Pferd wurde in der Box getreten was nun?
Hallo,
ich miste die Box meines Pferdes selbst während ich das mache kommt es auf den Vitafloor. Als ich heute morgen mein Pferd dann wieder in die Box stellen wollte stand auf einmal dort ein anderes Pferd (bei offener Tür) am Futtertrog und hat Ihn als er rein kam richtig mit beiden Hinterbeinen getreten. So früh morgens ist niemand außer mir am Stall die Tür des anderen Pferdes war auch offen. Nun ist es sehr Wahrscheinlich (Ich bin mir zu 99Prozent sicher) , da der Stallbursche gestern Abend dort nicht richtig zu gemacht hat und das Pferd die Tür selbst auf gemacht hat. Ich habe das andere Pferd nicht beim reinlaufen in unsere Box gesehen, da es gerade das Kraftfutter meines Pferdes gefressen hat welches hinter einer Holzwand ist…
Nun, ich bin schon ziemlich sauer mein Pferd hat zwar keine offensichtlichen Verletzungen davon getragen aber das wir sicherlich einen riesigen Bluterguss geben! Und dabei haben wir Ihn erst gestern wieder aus der Klinik geholt und es ist jetzt sehr wichtig wenn nicht sogar Essenziel das er trainiert wird so der Tierarzt.
Noch eine Anmerkung es kommt sehr oft vor das der Stallbursche die Türen nicht richtig zu macht, das ist einer der Gründe wieso ich es selber mache.
Aber welche Konsequenzen soll ich jetzt ziehen? Nur mit dem Stallburschen zu reden wird nicht genügen und es ist ja auch ein schaden an meinem Pferd entstanden.
You should talk to the stable owner, that’s really a NoGo! Of course for your horse, but also for the or any other horse. Lucky that you didn’t get seriously hurt and luckily that the other horse “only” has been eating, but that can also have bad consequences… How do you see the other horse owners? I would be more sorrowful and honestly more sour in place of the Besi, whose horse went for a walk. I can’t do that! The Stallbesi is responsible for ensuring that the horses are properly kept. And if his staff doesn’t get this, he’ll have to get something.
a completely unfounded thought you have to prove first.
we have on the stall 3 horses with special closures or additional door locks, as they know how to get up. if you put them behind a door with another lock system, they’ll be working until they get out, like the door opens.
most of them are the owners themselves who deal with the security systems for the doors sloppy.
how are your doors secured? hooks with splint? lock? double bars? spring hooks? ring lock with key outside and special spring inside (the only ones that are lockable), spring lever…? I still know about 8 other systems, so it’s already important to know the closure system and whether the horse with the head over the door into the stallgasse or not.
then the question – where have you been?
neither such a door can be opened silently nor a horse can reach the neighborbox silently via the stallgasse. If the door wasn’t there, you should’ve seen it passing by, and when you came back, the open box door would have come to you. a sliding door is quite loud when opening, and a “normal” boxing door always goes out and the open door is clearly visible when you stop in the stallgasse.
I had to googlen for your “vitafloor”.
long talk short sense – order veterinarian and talk to the stall owner. with “that surely gives a bleeding” is no help. the veterinarian notes whether what happened and the stall owner takes the bill for it and possible treatment. in the normal case, this is due to the operational duty.
but there is a great but: You are a partial debt. if the food is in the food nativity, you have to close the door of the box, even if you leave the box for a short time unattended to get your horse.
Whether the reward slave (sorry – it must be now) or the owner of the other horse has not really closed the door, the accident would have been avoidable. on the one hand, you should have noticed that the door of the other horse is open when you came back with your horse or what to hear was the door to your box open while you were not there.
the opening of boxing doors is probably one of the odds that is barely accustomed to a horse owner, although it can really go out badly.
If I’m thinking right now, you’ll have to pay the vet yourself. Talk to the stall owner. Maybe he’s a cult.
and if nix actually happened – why then ask.
purely interessential: why do you mix yourself – and why is this allowed in you?
Hello,
So “unfounded” I do not find my suspicion, because as I said, the horses often occur, e.g., just after the mist at once in the court. And it’s not always the same! The horse has no owner on the farm it was made available to the stable owner before the purchase and he was on the way all day. I didn’t hear it because my horse was at the Vitafloor in another stable tract, especially since the box of the other horse is not even in sight, but at the other end of our stable tract. It is a sliding door, which if entrance to the door is not properly locked, but the stable helper only pulls on it and if not locked it is apparently not his problem….Even if he sees horses that break it doesn’t matter to him, he doesn’t have time. Or do you think it’s normal that’s what you’re doing?
I mixed myself as I was not satisfied with the stable hygiene before. Especially, very spicy hay is fed. And that with the doors. Since for the owner the material costs (hey/spinning…) are no matter how I do it now even since it is probably back at the stable helper….And I am the only one that makes it completely self, the other mists/feed in the evening but again in my own boxes.
LG
The stable boy is not your contact person in this case.
Here you have to talk to the man responsible for the stable, the supervisor of the stable. As a rule, this liability is insured and must also be incurred for damages caused.
My tip: Stay as objective as possible. Hystery is usually counterproductive in the case.
there are no stubborns.
Of course, you’re right – it’s a degrading, very old-fashioned formulation, which unfortunately is still common. In this case, I took up the word of the questioner. Of course he’s a stable worker, or a stable employee.
merci 😉
we have no vitafloor either. as you have certainly seen in my profile, we put our horses to ventilate on the ride
What are you doing? Are you going to court?
Otherwise, talk to the person responsible that this is not properly closed.
But this is just a guess of the FSin. Horses are quite able to open simple tumblers. In this respect, your recommended conversation would be the only thing that comes into question.
Evt. connected with the request to install other bars.
Yeah, and that’s the point. To express the presumption. After all, you also pay for such accommodation.
Don’t change that’s not properly closed.
our special “houdini” gets doors with spring bars, which are attached outside, and these doors are difficult to open because you have to lift the whole door at the same time as pulling the lock. After standing on the graze for the third time in the morning, an additional safety chain with a firefighting carabiner was cut.
when the carabiner is closed, the horse doesn’t even try to get out.
if the carabiner is not hooked, the wallach does not need 15 seconds to get out.
Dito. Beautiful WE
If the horse can open it, it won’t be properly closed. Then I can save it.
It is not a matter of making a mistake, but of not matching.
Nothing to reinterpret, but only take the written one.
You had done it only as a fact that it wasn’t completed.
Therefore my note with the “self-opening power” of the horses.
For so many years I have been on horseback riding facilities to know that from some of the other side (usually farm operators) incorrectly perceived communication a giant swirl can arise up to termination, complaint, attachment of the horse in front of the farm etc.
Say yes, accusations no.
What is a solution?
They can dismiss or dismiss the stable boy, because there was a breach of duty.
The question is, of course, whether you would get a quick replacement that also works reliably.
In this respect, a conversation is always the better choice!
Perhaps the boxes can also be provided with better bars, which even the most negligent operator cannot let go.
nee. no one can dismiss or dismiss. you do not belong to the stall and the breach of duty is merely a presumption.
neither is a box door loud nor a horse running over the stallgasse. they should have heard the horse and not let their own box door open when food is in the crib.