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Besides Free, what is the least you ever paid for a horse?

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  • #41
    I'm sure by now many of you are TIRED of hearing about my $100 QH. That included shipping and a nice extra tight halter! And I'm talking about 2 years ago, not 20, either! Of course, since he was moving in with yee famous $700 pony, it seemed only appropriate...
    Anyway, Injin is 15 something, built like a TANK (or a loch ness monster, depending on your perspective) aged 28 or so, and the sweetest beastie you ever met. Bombproof, fairly sound, and loves to go on trail rides and eats ANYTHING. Loffs his blankets, and soupy mash and his friends, and being groomed and and and... everything! Never spent a better $100 in my life!
    Do not take anything to heart. Do not hanker after signs of progress. Founder of the Riders with Fibromyalgia clique.

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    • #42
      $200. Cdn, and a two-four of beer, for a very nicely bred mare off the track!
      What you allow is what will continue.

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      • #43
        When I was a kid I bought a very thin 16 hand QH for $25. Took my bridle to school and rode the school bus to where the horse was and rode him home.

        one free STB 6 years old with harness and cart, still have him he is 35 now.

        14 year old foundered pony $150, kids safe rides and drives!

        All other horses I have or had were under $1000.

        And I had someone offer me $5k to take three horses and keep them for life. I said no thank you.
        No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle. ~Winston Churchill

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        • #44
          In 1969 (I know I am dating myself) my Brother and I went to a horse auction with $80.00 in our pocket to by "a star". We came home with a $23.00, one month old foal , that actually sold in the ring for $19.00. My Brother went up to the woman who had purchased the foal and he told her he would give her $23.00 for the colt, she said " sure, he'll probably die anyway". He did not die ( He passed at 20yrs.old, sound) and turned out to be the best amateur horse I ever had. He showed in good company at A shows and held his own over fences and under saddle, not bad for an overo paint from humble beginnings.

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          • #45
            15oo$

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            • #46
              800.00 (+gst) for a lovely hanovarian/tb gelding. pinch myself everyday!

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              • #47
                well, 4 months ago there was a public auction for 11 abandoned horses found running loose, they were in horrible thin, neglected condition and absolutely wild as march hares. I took a 2 yr old filly home for $7.50, she's now doing well and coming along with her halter training. Today I got a call that a friend of a friend needed someone to pick up a nice Wap Spotted son that has pigeon fever, she moved to CA and can't get a health certificate with him being sick. He's 7 yrs old I think and not broke, but well handled. I paid $1 for him.
                Windwalker Ridge: Gaited horses, lessons, training, sales
                http://windwalkerridge.cloud11.net

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                • #48
                  Wow, I think getting paid $1,000 to take a guinne pig has me beat... it's a long story on the mare... she was a fruitloop... but absolutely beautiful.

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                  • #49
                    $50.00 in 1970 for large pony and that included a bridle and delivery (in the back of a pickup) to the local boarding stable. I was a very "young" 16 yrs old, didn't drive yet and took a BUS to the seller's house.

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                    • #50
                      $250 in 2007 for a TB gelding. Owner was downsizing her barn. This horse will jump the moon if asked.

                      GB

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                      • #51
                        I paid $1 for a draft cross yearling eight years ago.

                        Three months later, I paid $1,000 for castration and resulting infection.
                        Six months after that, I paid $7,000 for colic surgery and vet care.
                        Two years after that, I paid $3,000 for training because he kept bolting when I led him.
                        Two years after that, I paid $3,000 for a handful of lameness evaluations and xrays at a lameness clinic four hours away because he was horribly lame.
                        And then I paid for a lot of corrective shoeing.
                        And then I paid $1600 for a double neurectomy.
                        And now I pay to keep a 7-year-old pasture ornament happy at home.

                        My husband calls this my "$15,000 free horse." Ha ha ha!

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                        • #52
                          My guy cost $1 as a yearling- he was an unregistered lightly handled stud colt (and thus poorly mannered). You can see him now 20+ years later in my profile. He was quite the bargain.

                          Last year I bought an abandoned (by owners) 35 y.o., lame, retired event gelding at public auction for $10. We humanely euthanized him a week later and he is buried on the farm where he was living.

                          My Bengal cat on the other hand, cost a pretty penny, but he is a hoot!!! His step sisters are free barn kitty/rescues, and cool in their own ways.
                          Appy Trails,
                          Kathy, Cadet & CCS Silinde
                          member VADANoVA www.vadanova.org

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                          • #53
                            When I was 19, I was shopping for my future hunter. I ended up with a starved Reg Arab mare in foal with a yearling at her side for $750. Quite possibly the best money that I ever spent.
                            Holly
                            www.ironhorsefrm.com
                            Oldenburg foals and young prospects
                            LIKE us on Facebook!

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                            • #54
                              Ah, inflation (and the changing market)

                              1st horse - 5 year old Appendix mare (7/8 TB, great-granddaughter of Count Fleet), about 15.3 - $650 (1969). In those days, a nice TB eq horse was about $6,500 (What's a WB?).

                              2nd horse - 4 year old green broke TB mare (unraced), grey, about 16.1 - $1,500. (1975)

                              3rd horse - 14 year old Foundation Appy gelding, 15.3 +h.h.Intermediate eventer but he'd been in pasture for three years, looked like a blimp, seller was desperate for money. Asked $2,200, I offered $1,200 - she took it. (1977)

                              4th horse - 9 year old 16.3 Foundation bred Appy gelding, Novice/Training Level Eventer, $3,500 (1980)

                              5th horse - 4.5 year old 2nd gen. App/TB, green broke, "pretty" - $2,200. Matured to 16.2. Sweet horse. (1991) He's the one in my profile, now retired.

                              Newbie, current mount - currently 4.5, about 16.2 and still growing, Foundation App/Arab, fancy mover, purchased as unstarted 2.5. year old. Let's just say, over $5K and under 10K. (2006)

                              Considering the prices I see advertised, I think ALL my horses are/were still in the lower end of the price spectrum. LOL

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                              • #55
                                $1.00 (yes, one dollar....bill of sale and everything) for an OTTB gelding, 14 yrs old.

                                $50.00 for my old Lady mare that I purchased as a teenager with my babysitting money.
                                http://www.foxhuntingfriesian.blogspot.com
                                http://www.isherwoodstudios.blogspot.com

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                                • #56
                                  $500 for a sweet sound 5yr TB from OSU in 2005.... another COTHer has him now.

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                                  • #57
                                    Father marked up the price!!!

                                    I paid $1500 for my second horse--my own money at 14. My father had originally purchased the horse for resale. Well, he "re-sold" the horse to me after marking him up $500 over what he paid for him (didn't know about it until a couple of years later). At least since I bought the horse I got to keep the $15,000 I sold him for 6 years later.

                                    Can you tell I'm only slightly emotionally scarred 25 years later

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                                    • #58
                                      $2.50 for a weanling in rough shape at the auction, named Ollie for Oliver Twist.

                                      $55 for an amazing weanling at the auction (2 .5 years old now and *amazing*)

                                      $200 for the BLM mustang. He was an extra $75 because he was halter-broke. It was the best $75 we spent when, at the end of the day, we haltered him and loaded him up to go home rather than running him into a chute to load.

                                      $280 for a branded mare whose papers were gone (who rode like a seasoned reiner) and an injured appy foal at her side. Their adopter just raves about them, esp. the filly.

                                      $500 for the imported, stakes winning (recently foundered) TB

                                      $500 for the skinny old dude ranch gelding, who is as kid safe as they come and had been used for team penning and reining in the past.

                                      The list just goes on and on....

                                      And the Fat Palomino was given to me as a yearling.

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                                      • #59
                                        $75 for an abused colt at a garage sale. My mother wouldn't leave without him, and he ended up winning a bit of $$ for me barrel racing. I had him till he died at 23.

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                                        • #60
                                          Besides the free ones...

                                          $1.15 cents at an auction... then someone gave me $10 for a bale of hay to feed it :P

                                          I also paid $300 at an auction for a grey mare. Paint pony was maybe $450.

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