Caol Ila
Well-Known Member
I had a conversation with one of my friends while hacking yesterday. Her horse is on full livery, which includes rug changes. She was irritated that the staff could not always make the 'correct' decision about which rug to put on the horse (out of a pile on the rug racks), and she had to make sure that the one she wanted was very obvious. Her argument was that the yard is expensive, and the 'service' should therefore be good enough to include decision-making on rugs for full livery horses.
I pointed out that waffling over rugs actually takes quite a lot of mental effort, and if you have about 30 horses to deal with, the last thing you want to do is decide which rug to put on each one. Plus, you'll probably get it wrong anyway because the owner's idea of appropriate rugging might be different from yours. When I was on full livery, I either left the horse in whatever rug I wanted her to wear the next day, or left specific instructions in the book where liveries write notes to staff. "Change Gypsum to green rug please." Easy.
Friend insisted that for the price, the staff should still be able to make those decisions. The yard is at the upper end of average for the area. It is not the most expensive around, but there are cheaper ones. I said we're paying for facilities and proximity to a big city. It's very close to the West End, and the facilities are rather nice.
I have also never boarded at a stable where staff wanted to make those decisions for you. She has (in a different country). Even at much smaller yards, you had to leave out whichever rug you wanted on your rug rack. And you were only allowed a turnout rug and a stable rug on neatly folded on aforesaid rug rack.
Unlike this disaster zone. This is what happens when I have freedom to be me. Not all of these even belong to this horse! The Newmarket fleece is Gypsum's and the fly rug is Fin's. But she is DIY, so who cares.
Anyway, the YO at one place I stayed at would snark about you to other liveries because he thought everything should be in a 400g rug, but it was still up to you.
I imagine that at elite yards, like Carl Hester's, the grooms do make more day-to-day decisions, but they are probably better paid.
What would you expect from full livery? Just musing, really, as my horses are DIY so I do everything.
I pointed out that waffling over rugs actually takes quite a lot of mental effort, and if you have about 30 horses to deal with, the last thing you want to do is decide which rug to put on each one. Plus, you'll probably get it wrong anyway because the owner's idea of appropriate rugging might be different from yours. When I was on full livery, I either left the horse in whatever rug I wanted her to wear the next day, or left specific instructions in the book where liveries write notes to staff. "Change Gypsum to green rug please." Easy.
Friend insisted that for the price, the staff should still be able to make those decisions. The yard is at the upper end of average for the area. It is not the most expensive around, but there are cheaper ones. I said we're paying for facilities and proximity to a big city. It's very close to the West End, and the facilities are rather nice.
I have also never boarded at a stable where staff wanted to make those decisions for you. She has (in a different country). Even at much smaller yards, you had to leave out whichever rug you wanted on your rug rack. And you were only allowed a turnout rug and a stable rug on neatly folded on aforesaid rug rack.
Unlike this disaster zone. This is what happens when I have freedom to be me. Not all of these even belong to this horse! The Newmarket fleece is Gypsum's and the fly rug is Fin's. But she is DIY, so who cares.
Anyway, the YO at one place I stayed at would snark about you to other liveries because he thought everything should be in a 400g rug, but it was still up to you.
I imagine that at elite yards, like Carl Hester's, the grooms do make more day-to-day decisions, but they are probably better paid.
What would you expect from full livery? Just musing, really, as my horses are DIY so I do everything.
Last edited: