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Soapweed Rancher

Joined: 11 Feb 2005 Posts: 12095 Location: northern Nebraska Sandhills
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Posted: Thu Feb 01, 2007 8:19 am Post subject: A horse scenario |
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This is a little write-up in the new WORKING RANCH magazine, under the topic "riding point," entitled Matador Mayhem.
"The problem with buying a horse at auction is that you have little or no knowledge of its ground manners. When we trailered this horse back to the ranch, I was a bit displeased to learn she had a nasty habit of turning her butt toward you when approached. We patiently spent the better part of a month working on this potentially dangerous habit and thought we had it worked out. Then one morning I watched my six-year-old daughter walk out to the pasture to offer this same horse a carrot, and darned if the mare didn't turn her butt toward her. That did it for me. Not caring how much of a loss I would take on the mare, I sold her at the first livestock auction I could find. For all her cow instinct, and even though she hadn't made good on any of her threats, she was not a horse to be kept around children."
Okay, some of you might argue that a six-year-old girl had no business walking out into a pasture with a bunch of horses. Maybe so, but it's hard to keep a horse-loving kid of any age from doing this. Kids need to learn sometime, and an arbitrary "age limit" is not in the cards.
The above mentioned horse had developed a bad habit before the new owners accquired her. They worked long and diligently to correct this bad habit, but without success. The horse was a danger to humanity. They did what anyone would do--they sold her. Granted, another owner, with much time and dedication might cure this mare of her bad habit. Again, they might not. There is no need to keep her for the rest of her natural life, which could be another twenty years or more. Why buy feed for an untrustworthy animal such as her? There would be no real reason to turn her into a brood mare. Like begets like. She would very likely have colts with undesirable dispositions. The mare probably deserves to be sold to a horse processing plant. Whether or not you think a horse should be turned into meat for human consumption is irrelevant. The meat could go for dog or cat food, and the by products could be used in a constructive manner--medical supplies, cosmetics, gelatin, etc. The mare just as well be utilized in a positive manner as to hire a veterinarian to put her down.
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RoperAB Rancher

Joined: 11 Feb 2006 Posts: 1435 Location: Alberta
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Posted: Thu Feb 01, 2007 9:51 am Post subject: |
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Man that would be so simple to train out of a horse. Its just a trust/respect issue.
IMO that guy should really get some help with basic horsemanship.
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peg4x4 Member

Joined: 13 Sep 2006 Posts: 419 Location: central Texas
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Posted: Thu Feb 01, 2007 11:18 am Post subject: |
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| Had a filly would do that,I'd just scratch her butt and go on-one day I wasn't fast enough with the feed,so she kicked the bucket out of my hand!!!! I got some bailing wire,went back in--she put that butt to me,and I raised welts all over it before she mannaged to get away-- From then on,when I came into the pen,that butt was stuck in a corner,where it stayed,until either I left, or took her out to ride.. I was very lucky not to be hurt,but at that time I was bulletproof..
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