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I would love to work on a throubread horse farm any weir mainly in MI are their any around MI

2006-11-25 04:01:00 · 5 answers · asked by jetrose2000 1 in Sports Horse Racing

5 answers

If you work on a Thoroughbred farm, you're going to start at the bottom-- general maintenance and cleanup, i.e., stall-mucking. Much of the work you'll start out doing will be hard manual labor that doesn't involve hands-on work with the horses. The work is tough and the pay isn't good. Also, there may not be any health benefits-- which you may not care about until you desperately need them.

Over time, you'll get to work with the horses more. While horses are wonderful animals to be around, they are also large animals that can behave unpredictably, and anyone who makes their living handling horses knows that it isn't a question of whether they will ever get hurt by a horse, it's a question of when and how bad.

This is not to try to discourage you from working with horses, but you have to understand realistically that working with horses can be hard and painful. It can involve days that begin before the sun is up, when the temperature is below freezing, that don't end until hours after dark. It can mean being dirty and hot and tired.

And the truth is that it just doesn't pay very well. I have a friend who worked for 15 years at a Standardbred training center. She broke green two-year-olds, trained racehorses, went to the track with the racehorses, and had her assistant trainer's credential. After fifteen years of this, she was living in a run-down trailer that didn't have electricity, plumbing or gas, she had no health benefits, no savings, her car was 17 years old and had 190,000 miles on it.

When she got an eye infection and ended up having to use the left-over ointment from her dog's eye infection to treat it because she didn't have money for a doctor, she decided that she'd had enough and quit the job. She works as a pari-mutuel clerk now and has a "day job" as well.

She doesn't regret the years she spent working with the horses, but memories are all she came away with after 15 years.

2006-11-27 10:14:48 · answer #1 · answered by Karin C 6 · 0 0

There are some thoroughbred farms but there are many more Standardbreds if you're looking for racing.

2006-11-25 21:00:49 · answer #2 · answered by emily 5 · 0 0

cool... take a shot at it! It soundz fun! :-)

2006-11-25 23:09:18 · answer #3 · answered by Nikki R 2 · 0 0

go for it

2006-11-25 12:28:34 · answer #4 · answered by John 1 · 0 0

http://www.horsenetwork.com/

I hope that works...

2006-11-25 12:12:01 · answer #5 · answered by megan_trigg2000 2 · 0 0

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