Badirene
VIP Member
New, just in time for ChristmasHmmm what a tasty looking animal, shall I hug it, or tug it?
New, just in time for ChristmasHmmm what a tasty looking animal, shall I hug it, or tug it?
Spill. It. ALL. Please.Claire is not someone that is easily led….. from
What I know the love bombing was a 2 way street…. They both had plans for each other and now it’s all come to a head over money …. As predicted by everyone who knows them both … it was car crash waiting to happen and the car most certainly crashed!
How she can pretend to be surprised "I woke up this morning to find Peggy had foaled" if we could all see Peggy was pregnant how could she not and keep it quiet. Peggy was massive. If she didn't know she was pregnant, shows how negligent she is.Absolutely, it’s because Peggy is tiny and the mules legs will have been really squashed inside her. Peggy is incredibly lucky to have not suffered any trauma from birthing such a big foal.
Absolutely, it’s because Peggy is tiny and the mules legs will have been really squashed inside her. Peggy is incredibly lucky to have not suffered any trauma from birthing such a big foal.It needs splints? It's like those dogs that can't breathe like pugs and frenchies, just because they can doesn't mean they should
Long time lurker her, my first post! As a horse owner myself, all new horses on any yard should be quarantined for a minimum of 2 weeks for a very nasty lethal disease caused strangles....sometimes symptomless and VERY contagious. There's actually been an outbreak in Essex over the last couple of months....you can bypass this quarantine if horses pass a strangles test from the vet, but even then you should never put a new horse(s) straight into an established herd, they should be turned out in an adjacent plot for at least a week to allow them to get to know each other without fear of fighting or harm......accident waiting to happen!Thread suggestion!!
Can’t believe she’s got more Shetlands. I thought you should always quarantine new equines onto a yard/place to make sure they’re clear of anything? I also thought you shouldn’t just chuck a new equine into a field with ones they’ve never met before? Her land is overgrazed already and she’s begging for donations every 2 mins. One equine is bloody expensive to keep, never mind taking more and more.
Shetland breeding programme anyone?
What an absolute idiot.