Minimor
Well-Known Member
word is that AMHA has voted to reopen hardshipping to horses 5 and older. Same fees as before I am told.
Just curious... Can you tell me a ballpark figure what it would cost to have a certified person measure/inspect on-site? [i wouldn't be too keen on the idea of meeting up in a parking lot somewhere; rather, what would it cost to have someone come on-site and do the deed?] I had thought of registering ours the last time it was available and never followed up. I don't really give a rats-butt whether ours are registered, but I'm getting old and Baby is probably going to outlive me so if I could make her more valuable/appealing by registering her, that might be a good idea.... I am neutral, but stand to profit as I am a former director and a certified measure so will be able to inspect horses and certify them for hardship registration.
Never adverse to a little income. Before anyone objects, when you want a horse inspected (not at a show) you are asking for my time and sometimes travel and that isn't free. My time like anyone else's has value. I actually had someone bring a horse to where I worked and had me inspect and measure in the parking lot. Took time from my work day. To top it off, she objected to my measurement and said, oh, he needs his hooves trimmed, just reduce it for that. Nope, he measured what he measured unless she wanted to get him trimmed and come back. Funny, she didn't want to do that and I am talking I got a measurement of 32 1/4 and she was insisting he was 32.
He was registered as 32 1/4.
The only horses we can eliminate are obvious dwarves, quality means nothing. Just sayin.
Ok - then I'll give kudos to those who deserve them.....the MEMBERS who recognized this was necessary!It was not the board but the membership present at the meeting who brought it back.
Revenue from hardships averaged around $80,000/year.
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