Monday, December 3, 2012

7 Things You Need to Be Aware of Prior To Purchasing a Racehorse

Prospective racehorse owners can learn a great deal from trainers about purchasing and keeping a racehorse. This can end with nothing more than an injured horse, or it can end rather lucratively. Horses are living creatures and are just not able to be predictable all the time. However, there are seven things that the potential racehorse buyer should take into account.

Can They Afford a Racehorse?

Even a jade ridden for pleasure can be expensive to maintain. A racehorse has a lot of requirements: food, shelter, and other specialists to take care of and train the animal. You must obtain, and pay for, permits and insurance coverage. Racehorses also have travel expenses as they move from one racecourse to the other over the season.

Lineage

The horse’s lineage should be known by the owner. Who’s the dam? Who’s the sire? Do you think we can find them and their ancestors in the General Stud Book? What are the names of the horse’s siblings, whether they are full or half? Have they done well on the racecourse?

The Way the Horse is Made

Seabiscuit ran with a strange, eggbeater action for a horse, but despite this he was a great champion. Different horses may not adjust for mistakes in a similar way. If possible, the potential buyer needs to see the horse run around several laps.

What Sex?

Does the owner want to see what a filly can do? Some fillies have been brilliant, of course, and Falmouth and Ribblesdale Stakes, among other races, are open only to fillies. Would the owner be interested in a gelding after considering that even champion geldings do not generate stud fees? Owners may return to the gelding’s parents for another, improbable champion, but it’s not the same.

On What Track Will the Horse be Raced?

Some horses do well on flat racing courses like Epsom or Doncaster. Other horses excel at National Hunt races, such as Cheltenham, or mixed race courses, such as Folkestone or Kempton Park. If a horse owner wants to sign up a horse for a National or mixed hunt after a flat racing career, they need to make certain that a racehorse trainer gets the horse ready for it. If horses do not like to jump or are afraid to do so, nothing will persuade them to take that leap.

If a Horse Doesn’t Win, Are They Willing to Keep It?

To say it differently, how can an owner justify the expenses for a horse that isn’t bringing in money?

What are the plans for the horse after he is through working?

A horse will only race for a few years at best. Even though it is true that a champion stallion has the ability to generate stud fees, and a champion mare has the ability to breed more horses, all racehorses cannot reproduce, and horses live as long as thirty years. Is the owner going to keep them on private property, sell them to someone who loves horses, send them to a slaughterhouse or another place or give them to a charitable organization?

Have you been thinking about racehorse ownership? Racehorse trainers are an ideal place to start when searching for racehorses for sale. For further information visit http://www.jonjooneillracing.com/.

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