Log In

Home
    - Create Journal
    - Update
    - Download

LiveJournal
    - News
    - Paid Accounts
    - Contributors

Customize
    - Customize Journal
    - Create Style
    - Edit Style

Find Users
    - Random!
    - By Region
    - By Interest
    - Search

Edit ...
    - Personal Info &
      Settings
    - Your Friends
    - Old Entries
    - Your Pictures
    - Your Password

Developer Area

Need Help?
    - Lost Password?
    - Freq. Asked
      Questions
    - Support Area



Mae ([info]sadisticferret) wrote in [info]otf_wank,
@ 2010-02-23 00:09:00


Previous Entry  Add to memories!  Tell a Friend!  Next Entry
Fugly Wank of the Day
One fine day in February, every angry equestrian's favorite blog, Fugly Horse of the Day, had an anonymous guest blogger post about the many irritations of being a horse trainer, particularly when beginning riders are involved. Said post is very, very angry indeed, earning a figurative "you go, girl!" from Fugly herself. Opinions in the comments, however, are divided on whether she's 100% correct, right on several points but kind of snotty and condescending about it, or right on a few points but mainly just a wannabe know-it-all with a god complex. And they all lived angrily (but very happy about it) ever after.

I'll expose my bias and admit that I think that most of the wank is coming from the article itself, but there are a few gems to be found in the comments as well. But enough of that, have some quotes.

From the article:
I hate all of your tack. I swear every time I go to a new job I find the exact same crappy tack, tack that I wouldn’t put on my horses even with a gun to my head. It is the tack that your “friends” gave you because surprise they realized that it sucked so they gave it to you. The saddles you have are dry rotted and synthetic (I don’t care what you paid for them, a saddle that is $300 or lower new is crap), they nose dive on the withers and swim all over the back, so you have to cut the horse in half to get them to sort of stay on and then you have to balance the saddle on the horse while trying to ride, because it slides all over the place. A good western saddle new is $800 up, and tolerable one will be $500- $800.
---
Your way wasn’t working, that is why you called me, so just shut up and listen. I love it when I get a new client who regardless to what I say or accomplish with their horse still thinks that they know what they are doing or their way is better. You don’t. That is why you called me in the first place.

From the comments:
I used to burst screaming into The Vapors song, “I Think I’m Turning Japanese”, grab my hair and stomp around when I finally snapped.
I was mildly famous for it.

---
Well, I’m glad some people are keeping horse ownership to be something only the rich can afford. I’m so glad that the multitude of reasons I have a synthetic (including health reasons that preclude me from having a heavy and expensive “real” saddle) cause someone who has nothing to do with me or my horse so much grief.
---
Newsflash to people who use the “life happens” excuse: Unless your job involves riding horses, NONE of us have time to ride our horses! We do it anyway. I’d rather function on 4 hrs of sleep than function in a state of bitchiness because I didn’t get to ride my horse.

Edited to make it a little clearer which quotes come from which section. Sorry for the confusion!


(Read comments) - (Post a new comment)


[info]white_tean
2010-02-23 06:30 pm UTC (link)
I'm lucky enough to have horses (thankyou Mom and Dad), and I have an arrangement with a friend who had to sell her horse , who is a very competent rider and rides my mare the one night a week when it's family dinner night. It's a good arrangement, because I trust her and we communicate with each-other and get on the same page (and my mare is the type to actually thrive with a seven day work week).

Since I started that, she rides another woman at the stable's horse once a week as well now, and the son of another rider also rides someone's very, very nice horse (and previously rode another) because she's too busy with work to at the moment, and currently our shared instructor is riding my Mom's horse a couple days a week. Anyway, just saying there are some opportunities where if you're still connected with people with horses at an agistment centre and demonstrate that you can school/exercise a horse with skill, you can find people who would like it if their horse was worked a bit more regularly than they can do. It's a lot dependent on the culture of the stables however unfortunately - it wouldn't work at most places I've been, but the owners at our place don't want to be nosy past making sure everyone who rides has signed an insurance waiver.

And in these cases at my stables, the riders don't have to do anything in return except possibly dump pre-made hays/dinner in. I've heard from people who had similar arrangements as your childhood one, and I know there are people who'd be happy with that, though more because if they're part board they'd like someone to take over a couple days a week of mucking out/feeding.

(Reply to this)(Parent)


(Read comments) -

 
   
Privacy Policy - COPPA
Legal Disclaimer - Site Map