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- #21
abigalerose
Songster
- Feb 22, 2016
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Well yeah, that's what I'm saying. Initially I thought studding one out would help pay for him as well as my other horses, becuase I didn't realize how costly it is to have stallions, so now I'm thinking, if I ever get into reining enough that I need a horse, at least if I have a stallion I would have the potential of making back at least a tiny percentage of what I put into him. Id probably still be losing money but maybe not quite as much. And yes, the plan would be to breed him to one of my mares first and campaign his foal when it was old enough, to help out with his advertising. And if I am into reining I may need more than one reining horse anyways.
Reining is my ultimate goal, I'm just trying to find ways to make it a little easier on the bank account. Even if I am spending more money than I'm making, every little bit helps.
I also have a place I could keep one seperate from the rest of the horses, becuase my big pasture is to the right of my barn, and on the other side of the barn is my garage, and then after that, my house, and finally on the other side of my house is a small area (about 1 acre) with a little building, that I would fence with pipe fencing, and then fix up the building as a stall, maybe two. And keep a stallion there, with a mini gelding or mini dokey gelding as company, as I know a lot of people who do that and it seems to work.
Please re-read these. As I've already said, I have a place completely seperate for a stallion IF I did get one, in the DISTANT future, and I just said that I now realize I won't make money with him, or break even, but getting a small amount of money from stud fees just to put back into him would help.
Now on to working with stallions first, my cousin has one. She's moving in with me. She's going to show me how to work with stud horses. Her stud is for her to do barrel racing on, she's training him herself (she's been training for 10 years and she's going to help me with horse training as well) and if he proves himself she's going to stud him out. If not she'll geld him. She's already bred him to one of her mares, sold the foal as a weanling for $3,500. Studding him out is going to be her way of putting a small amount back into what she's put into him. Basically what I want to do, but she's into barrel racing and I like reining.
As for training horses, right now I'm already doing it, I advertise myself as having very little experience and that I'm wanting to do it to gain experience at this time. I'm charging $100 a month. Which obviously is VERY cheap. I had an ad posted for 2 weeks, which I had to take down becuase I had 20, yes, 20, people call me wanting me to work with their horses. Obviously I can't train 20 horses a month. So I'm taking what I can right now, and i told everyone else I could save their number and call them as soon as I get time and see if they're still interested.
Now, maybe I personally won't ever make any money with horses, considering I don't have a big farm and imported horses and years of experience ect, but I do believe some people can make money with them.