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Crazy boarding stories

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  • Crazy boarding stories

    Share your crazy boarding stories! The thread about the crazy boarder down the page is inspiring.

    I'm about to leave a barn this weekend, but I don't have any specific stories (it's mostly just in the category of Generally Crazy) besides the one where they keep all the hay chained up with huge padlocks and then underfeed our horses.

    Okay, your turn.

  • #2
    Several years ago.... asked for more shavings in the stall as the horse was standing in a pool of urine. B.O. told me with a straight face that the moisture was good for the horse's feet.

    !!

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    • #3
      I once boarded with a person who told me that my horse communicated telepathically with her and therefore she knew what my horse wanted more than I did.
      Proud member of the Colbert Dressage Nation

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      • #4
        I didn't board with this person but she was a "horsey" co-worker.. she found out I did jumping and asked with a straight face.. Yeah but can you do it blindfolded... All the really good riders have to be able to jump courses blindfolded.

        I mean if you were doing a staight in and out... maaaaybe.. but a whole course???? naaaa I don't think so.... I told her I had no aspirations to go pro so I'll stick to using my sight to make it around the course
        ___._/> I don't suffer from insanity.. I enjoy every
        ____/ minute of it! Member stick horse art lovers
        ';;;;;;; clique
        //__\\<-- Don't feed the llama!

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        • #5
          You should have told her that you make your horse jump blind folded.

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          • #6
            I have way too many to share them all, so here are my top picks...

            My most favorite... Clueless horse owner, bought a OTTB because she watched Seabiscuit and decided she wanted a horse. This horse just happened to be a cribber, and she actually left an empty bucket on his wall to crib on. When I tried to enlighten her to the ramifictations of this vice, her response was... "Cribbing is healthy for him because it helps him digest better." :0 No Joke

            BO sold a barn I was boarding at without telling the boarders it was even up for sale. We meet the new BO the day he takes over the farm. 2 days later I bring in feed dinner to the horses and leave. I realize I had forgotten to take my saddle home to clean it, so my mom and I go back. We walk in the barn to see the new BO taking the hay out of all the horses stalls. His reason was that he didn't want them to have hay at night because it cost money.

            And another favorite was the random feeding method at one barn. Sometimes they remembered to feed the horses and sometimes she forgot. Now that place was scary.

            Or the "Jockey" who exercised horses on the local track, would convince owners she could rehabilitate the unworthy to become jumpers. She put her boyfriend (who had never ridden before) on one of these straight off the track TB in sneakers and jeans with no helmet. Then told him to "just kick the horse down the middle of the arena" through an incorrectly set gymnastic. The horse actually goes through at lightening speed sending poles flying and the BF who hits the doors at the end of the arena. The proceeded to do this with many different horses for 2 months before they were kicked out. However not before the BF had gone through the kick walls in the indoor, and she got dumped and trampled among many other things. Talk about terrifying...
            Celtic Charisma (R.I.P) ~ http://flickr.com/photos/rockandracehorses/2387275281
            Proud owner of "The Intoxicated Moose!"
            "Hope is not an executable plan" ~ My Mom
            I love my Dublin-ator

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            • #7
              didn't we just do this thread?????

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              • #8
                [QUOTE=Showjumper28;4318545]I have way too many to share them all, so here are my top picks...
                This horse just happened to be a cribber, and she actually left an empty bucket on his wall to crib on. When I tried to enlighten her to the ramifictations of this vice, her response was... "Cribbing is healthy for him because it helps him digest better." :0 No Joke

                well, she may have had something there - not right exactly, but there are studies that link cribbing with ulcers - cribbing produces saliva, which soothes ulcers. I have a mare in my barn who is very prone to ulcers & has gone through month-long treatment with Gastroguard twice, and she is a chronic cribber. If she has nothing to crib on, she becomes very agitated & tends to get colicy. So we have to pick the lesser of 2 evils - let her crib, or let her colic?
                "I gave my life to become the person I am right now. Was it worth it?”

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                • #9
                  I once boarded at a barn where a fellow boarder gave his horses one flat-back (5 gallon) bucket of water to drink out of a day. And he informed the BM that he did NOT want anyone watering his horse or refilling the bucket when it was empty because the horse "didn't need that much water" or "he wanted the horses to see him as the water-provider only" or some such nonesense.

                  He was also the same guy who would *ONLY* ride his out-of-control horses bareback with a halter because he thought he was Native American (he wasn't- his 80-year-old "girlfriend" told us) and was trying to "get back to his roots."

                  And then he tried to convince my friend and I that there was some kind of mythical endurance race that was 100 miles along the beach, and he won it on his fugly grade paint thing because they "galloped the whole way." Bareback. With no water for the horse.


                  Luckily Fugly worked at that barn and ignored his "no-water" request enough that he finally left. LOL

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Originally posted by horse-loverz View Post
                    I didn't board with this person but she was a "horsey" co-worker.. she found out I did jumping and asked with a straight face.. Yeah but can you do it blindfolded... All the really good riders have to be able to jump courses blindfolded.
                    A previous trainer had me jump with my eyes closed- but only for one jump!! I thought it was fun, it gave me a better feel for when the horse would jump...but blindfolded?? Um, I don't think so.

                    Let's see...
                    Last winter, we had a college-aged girl and her mother board at the place at I'm at now. They seemed nice at the time, a little shy, but that's to be expected when you're in a new place. The horse was (supposedly) a GP dressage horse- very nice, about 23, but was in good health (except for hock issues) and didn't look his age. The only time these people could come out and do anything was when we (mom and I) would be there. For about a week or so, we never saw either of them ride.

                    One night, we come out and see their car there, and hear something in the tiny indoor that's connected. This girl was riding her horse inside the 20 meter ring! Not doing small excercises, but an actual ride. It's not just small in width, but also in height- one buck, and she could wind up dead, even with a helmet on. Keep in mind this horse is not small, about 16.3, plus he had hock issues.
                    We didn't do anything about it then, except for standing and watching in an empty stall next to the indoor window, ducking everytime she came close.

                    Fast foward maybe another week. We're talking to another boarder, and we find out these people don't even own this horse, he's being leased and the owner doesn't even know that this is going on. In the middle of our discussion, we hear a CRASH coming from the "indoor". It was loud enough to spook every horse in the barn. We open the doors to find they were free-lunging, and the crash we heard? "Oh, he just ran into the wall." WTF?! We all had something to say to them, but they kept "justifying" it by saying: "He's a GP dressage horse, and does this all the time"

                    We later found out they came out at night so people couldn't see what they were doing. Oy.

                    Needless to say, they were asked to leave. That wasn't the only reason, they just weren't very good boarders. When the farrier would come out to do her horse, and they wouldn't clean up afterwards. I can remember one time when Paris had a bone chip in her leg, and we had been handwalking her, as she couldn't be turned out yet. Me, mom, vet and BO were all talking as I was holding Paris (whilst in the indoor), and the girl comes up with her horse, all tacked and just stands there. As if to say: "Ok, I'm here. Now move." I wanted to tell her off, but I don't know why I didn't.

                    I've got more stories, but I don't think I can type any more now, that was long!
                    Horsey Stick Art clique
                    Crayolaposse~ SparklyLime
                    PPP Grand-Poobah

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by horse-loverz View Post
                      I didn't board with this person but she was a "horsey" co-worker.. she found out I did jumping and asked with a straight face.. Yeah but can you do it blindfolded... All the really good riders have to be able to jump courses blindfolded.

                      I mean if you were doing a staight in and out... maaaaybe.. but a whole course???? naaaa I don't think so.... I told her I had no aspirations to go pro so I'll stick to using my sight to make it around the course
                      There is a legally blind rider who does some pretty high hunter stuff. It's a really interesting story, I think her name is Tori, don't remember the last name though...
                      No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle. ~Winston Churchill
                      For Hope, For Strength, For Life-Delta Gamma
                      www.etsy.com/shop/joiedevivrecrafts Custom Wreaths and Other Decorations

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                      • #12
                        Showjumper28, your story ("We walk in the barn to see the new BO taking the hay out of all the horses stalls. His reason was that he didn't want them to have hay at night because it cost money. ") reminded me of a true and bizarre thing that happened here in Omaha just over a year ago (at a stable I left of course!).

                        They had a very emaciated rescue horse that basically lived in the back third of their very tiny indoor arena. He did gain some weight in their care, but really needed 24/7 access to good quality hay. He did get hay, but not enough and the hay they had was generally pretty poor. (The last straw for me was when I saw they were feeding moldy hay, but that was only one of many weird things that happened there.) So, one night I was the last one there except barn owner's BIL (Sister and BIL lived on the farm) came in to make sure lights were off. I had just given the skinny old boy some hay and BIL took it away. I asked why, and he said 'Oh he will just waste it'. The horse died not long after that. (Anyone ever thinking of boarding in Omaha I will be happy to tell you which place this is so you can avoid it. As truth is an absolute defense against any claim of libel, and this is eyewitness first hand reporting, I have no qualms about sharing this story.)
                        Last edited by sdlbredfan; Aug. 24, 2009, 12:14 PM. Reason: add something
                        Jeanie
                        RIP Sasha, best dog ever, pictured shortly before she died, Death either by euthanasia or natural causes is only the end of the animal inhabiting its body; I believe the spirit lives on.

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