T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
636.1 | | USADEC::GILL | | Fri Jul 01 1988 10:53 | 21 |
| Don't lose track of those papers. If the people you just bought
him from don't have them, than ask where they got him from. Quarter
horse names are most always dirived from the sire or dam. Pick
up a Quarter horse jounal, or pick up the Horsemen's Yankee Pedlar,
or call the Pedlar and talk to Denise she raises Quarter Horses
and could help you there to.
I can't emphasize enough about the registration bit. The horse
has a history, a name and it is nice to know where he came from
and who his sire and dam are. If you want to sell eventually you
will need the papers anyway. Is he tatooed somewhere?
An old dog breeder gave me this advice, never pass the money until
the papers are passed to you. The moral, people forget to do it
leaving you feeling like a pest, or worse they lied and the horse
is not registered and they inflated the price.
How come the people you bought him from didn't tell you his name,
or did you get him from an auction?
stephanie
|
636.2 | A name should reflect the horses's personality, IMO | MARKER::BUCKLEY | its MIDI 4 me | Fri Jul 01 1988 12:04 | 5 |
|
Since its a quarter horse, you could think up something relevant
like Racer X or something.
Buck
|
636.4 | | HERMES::GILL | | Fri Jul 01 1988 13:26 | 6 |
| Having never bought a horse at an auction, tell me did they allow
you to have the horse looked at by a vet, or do they give you time
to do that? What kind of guarantees are you offered that this horse
is truly sound and able, or is it buy as you see and take your chances.
Just curious
|
636.5 | | PBA::KEIRAN | | Fri Jul 01 1988 14:10 | 13 |
| RE .4
A friend of mine bought a QH at that auction in Agawam last year,
without having it looked at by a vet first. The person who sold
her the horse said if it wasn't sound she could bring it back.
The horse had navicular. When they brought the horse back to Agawam,
the guy told them he would send them a check, so they brought the
horse home. As it turns out, the horse was pregnant, so now she
has a new foal and a mare with navicular. Goes to show ya, you
can never be too sure about what you are buying!!
|
636.6 | Auctions are Risky at Best | GENRAL::BOURBEAU | | Fri Jul 01 1988 15:15 | 15 |
| Every auction I've ever been to (Other than annual sales by
breeders) have been buyer beware. Most specify that they are only
agents,and any agreements or guarantees are between the seller and
the buyer. You generally don't know what horses will be on the block,
and don't have the opportunity for a vet check.
If you buy at an auction,you try to look them over before the
sale begins,and take a guess at which one you might want.
There's almost no end to the possible ways that a horse might
have been drugged,medicated or otherwise treated to hide problems.
When I lived back East, I knew several horse traders. Some
were quite honest, but many would doctor up anything that they
couldn't get rid of, and take them to the auction.
George
|
636.8 | Auctions and Xerox machines. | SMAUG::GUNN | | Fri Jul 01 1988 17:36 | 25 |
| In my early days of riding I went to a number of horse auctions with
the owner of the stable where I learned to ride. The owner got many of
his school horses through auctions and was known for his ability to
pick out horses. His success rate, by my estimate, was 50%. Half the
horses he bought through an auction turned out to be suitable for a
riding school or resale as a reasonable horse to a private buyer. The
other half went back. Since he was a regular customer, some
"accomodation" was made for these returned horses.
I would not expect anybody else who was not a regular buyer at auctions
to approach a 10% success rate. An auction is not the first place
I would think of if I had a good horse to sell. However, I learned
quite a bit about the less glamorous side of the horse business
from going to those auctions. Most of the auctions were in Shrewsbury,
Ma, in a long closed sales stable off Route 9.
As far as the original point of this note is concerned, choose a name
for your horse that has some significance for you. Most of my friends
named their horses this way. As far as registration papers are
concerned, from what I learned at these auctions, I wouldn't put any
faith in any papers provided with a horse bought at any auction.
Whenever the seller represented a particular horse as having papers, I
knew they had "walked the horse past the Xerox machine". In some cases
the copying was obvious that even the auctioneer had to describe them
as photocopies.
|
636.9 | Caveat Emptor, fer sure... | USWAV3::BOE | | Tue Jul 05 1988 09:30 | 11 |
| That auction in Agawam is notorious. If you get a good horse there,
they're the greatest people in the world. If you get burned, they'll
turn the cold shoulder on you so fast... The kids they use to show
at the auctions drink beer during the auctions and generally act
pretty disinterested. After a friend bought a horse there and had
to return it because it was lame, he was cautioned by just about
everybody to steer clear of auctions as a place to buy a good horse.
Re: your base note...don't name your new horse Agawam. :^)
Dave
|
636.11 | to late | 3D::PIERCE | | Fri Jul 22 1988 16:48 | 7 |
| Hi Michele,
I am new to notes and I was just courious on what you named him,
sorry I did'nt read notes earlier I do have a good names for quarter
horses. I'm a quarter horse lover,,
Louisa
|