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 No Tune in a Bucket
Posts: 2935
       Location: Texas | crossspur - 2017-07-27 10:01 AM If the horse was truly a cribber I wouldn't think he would pass a vet exam or at least it would have discussed don't they have excessive wear to their teeth?
^^^^^ This. If he is a cribber, it should have been noted on pre-purchase exam. She would be out of luck. |
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Go Get Em!
Posts: 13503
     Location: OH. IO | tin can - 2017-07-27 6:11 AM
I listed my horse on dream horse he is a nice honest gelding no vices has benn hauled sorted on knew the barrel pattern broke well enough for ranch classes trail rode like a dream nice looking. The kind of horse that just wants to please. I priced him at 6500 a lady came out of state to try him she explained she wasn't allowed to have mares,cribbers,or back shoes at her boarding facility he fit the description I offered and did pull his shoes offered to let her stay another day and make sure she like him,she seen him tied to a post a hitching post and moving freely in his stall. She said she needed a prepurchace exam on my day off since she lived out of state I took the horse he passed so she agreed to buy him I dropped my price 500 dollars I didn't charge her to haul the horse to the vet or pulling the shoes. She picked him up on Friday loved him and was so excited. I received cash wrote her a receipt gave her the papers with a transfer with a signed receipt no contract we never discussed a trial period which I don't do. 6:00 am Monday I received a text not a phone call that the horse was a cribber and for me to make arrangements to return her money she would be bringing him back later in the day!!! This horse wasn't a cribber when he left my house. I was dumbfounded. I sold the horse because I love to show he wasn't fast enough and I can't keep them all what's your opinion?
Did she bring him back later in the day as stated? Where did the conversation go after she texted you? |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 509

| I told her her barn manager probably didn't know the difference between cribbing and a new nervous horse chewing on wood to try a equipride tub could be mineral deficiency, and that a cribbers top two teeth will show wear and that I went above and beyond to help her and didn't appreciate her acting like I lied to sell her a horse. I made it clear I never gave her a trial period and I wouldn't refund her money to keep him and enjoy a well broke horse, that the horse has never cribber and I would hear no more of it.
Then I felt so guilty he is such a nice gelding I paid 6000 for him he just wasn't quick enough for a barrel horse or a top sorter.I have always felt it's wasteful to keep a horse around no one uses if I buy one and they make a show horse I keep them forever. I really felt she was a good fit she had owned one other horse who was lame and wanted an honest gelding to trailride I put a lot of wet saddles pads he worked cows and was pretty. I also was Leary of taking him back because they turn all there geldings out in one field. Thanks for all the input made me feel a little better. |
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Go Get Em!
Posts: 13503
     Location: OH. IO | tin can - 2017-07-27 7:39 PMI told her her barn manager probably didn't know the difference between cribbing and a new nervous horse chewing on wood to try a equipride tub could be mineral deficiency, and that a cribbers top two teeth will show wear and that I went above and beyond to help her and didn't appreciate her acting like I lied to sell her a horse. I made it clear I never gave her a trial period and I wouldn't refund her money to keep him and enjoy a well broke horse, that the horse has never cribber and I would hear no more of it.Then I felt so guilty he is such a nice gelding I paid 6000 for him he just wasn't quick enough for a barrel horse or a top sorter.I have always felt it's wasteful to keep a horse around no one uses if I buy one and they make a show horse I keep them forever. I really felt she was a good fit she had owned one other horse who was lame and wanted an honest gelding to trailride I put a lot of wet saddles pads he worked cows and was pretty. I also was Leary of taking him back because they turn all there geldings out in one field. Thanks for all the input made me feel a little better. Sounds like a very good response and I know how you feel about feeling bad for the horse hopefully she will ride him some each day and realize what a good solid safe horse he is:)
Edited by jake16 2017-07-27 7:28 PM
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 509

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 I Prefer to Live in Fantasy Land
Posts: 64864
                    Location: In the Hills of Texas | Speedy Buckeye Girl - 2017-07-27 8:22 AM She sounds like a nut job. Depends how much you like the horse and want to see him go on and win and have a happy home...if you do, I personally would consider giving money back IF she brought him back the way you sold him. (ie: he's still sound, not injured, etc.). There's no way IMO he "learned" to crib in a weekend. She probably saw him chew on something and thought it was cribbing...I've seen one too many people that don't know the difference. But typically, yeah, all sales are final and I do have contracts on everything I sell for that reason.
I had a gelding for 2 years that never cribbed. We were going on vacation and the person that usually would come and take care of him wasn't available so I put him in a boarding stable for 10 days. He started to crib in that amount of time. I would have never believed it if I hadn't have it happen to me personally. My sister turned him out everyday for me while he was there. |
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Expert
Posts: 1446
      Location: California | Smh I've had several horses occasionally chew on **** just to be a pain in my ass but were NOT cribbers. . . Horses sometimes are just buttholes. |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 509

| I haven't heard from her anymore hopefully she will keep it he horse and enjoy him he was really nice |
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 To the Left
Posts: 1865
       Location: Florida | I have an older gelding who did not have any bad habits until I retired both of use. He first started cribbing, then wind sucking. He was 13 years old at the time. He wasn't shut in a stall, out 24/7 but he managed to break almost every feeder in the barn pulling on them. After a few years he stopped. Never seen anything like it. |
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