Preparing To Sell
Your Horse
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The following is to be used as a
guideline only.
The first few days you place your horse
on the market are very important. Your
horse may not sell in that time, however
you may very well lose buyers if
you have not taken the time to properly
prepare your horse and yourself .
Make sure all of his paperwork for
registration is in order.
Before placing a single ad online…….
Make a Veterinarian Appointment
1.
Have your horses teeth checked
2.
Update vaccinations if they are due
3.
Ask your vet to check your horses heart
and lungs, and perhaps lunge him and ask
your vet to see if he notices any issues
that may be due to soundness.
Why?
Many issues in horses do go undetected,
and they will be picked up in a
pre-purchase exam.
Riding issues or weight may
simply be due to your horse needing to
have his teeth floated.
The above of course is optional. However
a buyer does appreciate the fact that a
veterinarian has looked at the horse
recently and although in-depth tests may
not have been performed, nothing out of
the ordinary was noted.
If something is noted, depending on the
severity of the issue, you may need to
delay selling your horse while treatment
is performed, or you can re-evaluate
what you would sell your horse for, and
perhaps what disciplines they would be
suitable for.
The above is not necessary and many
people do not do this.
Next
1.
Have your horses feet trimmed.
2.
Bath and groom your horse if possible
(no they won’t stay clean)
3.
Spend some time with your horse and ask
for a friends assistance. Make a list of
everything your horse is trained to do
both under saddle and on the ground.
(stand for mounting, tacking up, accepts
his bit, leads well, side passes, picks
up feet etc. )
Picture Time
These days it is very difficult to sell
a horse without photographs. People are
more likely to drive two hours to see a
horse they have either seen photographs
of or video.
If it is spring and your farm is muddy
and your horse is white and there is no
chance of getting him clean, either wait
to list him or use photographs taken
within the last year.
Recent photographs are preferable, and
you should have a number of them, in a
good size such as 600 pixels width and
height, that are clear, that you did not
take a mile away and in good lighting
(preferably outside)that show the
following.
1.
Conformation – No saddle, tack or boots.
Have your horse stand square and take
photographs from all 4 sides.
This allows potential purchasers to get
a good idea of your horses conformation,
if his legs are straight etc.
2.
While standing square take some close up
photographs of his legs from the front
side and back, as well as any brands or
scars he may have.
3.
Take some photographs of your horse
while he is moving without tack on. At
this point he can have boots on if you
prefer.
The real key to taking a nice
photograph is to not wait for a nice
picture, perfect shot or angle. Keep
clicking away, yes you will have a ton
of photographs to look through, but
chances are you will find much better
photographs.
4.
Tack up your horse and have photographs
taken of him being ridden. Basically you
are aiming to get a few nice photographs
of your horses movement, and abilities.
If he jumps, take some pictures of him
jumping, if his legs are horrible in the
air, don’t put up a bad photograph just
to show he can do it. You may also wish
to re-evaluate if you should market him
for jumping.
5.
Go through your old photographs of him
and see if there are any that a
potential purchaser may like to see.
Sometimes it is a good idea to have a
couple of friends help you. One to hold
your horse and one to stand behind you
and flap their hands, call, whistle etc.
to get them to keep their ears towards
you.
Make sure your horse is clean, and
groomed. Depending on your horses price
and discipline you may wish to have his
mane braided.
Indoor arenas are NOT the best place to
take either video or photographs. There
are exceptions to that rule, as some
have excellent lighting, and in some you
can get some decent lighting facing one
direction and not the other.
Before you decide which photographs you
will use or send to prospective buyers,
have a few other people look at them and
see what they think. Sometimes it is
hard to see that your beloved horses
head looks like a mule when you take a
photograph of him from a certain angle,
or that the way he is standing makes him
look like he is toeing in, when his feet
are perfectly straight.
If you can it is always a good idea to
remove manure or any other items that
may be in the background, that may take
away from your horse.
Your photographs do not have to
be perfect. The main keys are in focus,
good lighting, no arena aura’s floating
around the picture, and photographs
where your horse is the main attraction.
Video can help sell your horse. We won’t
go into detail, but if you can have a
video taken of your horse being ridden,
then it is a good idea if your horse has
nice movement.
Some horses are best seen in
person, and some just aren’t far enough
along under saddle, for it to look
pretty. So if in doubt, unless you are
asked for it, don’t make it a main
priority.
If you do take video………DON’T RECORD
SOUND, or if you can, mute the sound
when you edit the video.
It
is simply a distraction and does not
need to be there. Neither does music to
fill the void.
So now you have your photographs and
perhaps some video and your horse looks
so great, you are rethinking if you
should actually sell him. You think he
must be worth a million dollars and in
this frame of mind you are at risk of
pricing him too high.
No one can price your horse but you.
However the market does fluctuate, there
are other horses on the market, and no
matter how much better you think your
horse is, you cannot let that affect his
price.
Start by looking around on websites,
magazines etc. for horses with similar
breeding and training. You are going to
find some priced extremely high and then
some quite low. Make sure they are
actually comparable. A horse that is
doing flying lead changes, and has won
on top level circuits is going to be
worth more than yours.
Your horse is worth what your actual
horse is worth. He is not worth how much
you have paid in board, or your vet
expenses, or how much you paid to
trailer him etc. You cannot take what
you paid for him, add the money you
spent having him trained and say that is
his asking price.
You could end up with a
greenbroke, unregistered horse of
unknown parentage,
that
you are going to ask $4500 for.
Try to find the middle figure, give
yourself some room to negotiate, and
then ask your horse friends to be
completely honest with you, when you ask
them “how much would you pay for
____________?”
SO, remember to be prepared for an
answer you may not like, and don’t hold
it against them. You want them to be
honest. Most potential buyers are NOT
going to agree with what you are asking
for your horse. How to deal with that
will be in another article.
4.
Make a list of any not so
wonderful things he does also. No they
won’t ruin your chances of selling him.
It is very important to be honest about
any bad habits, injuries or riding
limitations your horse has before
someone drives 3 hours to see him. You
will also save yourself many emails
and phone calls if things that
are important are noted in the ad.
5. Trying to figure out what level of
rider your horse would be suitable for
can be quite the task. If you have been
riding him for years, he has been at the
same facility and is familiar with his
surroundings, you may feel that a
complete beginner can ride him. However
what would happen if he went to a new
facility with a new owner, who is just
learning to ride? Would he possibly
develop an attitude, start bolting,
misbehave? We simply don’t know. So what
can you do? Ideally
you
could send him off to a friend’s farm
for a week and have them ride him.
However, many of us do not have that
option. An alternative is to have an
experienced individual ride your horse
and take him out of his familiar
routine.
Ride him on a trail, tack him up,
lunge him, behave on him as if they are
a beginner rider to see how he would
handle someone pulling a little harder
on his mouth than you would, or giving
the wrong cue, or no cues, and see what
he does without you around.
Then ask that
person to be completely honest
about what level of rider they would put
on him and what areas he had issues
with.
Really the fact is that he could still
react differently with new owners and at
a new facility, but at least you tried,
and will feel more confident in putting
beginners on him if that is what you
feel he would be suitable for.
Just remember NO horse should ever be
sold as Bombproof. There is no such
thing. Just because a dog has never
bitten anyone, does not mean he never
will, and likewise, just because your
horse has never spooked, bolted or
reared does not mean he never will. So
you can’t guarantee that. What you can
say if he has not done these things, is
that he has never done them while you
have owned him and under various
situations and surroundings.
Placing Your Ads
Your best bet is to write your
advertisement in a word document and
save it to your computer. Place the
photographs you plan to use, in various
sizes in a separate folder, so you know
where they are when you need to upload
them.
This will also save you the time of
rewriting your ad every time you wish to
post it. You simply just copy and paste
it.
Always include basic information when
posting your ad.
“15 year old quarter horse, rides,
$1500.00, no photographs available” will
likely not get you much of a response.
However on the other hand it is proven
that people do not like to read a great
deal, so they will first look at the
photographs and then they will scan your
ad.
Sometimes it is a good idea to place
your ad in point form.
Some people believe that the less they
place in the ad, then the more responses
they will receive with questions
regarding the item.
This is true, but you also end up
answering a lot of ads from people
looking for a completely different horse
because you failed to mention your horse
is not broke to ride and they need a
trained horse, or your horse is too
small, too expensive, trained for the
wrong discipline etc.
So include the basics.
Horses
Name
Breed
Registered
Age
Height
Level of rider needed
Trained in what discipline and what
disciplines does it have potential for?
Optional information:
Price (I always include this to avoid
the inevitable “How Much?”)
Are you negotiable on the price?
Shown & Placed
Temperament
Vices
Riding Limitations (due to injury)
Information on its pedigree
Trail Ridden
Traffic Safe
Clips
Baths
Lunges
Ties
Cross ties
Jumping? How high…
Neck rein
Turn on Haunches
And this list could go on and on………..
Basically you can include whatever you
like, you can just write “horse for
sale, call if interested” the response
may not be the same, but it is up to
you.
You should now have everything
together that you need or may need to
start placing ads for your horse.