susanne said:
Neither Grace 67 nor Renolizzie said they were LOOKING for a horse in the $500 range.
Renolizzie said that she was looking for a driving mini in the $1500-2000 range, but FOUND one for $500.
It seems people are getting bent out of shape because someone else OFFERED their horse at that price.
Susanne, I believe the comments are referring to the post where CZP1 says:
CZP1 said:
I am helping two friends look for a solid "B" sized horse. They are having a hard time finding a horse too. Though as Field of Dreams said, I could have sold my horse at least 10 times. He isn't for sale
and have turned down a pretty penny even in todays market.
The problem here is that there are great horses available but not in their price range $500 max. for horse is what they want to pay.
No one was referring to Grace67 or Renolizzie.
Minimor said:
I think a lot of the problem is so many people refuse to pay more than $500 for a well trained driving horse; therefore, people that have one that they would sell for $1500 to $3000 don't even bother to advertise--they just keep the horse. I've been in Minis for ten and a half years now and from the start I found it incredibly discouraging that trained driving minis sell for under $1000. I remember seeing ads for $300 to $500 (and of course I don't remember or even know how well those horses were actually trained) and then one day I saw one advertised for $800. I thought now that's more like it, then I read the ad closer & saw that price included his cart. There's no way I'd let any of our trained geldings go that cheap.
I agree with you. In a way the minis do themselves a disservice by being so easy to train as it means any yahoo thinks they can put a harness on their little gelding (stallion, more likely), teach him to pull something and call him "trained to drive." Hey, it was easy, it only took a week! Why
not price him cheap??
And then since potential buyers see "trained driving minis" going for $500, they think "why should I pay $1,500 for this one when I can get that one for so much less?" Then folks with better trained horses are forced to drop their prices to get them sold and boom- you can't get squat for your priceless gelding. It's so depressing!
The other side of that coin is that folks who can train their own (or think they can) see no reason to spend lots of money on a finished driving horse. They just buy that cheap prospect and train him up themselves and then sell him cheap when they need to. Why bother shelling out big bucks for fancy-smancy stuff unless you're into big-time showing?
Folks who bought one of those cute little horses for their kids also tend to dump them (and their equipment) for cheap just to get rid of the feed bill when the kids move on. It all adds up!
In 4-H or most larger breeds geldings are highly valued as performance animals and are worth their weight in gold! Not with the minis. To geld a stallion is to make him unmarketable according to many people and training him to drive is a last-ditch effort to make him worth something or "get some use out of him." Those who know how great a trained gelding is will hold onto him rather than sell him for far less than he's really worth and so you'll rarely see him on the market. If he IS sold, he'll probably go by word of mouth long before an advertisement hits the internet. That's why it's important to network when you're looking for a horse like this.
Renolizzie said:
When I started this process I just didn't realize how few horses there are that are trained to pull a cart. I guess I didn't think it was common since this is cowboy country but still...
The part of the country you're in can make a big difference. Here in the Pacific NW there are MANY well-trained driving minis, but that's because we live in an active combined driving area with several big AMHA/R driving trainers in residence as well. Due to the sheer volume of available driving horses their prices are well within the range you've discussed and often lower as they are not a rarity. Now that doesn't mean they are high-quality horses or that they've had high-quality training for that price, but they'll drive and they're sound and quiet. From what other forum members in cowboy country have said finding a miniature in your area who can not only pull a cart but was trained to do so properly is a bit more of a venture and I wish you the best of luck on it. You may be better off looking out of your geographic area via the internet and having a cheaper horse shipped for the same total price you were willing to pay for a more expensive local horse.
Leia