed since about September) and (my OH tells me) go-carts are rubbish on grass!

x
 
Id do it, horses soon get used to things, our old paddock used to have tractors and building stuff and first the horses were silly about it but after a while they didnt care, yours are likely to be the same when they get used to having a go-cart next door.
Also, hes not likely to drive it in winter because of all the mud and how cold it is! And its not likely to do much damage in summer as the ground will be hard and firm, id go for it, what have you got to lose? You can always look for somewhere else if its no good?
 
I agree - my horse is pretty laid back anyway, my friend has an 18 month old gelding who she's been de-spooking since he popped out of the womb! Her mare might take some time to get used to it, but I'm sure she'll be fine in no time at all!

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