Pferd wurde gequält?

Hi! Ich hab mein Pferd seid 1 Woghe und es kommt aus Spanien. Dort hatte es eine schwere vergangenheit. Das einzige was davon übrig geblieben sind sind ihre narben auf der Nase. Weiß jemand wodurch solche narben kommen bzw. was sie da mit ihr gemacht haben könnten?

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Aylamanolo
1 year ago

Yes, these scars come from Sereta or Serreta. I don’t know how this is written. You can googlen. That’s like a shackle band for horses at the caappzaum. Animal torment, but is unfortunately very often used. The Spaniards are going to “robust” with the horses.

I was a couple of times in Portugal at the trainer Senhor Luis Valenca. He formed (reell!) Lusitanos for the international market. As ancillary service, holidaymakers with a certain basic level – bronz, RA about – could get individual lessons with him. The horses he had for the pupils were fine and wide. But once he gave me a new horse, and I found it strangely blunt. I asked Senor Luis after that, if it was on me. He said, “No, this is a horse from Spain and the Spaniards are very hard and take the soul of their horses.” Almost he would have spit out of contempt.

However, I must admit that the Portuguese have not been green for the Spanish since Philipp II.

Well, Senhor Luis also used the carcass at the young horses. But it was wrapped thickly with KLebeband and often with sheep fur over it!

StRiW
1 year ago

Serreta Kappzaum leaves such traces.

No the horse was not tormented, it was “only” made typical of land.

Other countries other customs!

Why one also takes such horses to Germany, I get away completely.

80% of the horses that are badly treated here are better than most well-treated horses down there.

Except to strengthen animal suffering down there, nothing happens.

Baroque
1 year ago
Reply to  StRiW

If it’s a week now, hopefully it’s still in quarantine and has a current cogging test. Because they are not only cheap, but also to blame for the fact that we are once again cultivating strongylidene larvae. Make PCR to find out where the big strongylidens have been dragged back everywhere, which we had started in Germany.

EIA and other infections are also incredibly fun and all this is because someone thinks that a few thousand euros in the purchase would somehow fall into weight and it looked so cute in the photo.

StRiW
1 year ago
Reply to  Baroque

The bad thing is known to me are two stocks that had to be partially killed because of epidemic. “Rettung” from bad attitude.

This was a fun for the liability, which only replaced the worth of the respective horses who had really loved each other.

Baroque
1 year ago

Yes, for the owners who “buy good” here, their animal loves, somehow even more blazing when symptomlessly has to be killed than when it is tipped out of the rags and dies entirely by itself. A catastrophe like that. Both for our loving private horse owners and for economically dependent and also loving professionals. And that’s just because someone had to buy cheap and thinks “that with the quarantine I’ll save myself, that’ll cost money and then I’d be at the same price as if I bought a healthy, correctly pulled horse here.”

FunnyFanny
1 year ago

This is m.E. from a carcass/serreta that has been misused.

pony
1 year ago

You can find these “nears” at horses all over the world.

they come from when this helped stay in the head for years and is a bit too tight, not tormenting.

the horse is considerably overweight – it already forms speckbeulen. the speckbeulen are a clear indication that the metabolism of the material is shortly before the deglomeration. then it has EMS – equine metabolic syndrom, a severe, chronic disease that can also lead to death.

so – very urgently reduce food. raw ration, cure, no so-called feed, no juice feed, wee to the end of the season can be done because the grass now has no more many nutrients. next year would then be to end juli meadow tabu.

Conclusion – more work, less food.

Baroque
1 year ago
Reply to  Mariellayy

The horse is dangerously overweight. And our winters don’t judge it. We’re not in Siberia. Dosing hay and meadow. And why isn’t the horse in a quarantine station? Is it so fun to give to others all kinds of bullies?

RubyybuR
1 year ago
Reply to  pony

Don’t think it looks like it’s from the halter more Serreta

pony
1 year ago
Reply to  RubyybuR

I think that’s how you look at the horses that you’ve left for years. I’ve seen live. mostly this looks much worse. sometimes they grow hard on the head.

pony
1 year ago

that is not too thick. that is adipous.

Spaniards are extremely lightweight.

what they do is ten times what they need.

have you seen my life in tv with 300kg? your horse looks like that.

in the rest, there is a punitive feeding over. the horses have already been taken away because of this.

So again:

Your horse is fat. F E T T. sickly fat.

Baroque
1 year ago

You can put the horse in such a way that it has normal weight as quickly as possible. If they have free access to hay and/or meadow, they usually need about 4 to 6 hours of strenuous work a day. Does that match your “orderly”?

Igelalarm
1 year ago

Maybe it’s also scars of claws at least it looks like that for me 👐🏼

Hjalti
1 year ago

Typical serreta scars. And surely this is not the only thing your horse has carried away. You don’t see the scars on his soul from outside.

Ladenhut
1 year ago

Nothing against you, but I hope that the Spaniard fashion will flatten with us again. Many people here don’t get along with the “increated” horses, and then blame the horse.

Hjalti
1 year ago
Reply to  Mariellayy

One should be aware, above all, that one supports a animal-traumatic system. Like puppy trade.

Ladenhut
1 year ago
Reply to  Mariellayy

Most people shouldn’t get a horse. Just had an emergency at the stable this morning, which would have been absolutely avoidable.

Hennenfeuer
1 year ago

Especially the good horses stay there. What goes abroad are usually animals with which the nix can start. For a variety of reasons. All Spaniards from Spain, whom I have met so far, were in some form noticeable. And always victims of pity and overestimation of the owners.

Urlewas
1 year ago

There the horses are dressed with a sharp-edged gaiter.

ChampagneLady
1 year ago

Gives various ways why your parents’ horse has such scars.
Unfortunately, most horses from the area.

Otilie1
1 year ago

that might come from blows, is your horse sensitive when you line it up?

Otilie1
1 year ago
Reply to  Mariellayy

then she was guaranteed to beat her arms

Urlewas
1 year ago
Reply to  Otilie1

The scars on the nose do not come through blows, but through a hard drum.

Hjalti
1 year ago

She was touched. See the typical Serreta scar on the nose…

pony
1 year ago

or she was never touched.