It’s
crazy, the way we horse owners behave with our horses suggests Don Blazer.
No
doubt it’s a love affair. A love affair of the heart, but not often a love
affair of the mind. But then, seldom does a love affair have anything to do
with rational thinking. Love affairs are
crazy.
And
what is crazy?
Crazy
is mentally unbalanced, deranged, foolish, wild or fantastic.
That’s
the description of a horse owner if ever I saw one!
I
guess what I’m saying is we often act crazy because we act with the heart
without thinking about our actions. Our
intentions are good, but you know which road is paved with good intentions.
Thought
and actions we consider rational are certainly not the thoughts of our horses,
and not often what they respond to as rational.
First
of all, we reason; horses don’t. We
consider and make judgments as to whether or not a thing is good or bad. Our horses instinctively know what is good
and what is bad. Eating feeds and tasty
roughage is good—being eaten by a predator is bad. Being comfortable is good. Being jerked, spurred and worked like crazy
for two hours, then put away for three weeks is bad. And so on and so on.
When
do we start being crazy about horses?
When we first fall in love with them. (A very easy thing to do.) And from then on, the craziness increases
almost as rapidly as the number of horses we own.
We
are, almost every one of us, crazy when we negotiate to buy a horse. A horse, I understand, is worth what someone
will pay. It’s impossible to establish a
price when it comes to a crazy love affair.
But no matter how in love we are with the horse, we still have to haggle
about the price. We want the price
reduced, slashed, cut.
The
price you pay for a horse, you already know, is the smallest amount you are
going to spend. You are going to spend
more for feed, equipment, shoeing and training and veterinary care of the next
few years. So what is the big deal
about £100 or £500 or £50,000 more?
If
you like the horse, buy him!
From
the moment you buy him, it’s going to get crazier.
Most
first time horse owners (and a lot of old-time horse owners for that matter)
don’t know how or what to feed a horse.
They don’t have any idea of how many mega calories of digestible energy
per day the horse is getting, or when to feed fat versus protein.
But
they love buying supplements, coat conditioners, energy boosters and energy
reducers. They don’t know what they do,
but mixed together and in twice the amount suggested, it’s got to be good for
the horse. Now that’s crazy.
What
about bits and saddles and exercise boots and spurs?
What about leg aids and weight shifts and direct and indirect reins?
It’s
crazy to buy all that equipment and put it on a horse and try to ride him and
not have a clue about how any of it works, of if it does work. Horse owners will spend £5,000 on equipment (a
lot more if they get half the chance) and not £10 on education. In a recent survey more than 75 per cent of
the respondents who called themselves professionals had never had any formal
education—they failed to correctly define a snaffle and a curb.
Shoeing
is crazy. We talk about shoeing as if it is a good thing for the horse. In some
cases it is, when the shoe protects the hoof.
But the instant you put a shoe on a horse, it’s all downhill from there with respect to hoof health. And too many
owners leave shoeing to the farrier.
That’s crazy! The responsibility
lies with the horse’s owner. Don’t blame
the farrier if you don’t know about correct hoof balance.
So am
I crazy, or just in love with horses? Am
I crazy to think anyone in love with horses ought to make a commitment to know
as much as possible about everything which concerns their horse?
Is
it crazy to spend 12 to 16 hours a day working with horses, 365 days a
year?
Is it crazy to spend a rare day
off at a horse sale, horse show or horse races?
Is
it crazy to be learning something new about horses every day?
Boy,
am I lucky to be so crazy!
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