Horse as companion. Who pays, or does anyone even have to pay?

Hello,

I'm considering offering my mare as a companion horse. But honestly, I have absolutely no idea how that works; I haven't looked into it yet.

If I give her to someone looking for a companion, do I still have to pay stable rent? Or will I be paid anything at all? It's more of a win-win situation. You can still do groundwork with her. However, she's no longer rideable.

Do you have any tips on what I should definitely keep in mind? I'm worried that these people will simply resell the horse. There have been a number of cases of this before, and the horses have never been seen again.

Thank you in advance 🙂

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PeppysGirl
2 years ago

Whether your horse is in the garden in a “normal” guesthouse or as an assistant at Lischen Müller: as long as you are the owner of the horse, you are of course also in the duty to take over the costs. The only advantage is that, if necessary, the stable rental at Lischen Müller is cheaper than in the well-equipped pension stable (whether this can also be maintained qualitatively, of course, on another sheet).

Otherwise, of course, you will also be free to sell the horse as an appendix at any time. In this case, however, you lose – logically – all rights on the horse. Although various clauses such as pre-purchasing rights, etc. can be incorporated into a purchase agreement – whether they really stand in court (if you want to run a costly process at all) is questionable.

Baroque
2 years ago
Reply to  PeppysGirl

In the case of contractual clauses such as pre-purchase law, most of them make the mistake of not agreeing a specific contractual penalty. But if you don’t know what to do if a party doesn’t stick to a clause, nothing happens, so it’s completely ineffective.

dancefloor55
2 years ago

if the horse still belongs to you then yes – in most cases, side horses are sold very cheaply because they are unreadable. then of course the new owner pays all.

If I take them to someone who’s looking for a hirer, I’ll pay for the stable

abbe = sales = then not

Is there a win-win situation?

if you don’t want to worry about your horse anymore

I’m afraid it’s those people who just sell the horse.

if that’s what it’s like. you can agree a pre-purchase right at most. do not pay the desired price, then the animal can be sold to someone else

dancefloor55
2 years ago
Reply to  JenniferKnorr

then it’s just like you put her in another stable

you pay ALL costs

pony
2 years ago
Reply to  dancefloor55

then the animal can also be sold to someone else

having regard to the documents of the Animal Protection Act. as a riding horse is no longer possible.

StRiW
2 years ago
Reply to  pony

This always goes, as long as no veterinary expert opinion permanently excludes an application as a riding horse. Ridiculous use is however already given, 1 times a week 5 min sitting on it.

What has been noted in the Seller’s purchase agreement is very binding. Since each buyer can decide on the use itself.

Punkgirl512
2 years ago

I’m a little shocked to think that if you put the horse as a sidewoman somewhere, you wouldn’t have to pay more.

Either you sell the horse explicitly as a hirer – and is sold! – or you keep it and of course pay the parking space and all other costs as before – only often keeps it cheaper than until then, because no infrastructure is needed.

Tips for not falling in on scams? Look at the stable, human well-being, usually you can only look at people in front of your head.

Punkgirl512
2 years ago
Reply to  JenniferKnorr

They’re looking for a lot. But then stop with the transition of property and property.

But I hope you will find an adequate solution for you!

Baroque
2 years ago

I don’t give my animals here. I’ll keep her until she dies. First, because it hadn’t been mine, they wouldn’t have touched me emotionally. On the other hand, because it is really bad for an old horse to get rooted and some don’t get over it and then die very quickly.

And then it’s easy to figure out why someone is looking for an applause. Mostly because he keeps private and, for example, because of the death of a predecessor, has no society anymore for his horse. But then why a horse that is offered as a sider? One of these is usually more expensive to keep because it already has one or other treatment-neededed vomiting. The cost of this is more likely to be borne by the fact that the animal has long since been closed to the heart than if one does not know it. So it is to be expected that there are few people who really are looking for a horse with breaks. Yeah, you save purchase costs. But if I take them back to the veterinarian in a few months, the money is still gone. In other words, in the case of a large number of interested parties, it is assumed that the treatments are saved at the expense of the horse. The rest rides on the march and buys a sidewalker and sells it as a riding horse.

Of course, you can adjust more favourably if you no longer need a riding facility. On the other hand, good riding floors are also necessary in order to give the horse an important “sick-engymnastics”. In this respect, I would rather put a young fit horse without a plant.

And with someone behind the house as a company for his horse always means that no professional is there if it has something acute. I know a lot about horse health, but the last few weeks in my Wallach’s life, I was really lucky to have expert support. The more I know, the more important it is to me that my stable operator is doing the main job and stays on the plant and does not look past the work shortly before and after.

Baroque
2 years ago
Reply to  JenniferKnorr

How old is the horse? If it’s at an age where it’s still clear with a move, an option would be to find a favorable retirement place in motion. There is also a regular control. If you’re in the clinic yourself, you have to order it.

ShadowTaking
2 years ago

If you give off your horse, it is no longer your property or property.

In the end, the new owners can do what they think is correct and you have no handling about it.

Submit as a supplement = sales

If you want to put it in a different way, where it can enjoy his pension as a contributor, but you still care about it, so it’s your property… Of course you have to bear all expenses.

You can also contractually adhere to what you are funny (not reitbarable, etc.) what the new owners then hold on is their thing.

ShadowTaking
2 years ago
Reply to  JenniferKnorr

Then it’s normal to your horse and you’ll have to pay everything you like. Verification, stable rental, additional food, veterinarian costs, etc.

hoekerlein
2 years ago

Yes the 1 Euro purchase contracts. I would offer them for free. Don’t push papers. If they are out of hand, the horse is often sold quickly.

hoekerlein
2 years ago
Reply to  JenniferKnorr

I’d be afraid. Many animals were also slaughtered. Look at the Dokus at Youtube. The horse mafia.

StRiW
2 years ago
Reply to  hoekerlein

The passport must stay with the horse. No matter who gave it.

Property certificate is also always up to the owner.

The property document can only be retained at the disposal.

hoekerlein
2 years ago

That’s right. There was a lot of stress at my place. The previous owners had posted a lot at Ebay classifieds.

StRiW
2 years ago

Honest!

No one takes a horse without purpose to put it in. (pension operation)

For this, the market is too crowded with horses that can be used for a few years.

This is the reason that certain subjects can partially buy hundreds of contributors.

If you do not have a good place, a horse can also simply be used in secondary use. Saves the horse a lot of suffering and so many inexperienced horse friends a lot of grief.