T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1169.1 | Why the Auction? | BOOVX2::MANDILE | | Mon Mar 05 1990 10:23 | 7 |
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Just out of curiosity, could you explain why the Auction? I guessed
it was because this Don Hunt is dispersing his farm, but I was just
wondering why. Also, why they are not being auctioned with papers.
Lynne
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1169.2 | i dunno..... . . ... .... . .. . | JETSAM::MATTHEWS | Ok, so *like WHEREZ the mail!? | Mon Mar 05 1990 11:02 | 10 |
|
I would think anyone that would want to represent an animal that
was of good quality would first be there or second keep the
papers with the horse..
i think if it were quarter horses, i would personally ask them what is
going on.
wendy o'
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1169.3 | | MEIS::SCRAGGS | | Mon Mar 05 1990 11:02 | 26 |
| On a separate subject re: auctions. I went to Crowleys sale on Fri
night. I only went as it was supposed to be a "Registered" special
sale. Meaning special consignments of strictly registered horses and
(hopefully) not like the traditional thurs eve meat market auction..
Out of approx 100 horses, maybe 5 were worthy of owning. The prices
were ridiculous. They were bringing in anywhwere from $1000-$2000.
Only one horse was worth the price of $1900, whoever bought him got
a great deal.. he was a registered App gelding. The horse is a world
champion and has many superior titles. Friends of mine knew this
horse and there was nothing wrong with him..just one of those
circumstances. Everthing else there either had obvious reasons for
being there or came in from a farm dispersal. I felt that the sellers
made out like bandits, and was really surprised the auction brought
prices like that. I would be a little leery about putting out such
money on an animal where I had no recourse in case of unsoundness
etc.. Some of the animals were in pretty "rough" shape and they were
bringing in what I would consider to be top dollar for an auction. Even
the top auctions out west where your dealing in top bloodlines and
show horses are hard pressed to bring in that amount per
horse.. I guess I was just surprised and wondered if this was normal
for an auction in this area?
Thx
Marianne
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1169.4 | i'm in the market for a palomino filly/foal | JETSAM::MATTHEWS | Ok, so *like WHEREZ the mail!? | Mon Mar 05 1990 11:13 | 18 |
| when is the next sat auction??
I interested to find out what is goin thru there.
I would also look at horses that are coming from out west, where?
depends on the market out there..
and also who is something to consider, most times YOU dont know!
main reason is why are they there..
also since things are so bad out there, the market for them is here,
but then again, people (I THINK) pay way too much for things out here.
a perfect example is auctions on tack and they have a whole lot to sale
everyone runs up the price.
heck I dont know how many times we used to go to brush auction out
in colorado, tack that someone bought a whole lot on and asked
nicely if we could buy a couple of them..
wendy o'
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1169.5 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Mon Mar 05 1990 11:24 | 12 |
| Two years ago a friend of mine bought a registered QH mare at this
auction and paid a good amount of money for her. The owner told her
if the horse didn't vet to bring it back and he would give her her
money back. The horse had navicular and they brought her back to
return her and the guy told them he would take the horse home and
send them a check. Of course they didn't give him the horse and
brought her back home. As the weeks went on, this horse was getting
bigger and bigger, and the following summer had a beautiful chestnut
filly!! She sold the mare to a woman on the cape as a broodmare, and
she was showing her in halter this year. The mare ended up being some
type of New England halter champion! I guess it goes to show that
you never know what you're buying at auctions!!
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1169.6 | | DECXPS::LCOBURN | | Mon Mar 05 1990 12:27 | 31 |
|
I am curious about these auctions...I am not in the market for a
new horse, but this discussion has made me wonder. Is it always
a buyer-beware situation?? Is there any opportunity to have the
horse you are getting vet checked or something?? I would think buying
a horse without having it vetted is an incredible risk, and especially
so a horse of unknown origin....I mean, why didn't the horse sell
"normally" ?? I have a friend who used to own a 7 yr old registered
Quarter Horse. He was a super horse and an incredible jumper, but
he had this chronic lameness that after several vets and inumerable
series of X-rays could not be identified. Just would one day be
off, then fine for a few days, then lame for a week again, etc.
My friends could not keep up with the vet bills and feeling the
frustration of it all. She could not honestly sell him as a sound,
ridable horse, so as a last option she sent him to auction. When
she bought him originally she had him vetted and he passed fine...
the lameness started a few weeks after she got him. After tracing
his history through his registration papers, she discovered that
he had been sold at auction once before as well. She paid 2500 for
him, I am not sure what he sold for, but I know she took a big loss...
I felt for her, but I also feel for whoever bought this horse at
that auction. Seems there should be some way of protecting yourself
if you feel compelled to buy this way. There are other, safer ways
to get inexpensive horses... I paid 200 for my mare, who is 100%
healthy at 13 and going strong, and my brother paid 500 for a TB
gelding who is also problem-free and doing super heading into his
second season showing at 8 yrs old. I don't mean to sound critical,
it just seems that if you are going to buy at auction you should
be prepared for the added risks as opposed to being able to do research
on the animal *before* purchase.
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1169.7 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Mon Mar 05 1990 12:48 | 16 |
| Hi Linda,
I personally agree with you, auctions are most definitly a buyer beware
situation. I also find it a little odd that someone would buy a horse
through the auction and then send someone $500 for the papers, how do
you even know those papers belong to that horse. Also, how do you know
you will even get the papers??? I have been to a couple of racehorse
auctions and have had the catalogs before the sale date, which gives
you a chance to look up any information on the horse. The horses are
tattooed at 2 years old and the papers have the corresponding numbers
so you at least know you are buying the horse that is on paper. I
guess there are times when you can really get a great deal, for example
if someone is getting out of the business, or needs to cut down their
stock to concentrate on young horses or whatever. I really hate going
to auctions, I always feel the horses are looking right at me, saying
"buy me!"
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1169.8 | | MEIS::SCRAGGS | | Mon Mar 05 1990 13:20 | 20 |
| I think if I were truly going to go to an auction to buy a horse
I would go further out west. I think the quality of the horses is
alot better. They are more production and performance sales, rather
than individual private consigners selling their handoffs. Some of the
auctions out there are more careful with their reputations also. You
can also find the consignor and sometimes work out an individual
agreement with them regarding returns etc.. I think even at crowleys
if you get out back and find the consignor you could probably arrange
something, but like one of the previous notes before, you're still
taking chances.
I agree with Linda in reference to getting the catalogs before
hand to see whats going to be sold. They include registered names,
bloodlines any earnings, etc.. The only thing I would be leery about
as far as individual breed auctions are the industry problems such
as the Quarterhorse tail deadening etc... a whole sep. topic....
Marianne
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1169.9 | | JETSAM::MATTHEWS | Ok, so *like WHEREZ the mail!? | Mon Mar 05 1990 13:41 | 24 |
| mare
YOu have made a very godd point..
so people are more careful about their reputations...
so... why dont we all just help them out :^}
as far as out west I have been to many sales.
Thats where i bought cil (cilly) and she has been with me for 9 years!
The sales we went to they **had to be vet checked and they had to
have .etc..... if not they were liable..
I sold my other horses there, I never ever misrepresented a horse!
We were a training barn and bought and sold horses so we were very very
careful..
as far as paints palominos If i'm going to use a horse dealer I will
use me:^}
I prefer to see whats in front of me (unplanned visits)
re.last
how did she sell her broodmare??while i'm set now, I would like to find
a nice home for my horse as a broodmare.
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1169.10 | ADDITIONAL INFORMATION | ASABET::NICKERSON | KATHIE NICKERSON 223-2025 | Mon Mar 05 1990 15:02 | 15 |
| A couple of weeks back there was another group of Arabians who came up
to Crowley's from Florida. These are additional horses that are coming
out of the same area because the farms have folded.
Don Hunt seems te be acting as the broker. I too would be careful but
a
friend of mine picked up a couple of the horses from the last lot and
they were fine. It seems the main reason they are coming through here
or so I have been told is that they have to get rid of them and the
Northeast is where a lot of them come to the "packers". This type of
a story always breaks my heart but there is so little anyone can
do about it.
Thanks for listening.
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1169.11 | 2 cents | PFSVAX::PETH | My kids are horses | Mon Mar 05 1990 15:11 | 12 |
| Wether it be at an auction, dealer, or private owner it is always buyer
beware! I personally cannot attend auctions as I am too soft, horses
are pets to me. Of horses I have gotten from dealers, none have stayed
with me more than a year. I now buy all horses from private homes, and
the first question I ask is not how old, or how big, but why are you
selling this horse? I now have the best horses I have known in the last
18 years, and have spent far less money to accquire them. My point is
patient shopping is the best way, and auctions don't give you that
option. I never could understand why someone would charge more for a
horses papers, when they legally can't use them on another horse.
Sandy
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1169.12 | Papers for breeding stock. | GENRAL::LEECH | Customer Services Engineer ** We do the job ** | Mon Mar 05 1990 15:36 | 31 |
|
A horse's value as breeding stock is directly related to that horse
having papers. A mare that is unsound for riding can still, in many
cases, be used as a broodmare. A mare that belongs to a friend of mine
foal foundered and was dead lame on all four feet. This mare had a Sonny
Dee Bar filly last year that was first in her class at the Solid Gold
Futurity in Springfield, Ill. Another example is a TB stallion in Ill.
that broke down on the track. He has no sesimoids left in his right
front ankle and his pastern angle is about 90 degrees. He was rescued
from the killers and has been siring some very nice foals for his
current owners. Neither of these horses would have survived except for
the fact that they had papers and could be used for breeding. Geldings
and horses that are not used for showing or breeding don't really need
papers. I have a 27 year old purebred Appy gelding that has no papers
and has never needed them.
Re. .3
One of the reasons that outrageous prices are sometimes paid for
average horses at auction is that the seller will have several of his
friends/family in the sale crowd bidding on his horses against people
that legitimately want the horse. These friends/family stop bidding at
a certain level and then let the horse go on down the road. This is
sometimes done to keep a certain horse from the killers, but is most
often a form of price gouging. I have seen this done with tack as well
as with horses.
Pat
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1169.13 | More Money | MERLAN::KJROY | | Mon Mar 05 1990 16:43 | 14 |
| Some of the auctions/dispersal sales out west will send you catalogues,
vidoes, are very helpful on the telephone etc. You will find that
sometimes one of the big farms (Gary Raak's in Minnesota) will get
rid of everything but maybe 3 or 4 mares and they have some really
nice horses. They are a lot cheaper out west, I was floored when
I bought my mare last spring in New Hampshire and I found out she
had been sold at an auction in Ohio and I called that previous owner
and he asked me what I paid for her and told me what he had sold
her for and I paid 2 1/2 times what he had sold her for!
You never know, but you do have to be very careful and we are a
lot more expensive here!!!!!!!!!
KJ
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1169.14 | ex | JETSAM::MATTHEWS | Ok, so *like WHEREZ the mail!? | Tue Mar 06 1990 09:47 | 16 |
| re.last..
not only that, i'm kinda leery about horses sold with the wrong papers,
whos to say the horse didnt come from california, resold in wyoming
and then brought out in nh/ma whereever?
i have heard of people purchasing horses and come to find out they
were stolen and changed hands 2 or 3 times. I would think it would
cost them more money..
well there are proably war stories about all sorts of things, i'm
just lucky i never had any problems, I would be heartbroken if
my mare never turned out the way she did!
wendy o'
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1169.15 | Honesty not a NE policy... | BOOVX2::MANDILE | | Tue Mar 06 1990 15:27 | 23 |
| Geldings sell better when they have papers. Even some of my local
QH shows have "REG" classes, which require all horses to have papers.
This calling Don Hunt sounds fishy to me, but, at auctions, it is
"LET THE BUYER BEWARE". When I was out in Texas, most of the horses I
looked at, if they had something wrong, the owner had mentioned
it. I don't know if they are more honest, or value their reputations,
or what, but when I was looking up in the NE area, I had some pretty
rotten people try to sell me blind, crippled, navicular, splint
lame, cribbers, windsuckers, etc. I asked up front if there were
any bad habits or problems, and the response was, "Oh no, this horse
is 100% sound, no vices, etc." Until I mentioned the vet check,
and then it was, "Did I mention this horse has a splint, is lame
on left front, losing vision in right eye, etc." Not being very
knowledgeable at that time, I had no choice but to pay for a few vet
checks. Luckily, I had asked a reputable vet who was honest about
a Morgan I had a crush on. The poor thing was lame in three legs,
the left front vetting out as possibly navicular.
So, I would not be a likely candidate to purchase at an auction,
but I am going to my first one this Friday night, just to look
and see whats going on.
L-
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1169.16 | | PATS::MATTHEWS | Ok, so *like WHEREZ the mail!? | Wed Mar 07 1990 09:39 | 7 |
| friday night???
where???
WENDY O'
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1169.17 | They aren't meant for riding! | WJOUSM::NICKERSON | Bob Nickerson DTN 282-1663 :^) | Mon Mar 12 1990 13:23 | 27 |
| There is no great mystery or intrigue attached the the papers of these
horses. I'm not sure that you could get the papers even if you did get
ahold of Don Hunt. The only reason his name was mentioned, is because
he is the middle man and probably the only one who knows where these
horses came from. There is one simple reason why the owners did not
include the papers with the horses to be sold. THEY ARE BEING SOLD FOR
MEAT NOT FOR RIDING PURPOSES. Personally, I hope that the papers
cannot be obtained for any price. This is just another case of the
irresponsibility of many (most?) large Arabian breeders over the last
few years. After breeding anything that moves for ten years, they have
now produced a glut of horses in their own areas, and now they are
going to compound their own greed by dumping these poor animals on
own little piece of the world. I'd like to think that they have
honorable intentions by not sending the papers, but I doubt if it is as
much to protect our market as it is to keep people from finding out
what they have done (and thereby ruining the price of the stock they
keep for sale). This is not dispersal as much as it is culling and
therefore you should be especially careful of these horses. The only
reason it was mentioned is to save any few that might be healthy from
the killers.
Sorry but this really gets a burr under my saddle...
SET FLAME/OFF
Bob
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1169.18 | forget about the papers | FRAGLE::PELUSO | There's ALWAYS room for ONE more | Tue Mar 13 1990 09:32 | 11 |
| I wouldn't trust the papers they sent, even if they were free. Like
I said earlier, I was burnt bad by an auction. My gelding supposedly
was AQHA registered.......but after I bought him (at the time I didn't
care or know enough to care) the papers I got were for a 16 hh TB.
this guy was barely 14.2. They told me they'd straighten it out
later... well I'm glad I never held my breath. The chick never
returned my calls and when we went back.....she couldn't remember what
we were talking about.
If anyone is lucky enough to find a good arab up there, and it is
possible - i think, I'd forget about the papers.
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