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Smoking Barn Worker

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  • Original Poster

    #21
    Thank you so much for all the support and advice. When I woke up this morning I was in less of a panic about the situation. I called the BO who seemed greatly concerned and stated that smoking is DEFINITELY not allowed in the barn and he will speak with the BW. He thanked me several times for letting him know. He also told me that he will not tell BW that I was the one to tell on him.

    So now I'm not sure what to do. I feel bad leaving if the situation really does resolve - but I don't trust the worker to actually clean up his act. I have a name of a good trainer in town recommended by a couple different people and will call her tomorrow and tour her place if she has an available stall. If I do give my current barn a chance to clean up their act I need an evacuation plan where I can leave in a second if things are not looking right again.

    And there is no option for pasture board at this barn, unfortunately. Sigh. I wonder if now that I've had my horses at home for six months I will be too nervous to trust them with anyone else.

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    • #22
      I smoke. My former barn required me to sit on their curb side and not smoke on their property. I feel as an equestrian I can be trusted to never smoke in the barn, and dunk in water, and put the butts in my pocket.
      I've never seen someone smoke in a barn, before it became a PC issue. Even as a smoker, I'd say something. However as a smoker, if your barn is big enough that we are well out of the way of innocent lungs, give us an area and a water or sand bucket to put them out, and have us clean them.

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      • #23
        I have a friend who trains out of a barn where the BO himself smokes in the barn.....and he is an attorney.
        "You can't really debate with someone who has a prescient invisible friend"
        carolprudm

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        • #24
          Originally posted by blondedr View Post
          Thank you so much for all the support and advice. When I woke up this morning I was in less of a panic about the situation. I called the BO who seemed greatly concerned and stated that smoking is DEFINITELY not allowed in the barn and he will speak with the BW. He thanked me several times for letting him know. He also told me that he will not tell BW that I was the one to tell on him.

          So now I'm not sure what to do. I feel bad leaving if the situation really does resolve - but I don't trust the worker to actually clean up his act. I have a name of a good trainer in town recommended by a couple different people and will call her tomorrow and tour her place if she has an available stall. If I do give my current barn a chance to clean up their act I need an evacuation plan where I can leave in a second if things are not looking right again.
          .
          I think you should trust your instincts and move if the trainer has an available stall and your tour goes well. The fact that the BW has such poor judgment as to smoke in the barn in the first place makes me wonder what other boneheaded move s/he might pull. I once fired a farrier on the spot for this behavior. You don't need to feel bad - you did BO a tremendous favor by reporting this. I'm sure s/he will understand if you no longer feel your horse is safe. And if not? Your horse's safety is more important than hurt feelings.

          Originally posted by AlexS View Post
          I smoke. My former barn required me to sit on their curb side and not smoke on their property. I feel as an equestrian I can be trusted to never smoke in the barn, and dunk in water, and put the butts in my pocket.
          I've never seen someone smoke in a barn, before it became a PC issue. Even as a smoker, I'd say something. However as a smoker, if your barn is big enough that we are well out of the way of innocent lungs, give us an area and a water or sand bucket to put them out, and have us clean them.
          I disagree. For a couple of reasons. I think once the BO allows smoking on the property, it will migrate ever closer to the barns. And I think if a BO allows smoking on the property it will, these days, cost her/him business. And I say this as someone who smoked for thirty-some years. I know what it's like to crave a cigarette. But barns just aren't places to allow smoking, in this day and age.
          I'm not ignoring the rules. I'm interpreting the rules. Tamal, The Great British Baking Show

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          • #25
            The BW will have little difficulty figuring out who told about his smoking, and I don't think leaving your horse there is safe. Just get the horse out of there, before something happens to your animal. If something happens you will never forgive yourself, so get a move on.
            You can't fix stupid-Ron White

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