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 Expert
Posts: 4625
     Location: Desert Land | I would register him. I think it will only make hsi value increase even if he isn't name brand bred. |
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 Ima Fickle Fan
Posts: 3547
    Location: Texas | If you ever sell him, you'll have more potential buyers with a registered horse than you will grade. Plus, on average, registered horses bring more than grade. It will be worth it in the long run to register him. |
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 Expert
Posts: 3782
        Location: Gainesville, TX | If he turns into anything, it would be better to have him registered. Easier to track/look up on equistat or with AQHA. |
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Mrs. Txdad
Posts: 14084
       Location: the fantasy txdad married | I'd send in the paperwork now. Even if you don't have all the money, send the paperwork and some of the money. AQHA will take payments and send the papers to you after it's paid in full. |
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  Shipwrecked and Flat Out Zapped
Posts: 16390
          Location: DUMPING CATS AND PIGS IN TEXAS :) | 1left2right - 2014-06-02 10:31 AM I'd send in the paperwork now. Even if you don't have all the money, send the paperwork and some of the money. AQHA will take payments and send the papers to you after it's paid in full.
Did not know that.....good info. :) |
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 Expert
Posts: 2097
    Location: Deep South | I agree that I'd register him. It's not that he's going to be SO much more valuable as a gelding with less than desirable papers. It's that at the same price people are going to go with the papered gelding over the non-papered one, even if they don't recognize anything on his papers. Therefore, making him easier to sell, not just with you but for the rest of his life. |
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 Swiffer PIcker Upper
Posts: 4015
  Location: Four Corners Colorado | I would register him! |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 512

| Register! I think they have much more selling appeal if they are registered. For me personally there are certain bloodlines I do not like and try to avoid when purchasing. So a horse that is grade turns me off sometimes. I like this guy and his breeding:) |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 678
     Location: Canada | Personally I'd register him. It guarantees his age to future potential buyers. They have history on his bloodlines even if it's not the hottest in the industry there are people who like certain lines and you never know who may be shopping if you decide to sell. If he turns out to be a smoking barrel horse you will want to have him registered.
For me it's more a pet peeve - I am really annoyed by ads that say "Purebred Quarter Horse (Mare, Gelding, Stallion) have paperwork but never registered." To me it sounds like the horse never amounted to anything or showed potential for anything.
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The Advice Guru
Posts: 6419
     
| SheWolfe - 2014-06-01 11:14 PM
Soooo I just looked at dates and it would cost $400 to register him, plus I'm not a current member and I'd have to pay for membership. That's almost what I paid for him, haha. I have copies of both sire and dams papers, plus filled out registration paper with birth dates on it. So if he is awesome in the barrel pen I'll pay for his registration with his earnings. haha.
Make sure the parents have DNA type on file, as the horse will need to be parantage verified I believe after 3.
If you wait, there will be more costs his parantage verification, the parents DNA typed if not on file.
If any of the parents are dead and have not been typed, the horse cannot be typed.
I looked at a judge cash mare, people said paperwork was in order, but dam had died was never typed so the mare could not be registered, such a shame.
I would bite the bullet and do it now, I won't even look at a horse who is over the age of three that has not been registered even if it says paper work is in order too many people have no clue if they have the adequate paperwork to register. |
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 Mouhahaha
Posts: 1786
       Location: British Columbia | As a buyer, I want papers. I won't buy grade, although I'm sure there are nice grade horses out there, I like to see what I'm getting on paper. |
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 You get what you give
Posts: 13030
     Location: Texas | We don't buy grade either. We have in the past and had some really good kid horses out of it, but I will say when we outgrew those horses⦠the registered ones we had sold for more than the grade ones. In fact, we have a grade mare now on free lease with a friend that we couldn't sell⦠|
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  Neat Freak
Posts: 11216
     Location: Wonderful Wyoming | I would register. If nothing else it keeps the age correct and I personally would pay $450 any day for a gelding I was interested in that had papers vs one that did not. |
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  Fact Checker
Posts: 16575
        Location: Displaced Iowegian | LRQHS - 2014-06-02 10:39 AM 1left2right - 2014-06-02 10:31 AM I'd send in the paperwork now. Even if you don't have all the money, send the paperwork and some of the money. AQHA will take payments and send the papers to you after it's paid in full. Did not know that.....good info. :)
Hmmmmmm.........as screwed up as the AQHA has been lately I wouldn't chance that option......they might not be able to keep track of the payments, may lose the papers, etc, etc |
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  Crazy Chicken Chick
Posts: 36132
         
| Only way I'd buy a grade horse is if I had seen it work in my area myself, or someone I knew well had seen it work. Without papers, there's no way to know that the "grandson of Freckles Playboy" is just that. Or that he's even QH, etc. so I normally don't even consider a grade horse. |
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Mrs. Txdad
Posts: 14084
       Location: the fantasy txdad married | NJJ - 2014-06-02 4:53 PM LRQHS - 2014-06-02 10:39 AM 1left2right - 2014-06-02 10:31 AM I'd send in the paperwork now. Even if you don't have all the money, send the paperwork and some of the money. AQHA will take payments and send the papers to you after it's paid in full. Did not know that.....good info. :) Hmmmmmm.........as screwed up as the AQHA has been lately I wouldn't chance that option......they might not be able to keep track of the payments, may lose the papers, etc, etc
Maybe, I don't know. I know I was $6.00 short once on a transfer and a few copies of pedigrees or something. They kept my papers for 2 years. I didn't really care as I wasn't selling and when you went to the website the horse was in my name. When I did sell, I gave the people a transfer and $6.00. They sent it in and the papers came back to them. That was about 8 years ago. Now, I always walk in since I live so close. And one time when I was there I was talking to the rep about someone who didn't have the money to register an older horse and she told me they would take payments. All you have to do is keep copies of what you have sent if you're afraid they would lose track. |
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Expert
Posts: 1561
   
| We just bought a grade 5yo cutting bred mare. We dont care about the papers, we buy horses for their barrel potential and not financial gain but would like to have them if she ends up being broodmare sound only at some point. |
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 Not Afraid to Work
Posts: 4717
    
| I think its really an injustice to the horse if you dont register them. I personally would buy a grade horse but many will not. You never know their back story, at least with papers you know how old the horse is and can know a bit about his potential. JMO |
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