Quote:
Now wait, are you talking about leasing a horse to keep at your farm, or are you talking about leasing a lesson-barn horse that would then continue to live at its lesson barn? The two things are TOTALLY different, pretty much unrelated in fact.
Leasing a horse to live at your house usually means you are responsible for all expenses, period, every last thing including vet bills, and usually need to have mortality/loss-of-use insurance in case of Bad Things.
Leasing (or half-leasing) a horse at a commercial barn is more like a frequent-rental agreement. You usually pay half (or full) board as your lease fee; in some cases you may pay a portion of farrier or vet bills but often you don't. You only get to ride the horse on specified days at specified times in specified ways (as specified in what is usually a fairly detailed contract). The contract usually (anyhow, SHOULD) be very explicit about who is liable for what costs in the event of Bad Things, and what happens if the horse is unrideable for some days/weeks/months. (At a lesson barn, often they will let you use a different horse if loss of use is more than just an occasional day here or day there; but this is not going to be the case if you are half- or full-leasing a privately owned boarded horse).
(edited to add: *should* be a very detailed contract. However, I leased the barn owner's field hunter my senior year of high school on the strength of "you wanna lease Tinseltown? Pay full board every month, and you can ride him every day except when I am hunting him, and show him however much you can afford, but you have to do what I tell you to get/keep him fit for the hunting field" "oh, okay, sure!"
Any picky little legalistic clauses that shoulda been in a contract were more or less covered by the unspoken "you've ridden here for nine years now, you know what you are supposed to do and not do, and if you screw up I will kill you and you will never sit on a horse again anywhere in the tri-state area" LOL Really, a contract would probably be better
)
Pat
your last paragraph kind of sums it up
I would not want to lease a horse at my own place, would do a lease at someones barn, that way you have the barn and possible arena to use as well. Don't know if I'd go the lease route. but, worth looking into at least.
thanks for clarifying the lease for me welsummer and patandchickens.