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Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders

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*almost there*
Reg. Apr 2006
Posted 2016-02-23 10:34 AM
Subject: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders


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I'm wanting to have a genuine discussion as to why people have issues with other people that sell horses for a living.

The horse community where I'm from, although big, everyone knows pretty much everyone. There's a person who is known for buying, training and then selling horses. I hear a lot of people behind their back calling them a horse trader, in a bad way. I've rode some horses this person has trained, and I really liked how they worked! Been around a lot of them. This person also trains outside horses.

I'm just curious, why is it so offensive that a person buys, trains and sells horses for a living? Is it only acceptable to sell a horse once every couple years?

I know there's bad horse flippers out there, but I just don't get why everyone has to be put in that category?
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Sockittoemred
Reg. Nov 2006
Posted 2016-02-23 10:43 AM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders



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They aren't all bad. There is a local gal near me who picks up junk horses that most people wouldn't bat an eye at. Often she gets them for free or just almost free. She puts 90-180 days in them. Fattens them up, shines them up, gets them riding nice, and turns a nice profit. She is a straight up trader/flipper but she has always been honest about it and she isn't trying to take anyone's arm off when she sells. On the other side of the coin there are some folks in my neck of the woods who will pick up half broke 4d horses for $2000 and a week later advertise them as "1-2D, rodeo potential, anyone can ride, etc" and slap a $15k price tag on them. It's folks like that who give all trainer/traders a bad name.
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FlyingJT
Reg. Jan 2014
Posted 2016-02-23 10:55 AM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders



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it's not offensive to buy, train, sell a horse. It is however, when you buy sh*t, cover it up, and then sell at as box of chocolates...

There's lots of dirty, dirty tricks out there that people do and unfortunately it causes bad raps for everyone.



Edited by FlyingJT 2016-02-23 10:56 AM
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haulin4cash
Reg. Feb 2005
Posted 2016-02-23 10:55 AM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders


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Its the dishonest horse traders that lie, cheat and steal from sincere, trusting people that gives other "horse traders" the bad rap.  As I recently found out with some liars that I dealt with in Kentucky.  I can't believe they even have the gall to show their faces on here anymore.  There is nothing wrong with being in that business if you keep it honest and don't rip people off like many horse traders do.
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smmthbr
Reg. Jun 2005
Posted 2016-02-23 11:02 AM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders



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FlyingJT - 2016-02-23 10:55 AM it's not offensive to buy, train, sell a horse. It is however, when you buy sh*t, cover it up, and then sell at as box of chocolates... There's lots of dirty, dirty tricks out there that people do and unfortunately it causes bad raps for everyone.

Exactly!!  Hence the reason "Horse Trader" has a negative connotation!
 
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cheryl makofka
Reg. Jan 2011
Posted 2016-02-23 11:21 AM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders


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To me a horse trader keeps the horse less then 30 days. They are in it to make an easy buck, and will do this at the expense of a gullible buyer.
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scwebster
Reg. Mar 2013
Posted 2016-02-23 12:12 PM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders



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*almost there* - 2016-02-23 10:34 AM I'm wanting to have a genuine discussion as to why people have issues with other people that sell horses for a living. The horse community where I'm from, although big, everyone knows pretty much everyone. There's a person who is known for buying, training and then selling horses. I hear a lot of people behind their back calling them a horse trader, in a bad way. I've rode some horses this person has trained, and I really liked how they worked! Been around a lot of them. This person also trains outside horses. I'm just curious, why is it so offensive that a person buys, trains and sells horses for a living? Is it only acceptable to sell a horse once every couple years? I know there's bad horse flippers out there, but I just don't get why everyone has to be put in that category?

Thank you for making this point!!! 
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*almost there*
Reg. Apr 2006
Posted 2016-02-23 12:17 PM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders


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scwebster - 2016-02-23 10:12 AM
*almost there* - 2016-02-23 10:34 AM I'm wanting to have a genuine discussion as to why people have issues with other people that sell horses for a living. The horse community where I'm from, although big, everyone knows pretty much everyone. There's a person who is known for buying, training and then selling horses. I hear a lot of people behind their back calling them a horse trader, in a bad way. I've rode some horses this person has trained, and I really liked how they worked! Been around a lot of them. This person also trains outside horses. I'm just curious, why is it so offensive that a person buys, trains and sells horses for a living? Is it only acceptable to sell a horse once every couple years? I know there's bad horse flippers out there, but I just don't get why everyone has to be put in that category?
Thank you for making this point!!! 

 Do you do this as a business? What have your experiences been?
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LAC
Reg. Jan 2008
Posted 2016-02-23 12:27 PM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders




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What I've learned from buying a few from the local horse traders by us is that they actually do not keep a horse long enough or spend enough time with them to really know what the horse is.

Ours are not intentionally being dishonest. They are only telling you the "story" that came with the horse and you should always have this in your mind when you are dealing with them.

I bought a few goods ones and a few bad ones. It's a gamble.
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*almost there*
Reg. Apr 2006
Posted 2016-02-23 12:31 PM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders


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I know it's a couple bad seeds ruining it for everyone, but unless you are a power house name, I've seen a lot of people talking negative of a lot of smaller businesses, who in my opinion, produce nice horses. Guess I'm just trying to understand why everyone gets the reputation.
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*almost there*
Reg. Apr 2006
Posted 2016-02-23 12:32 PM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders


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LAC - 2016-02-23 10:27 AM

What I've learned from buying a few from the local horse traders by us is that they actually do not keep a horse long enough or spend enough time with them to really know what the horse is.

Ours are not intentionally being dishonest. They are only telling you the "story" that came with the horse and you should always have this in your mind when you are dealing with them.

I bought a few goods ones and a few bad ones. It's a gamble.

Great insight. How long did these people have them before selling? Month? 3 months?
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FlyingJT
Reg. Jan 2014
Posted 2016-02-23 12:41 PM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders



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*almost there* - 2016-02-23 12:31 PM

I know it's a couple bad seeds ruining it for everyone, but unless you are a power house name, I've seen a lot of people talking negative of a lot of smaller businesses, who in my opinion, produce nice horses. Guess I'm just trying to understand why everyone gets the reputation.

Everyone earns their "own" reputation... good or bad! Negative talk is because someone got shafted on a deal.
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LAC
Reg. Jan 2008
Posted 2016-02-23 12:51 PM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders




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Time various. They only keep them as long as they have to.

I bought a little doc bar mare that turned out to be a superstar. My daughter heads, heels, ties goats, and runs barrels and poles on her. We bought her the night the one guy got her in. She came through one of the local sales. I traced her back to the owners who actually gave her away as a 2 year old thinking she would be too small. (She's a doc bar so she's short but stout). People turned her out for a few years then decided they didn't want her and sent her to the sale. He picked her up there and we saw her. Rode her and took a chance and bought her.

Whereas we went and tried another that came through him that he had a few weeks and ridden and said she was supposed to be an awesome barrel horse. My husband got on her, rode her two steps, got right off and handed him back the reins. He knew right away she was nothing we wanted to mess with.

You have to go there and form your own opinion and put little stock in what they are telling you.

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*almost there*
Reg. Apr 2006
Posted 2016-02-23 1:46 PM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders


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FlyingJT - 2016-02-23 10:41 AM
*almost there* - 2016-02-23 12:31 PM I know it's a couple bad seeds ruining it for everyone, but unless you are a power house name, I've seen a lot of people talking negative of a lot of smaller businesses, who in my opinion, produce nice horses. Guess I'm just trying to understand why everyone gets the reputation.
Everyone earns their "own" reputation... good or bad! Negative talk is because someone got shafted on a deal.

 I'm not sure I can agree to this. How many times have you heard something about someone and it being polar opposite of the truth?
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FlyingJT
Reg. Jan 2014
Posted 2016-02-23 2:14 PM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders



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*almost there* - 2016-02-23 1:46 PM

FlyingJT - 2016-02-23 10:41 AM
*almost there* - 2016-02-23 12:31 PM I know it's a couple bad seeds ruining it for everyone, but unless you are a power house name, I've seen a lot of people talking negative of a lot of smaller businesses, who in my opinion, produce nice horses. Guess I'm just trying to understand why everyone gets the reputation.
Everyone earns their "own" reputation... good or bad! Negative talk is because someone got shafted on a deal.

 I'm not sure I can agree to this. How many times have you heard something about someone and it being polar opposite of the truth?

Never....
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scwebster
Reg. Mar 2013
Posted 2016-02-23 3:02 PM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders



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*almost there* - 2016-02-23 12:17 PM
scwebster - 2016-02-23 10:12 AM
*almost there* - 2016-02-23 10:34 AM I'm wanting to have a genuine discussion as to why people have issues with other people that sell horses for a living. The horse community where I'm from, although big, everyone knows pretty much everyone. There's a person who is known for buying, training and then selling horses. I hear a lot of people behind their back calling them a horse trader, in a bad way. I've rode some horses this person has trained, and I really liked how they worked! Been around a lot of them. This person also trains outside horses. I'm just curious, why is it so offensive that a person buys, trains and sells horses for a living? Is it only acceptable to sell a horse once every couple years? I know there's bad horse flippers out there, but I just don't get why everyone has to be put in that category?
Thank you for making this point!!! 
 Do you do this as a business? What have your experiences been?

I have a career in the oil and gas industry, but my husbands full time job is training for the public/selling horse. We often buy prospects from sales or from horse people we know and further their training and eventually re-sale. We keep some for several months up to a couple of years. Some we get back home, start riding and within a couple of weeks someone has come by and asked to purchase them so we let them go if the money is right. The complete truth is always disclosed on everything we sell. We are honest horse people. We have many repeat customers for this reason. No one has called us "horse traders" that I am aware of...then again what people say behind our backs isnt really any of my business lol. When I hear the term I think of people who are very dishonest in their practices. Its not fair to label the honest ones as horse traders...just because someone makes their living buying and selling. I am glad you brought it up.You def seem to know the difference :)
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linds
Reg. Feb 2005
Posted 2016-02-23 4:19 PM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders


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I think this is kind of like linebreeding vs. inbreeding.  

Linebreeding = good, inbreeding = bad
Trainers = good, traders = bad
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quickdraw
Reg. Apr 2009
Posted 2016-02-24 8:03 AM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders


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The horse traders that lie unmercifully give our industry a bad name. A few things a potential buyer should pay attention to are ;

Ask the horses life history. Traders won't know or if the horse has a bad reputation, they will avoid answering that question.
Ask how many horses they sell in a year. or watch and see how many they have advertised for sale on a regular basis. More than a few, big red flag.
If they tend to ridicule the riders on the horses they have sold (that was a great horse but the girl just can't ride) that's horse trader talk. Good trainers will try their best to find a buyer that fits the horse. Good trainers hate to see their hard work wasted by a rider with no skills.
Go to their place. How many horses are there? Trainers may have 6-8 to ride every day. If they have dozens of horses, that can be a sign there are a bunch of "sale bRn rejects" there.
Talk to others that have bought from this person. Ask if the horse they bought clocked as advertised. Ask if it has had health/lameness issues soon after the purchase. Ask if they have to keep taking it back to be "fixed" over and over.
Prepurchase exams are not fool proof but I strongly recommend them. Include X-rays and a drug screen.
If it's a barrel horse, ride it AT A SHOW before you buy. I've seen some there ride like saints at home or the practice pen but they are outlaws at aa show. The horse "knows" the difference.

To the OP, horse traders have had the bad rep forever and always will. Sad but true. It seems like these days there are just a lot more of them. Some are peddling horses that came off the track that are usually not sound. Others are buying junk out of the weekly or monthly sales and trying to turn it for a big profit in a couple months.
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BigStarBound
Reg. Oct 2015
Posted 2016-02-24 9:00 AM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders



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It's sad that bad traders have given all people who sell for profit a bad name. I used to do it, just one or two horses at a time, but I was always honest. I see nothing wrong with people picking up a prospect, or a horse at a sale, putting some elbow grease in and reselling it.
I am proud of the horses I have resold. I know the situation that horse was in when I got it, and the home I sold it to, and I know that the quality of life of that horse improved tremendously because of what I did.
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rodeomom3
Reg. Dec 2007
Posted 2016-02-24 11:17 AM
Subject: RE: Horse Trainers vs Horse Traders



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 From my recent horse shopping experience looking for that safe 3D horse for myself and willing to pay to find it but have no need to buy more than my ability to ride.   

Horse trader:  tells me about a 45K horse, tell her although I can afford it, I don't ride good enough to justify that price tag.   She proceeds to tell me that if I can get him into a higher D he can pay for himself in a couple of years.  Told her just because I was 3D didn't mean I was stupid.

I have looked at horses with trainers also, most are honest, one, I would not call outright dishonest but while disclosing horses info spun it in a way that was not really accurate.

I do a ton of research, contact past owners, look up all records available, never buy just off what someone tells me. I have no problem buying from someone who buys and sells for a living if I can verify the horses history.  I am more than happy to pay a nice sum for a good horse.


Edited by rodeomom3 2016-02-24 11:33 AM
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