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Numbered Neck-straps on Horses?

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  • Numbered Neck-straps on Horses?

    I drove past a paddock recently in Whiting with about 30 horses with numbered neck-straps on them - I've seen this at Pond Hill Ranch, where they ship in loads of horses from auction for sale and lease at one time - but this was just a field by a house, no arena, barn...

    My worst fear is that this is a horse livestock situation - they have a few of them up here - does anyone know of why horses would be kept in neck-straps like that?
    Last edited by Tommy's Girl; Sep. 11, 2010, 11:24 AM. Reason: clarification

  • #2
    Recipient broodmares, auction horses, large broodmare farms, large foaling farms, my in laws' cutting horse operation....
    Michael: Seems the people who burned me want me for a job.
    Sam: A job? Does it pay?
    Michael: Nah, it's more of a "we'll kill you if you don't do it" type of thing.
    Sam: Oh. I've never liked those.

    Comment


    • #3
      So that the hired help can identify the correct horse.
      ... _. ._ .._. .._

      Comment


      • #4
        Neck straps, commonly made of plastic chain or leather collars, are frequently used as they are safer than halters. Number tags are for identification purposes.

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        • Original Poster

          #5
          But there is very little hired help up here.

          Comment


          • #6
            Neck straps are commonly used everywhere for identification for many reasons. Stop at the farm and ask before you create unneccesary drama.
            *Every horse is a self-portrait of the rider....Autograph your work with excellence.*
            Supporting Nokotas www.nokotahorse.org
            Lipizzan's rock! http://rigitta.blogspot.com/

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            • #7
              Originally posted by Grataan View Post
              Recipient broodmares, auction horses, large broodmare farms, large foaling farms, my in laws' cutting horse operation....
              Yeah, there are tons of reasons. I most often see them with recipient broodmares where many are nondescript bays or chestnuts and it's easier to say "Get #24" than "Get Pookie" to make sure the right horse is being treated. Another thing I see at a lot of breeding farms is that the mares are rarely handled and can be a bit hard to catch, and it's safer than keeping halters on them all the time.

              Originally posted by Tommy's Girl View Post
              But there is very little hired help up here.
              What does that mean? You mean no one in your area hires people to work on the farms?
              exploring the relationship between horse and human

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              • #8
                easy way to identify largly non-descript horses.

                I think it's ingenius.

                Another thing, probably not in said scenario (and just because you don't see the work force does not mean there isn't any, think road construction, I never see any workers and eventually the work gets done anyhow) but there are also neck straps that carry a chip through which added feed can be controlled in feed stalls layed out for it.

                Should I ever win the Lotto really big, I put that on my list.

                Comment

                • Original Poster

                  #9
                  Great - thanks for the info.

                  JMurray - wasn't trying to stir up drama, sorry to disappoint.

                  Comment

                  • Original Poster

                    #10
                    Oh - sorry, I forgot to reply to the hired help question - I've found that most of the small to mid sized farms in my area are family run, with little hired help. This was also a small farm, so I assumed it would have no hired help - I could be wrong, of course.

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                    • #11
                      I also use these neck straps on my horses, when preparing for an impending hurricane. On them I write horses name, sex, immunization info, including coggins date, my farm info, contact numbers. Just in case, you know? You can't be too careful.
                      "I can explain it to you, but I can't understand it for you..."

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                      • #12
                        yes, if you go in to TB country in bjillion dollar farms and walk through a field of broodmares worth an insane amount of money, guess what they all have? Guess what all the foals have too? Neck straps. Mom's name on the strap of mom and on the foal's as well (typically the babies are known as "mom's name XX" for the year foaled. My guy was "Winter Crown 07" on the farm records and his strap was Winter Crown. All very useful in a field of 15-20 bay mares and even more useful if the herd is in for vet/farrier work - you don't need to be on hand to identify each horse even if you know them.

                        They are also invaluable in catching a wily old broodmare who does not see why she should let you get that snap too close to her halter ring. Of course then you get the really wily old mare who sees no reason to let you get near her neck strap either, but that is the exception, not the rule.
                        Your crazy is showing. You might want to tuck that back in.

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Tommy's Girl View Post
                          so I assumed
                          Haha, these words can get you in a world of trouble here in COTH land!
                          Proud owner of a Slaughter-Bound TB from a feedlot, and her surprise baby...!
                          http://i42.photobucket.com/albums/e350/Jen4USC/fave.jpg
                          http://i42.photobucket.com/albums/e3...SC/running.jpg

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                          • #14
                            Originally posted by Tommy's Girl View Post
                            Oh - sorry, I forgot to reply to the hired help question - I've found that most of the small to mid sized farms in my area are family run, with little hired help. This was also a small farm, so I assumed it would have no hired help - I could be wrong, of course.
                            Thanks for clarifying, I just couldn't figure out quite what you meant by that. Late night last night, what can I say?
                            exploring the relationship between horse and human

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Like DMK, my first thought was "broodmares".
                              Janet

                              chief feeder and mucker for Music, Spy, Belle and Tiara. Someone else is now feeding and mucking for Chief and Brain (both foxhunting now).

                              Comment


                              • #16
                                My geldings both wear leather neck straps in lieu of halters. They're easy to catch, but I want some form of i.d. on them in case something would happen and they would leave the property. The Tb gelding is thin skinned, so halters rub the hair off his face, and I just like the look of the neck straps better. It's also easier to deal with fly masks during the summer, when you don't have a halter in the way.
                                Cindy

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                                • #17
                                  Being a farm owner myself on a busy road, what I have in my fields is on public view. I am appreciative of someone who stops and asks me a question about what they see. I can explain and educate rather than have someone make an assumption that what they see is "bad" or possibly "bad". So yes, these assumptions create unneccessary drama when a benign situation is discussed either on a BB or to local authorities as someone's "worst fear".

                                  I take in a project horse every year or so and they often arrive thin and unhealthy looking, 6 months later they are fat and happy and ready for a forever home. Well meaning people driving by often make the wrong assumption. Easily clarified as the SPCA and LAPS folks in the area know what I am doing. But, I would love it if they stopped so I could educate them myself on the joys of rehabbing a horse.

                                  Neck straps are a common way of identifying horses on farms. That does not mean a group of horses with neck straps is a "livestock" situation, any more then one skinny horse in a field is a neglect situation.
                                  *Every horse is a self-portrait of the rider....Autograph your work with excellence.*
                                  Supporting Nokotas www.nokotahorse.org
                                  Lipizzan's rock! http://rigitta.blogspot.com/

                                  Comment


                                  • #18
                                    Originally posted by Over the Hill View Post
                                    I also use these neck straps on my horses, when preparing for an impending hurricane. On them I write horses name, sex, immunization info, including coggins date, my farm info, contact numbers. Just in case, you know? You can't be too careful.
                                    Actually you are better off writing contact info on the horse's body with livestock marker crayon as the neck straps are designed to beak away.

                                    Having worked for FEMA after hurricanes, often we can not get close to the horses until they are finally rounded up and put into a chute, that is when we look for chips and any form of ID. If the ID is easy to read, they were separated out as soon as possible.

                                    Comment


                                    • #19
                                      If only my first lesson barn had done this. Tell a twelve-year-old girl to go out into the pasture before her fifth lesson ever and bring in the fairly non-descript horse she rode three weeks earlier... out of a field of bays and browns. (No, I didn't get the right horse. By the time we got back out to find the right horse, said right horse was having a grand old time, bolting around the pasture and laughing. Didn't get to ride her that day!)

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