- Aug 1, 2015
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If you're keeping them at home, then you have to have a place to store hay, a shelter for the horses, and a place to store equipment. I don't think you quite realize just how expensive startup costs are. Not just for horses.Oh, that said though, I don’t think I would board. I think I’d keep them here. Especially cause even if it’s not technically enough land, it’s likely way more than they would get in a boarding or lesson barn. But I guess boarding has the advantage of having other horses so I would only have to have one horse instead of two and it might actually work out to be cheaper in some cases? Cause a lot of the full board places include all the grain and hay and everything. At least around here.
There's a reason I have wanted a horse for my whole life and haven't gotten one, and that reason is cost. Maybe you can afford standard upkeep. What if the horse colics and needs surgery? Do you go into debt, or do you put your horse down? Or, maybe your horse gets into the grain, contracts laminitis, and is permanently crippled. What do you do then? Keep a useless horse for the rest of its days? I never buy an animal unless I have a contingency plan because disasters can and will happen.
I know a lady with horses. One of her drafts came down with canker and took two years to heal. Those vet visits weren't cheap. What I'm saying is that horses are great, but not something to step into blindly. Maybe you'd be lucky. But I prefer to stack my odds.
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