Northern Rancher said:
Most cowboys would rather die than admit they bought a horse they can't make work-most rodeo cowboys on the other hand are more than happy to blame the horse when alot of times it's the other way around. I'm not rich or handy enough to afford or utilize a high dollar ranch horse so I just muddle by with ones I raised myself. You'll never know how your idea will work unless you try it for sure.
NR, I'm inclined to agree with what you said about cowboys not wanting to admit a horse they bought might not work. Between their pride, their skills with a horse (combined with the time available to spend with the horse), and not having a whole heck of a lot of quit in them, they'll stick with a horse and usually make it work. The problems I've seen with unhappy buyers, though, aren't typically with working cowboys. It's with weekend recreational riders (whether they be weekend ropers, trail riders, semi-retirees, etc.). It is these folks, whose horsemanship skills and experience, physical abilities, and time available to spend with their horses are insufficient for the realities of horse ownership, that tend to become problem buyers.
There was a fairly interesting quote in a recent Western Horseman article (geez, I've referred to Western Horseman twice in this discussion... I promise I won't refer to them a third time... either that, or I'll hit them up for a commission....) on the subject of ranch horse sales. The article, 13 Rules for Ranch Horse Buyers, offers tips for folks (presumably the type of rider I described above) that are considering purchasing a ranch gelding as a recreational horse. Here is rule number five:
5. WHAT DO THEY MEAN BY THE TERM "RANCH GELDING"?
Get more specific details, because some talented, experienced, cow-smart ranch geldings act like PRCA broncs on cool mornings. Be realistic. Are you looking for an athlete or a babysitter?
"People say they want a horse with ranch horse skills, but they couldn't even get their saddle on some of the best ranch horses that I've known," Smith says. "Really, most people are wanting a good, safe, gentle horse that has some experience going over rough country, crossing creeks, standing quiet to be saddled, and doing things that a good ol' ranch horse will do."
Anyway, anybody interested can read the whole article at
http://westernhorseman.com/index.php/articles/ranchlands-mainmenu-74/article/541.html
Back to the point, and to the market need (which, I think, is very valid... it's the successful, profitable implementation of a strategy to meet that need within an auction system that I'm unclear about) that Flying S initially brought forward: in order for any guarantee to be even possible, a seller needs to start with learning about what the buyer really wants, really needs, and is really equipped to handle. Which is tough to do at an auction (even if you can get the buyers to show up two days early to try out horses). It's tough to do in private treaty sales where you have an opportunity to visit in greater detail with the potential buyer, schedule test rides, etc. In an auction setting where you might have 500 or 1,000 to talk to about your horses? Tough to do in two or three days.