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View Full Version : High hay costs - Horses being abandoned !


Monty
11-30-2006, 03:32 AM
This is from - The Horse online news -



High Hay Costs Push Up Cases of Horse Abandonment
by: The Associated Press
November 29 2006 Article # 8268

High prices and scarce supply for hay this season are leading to abandoned horses, according to animal-welfare groups.

"This is the first year where people are literally just opening the gate and kicking them (the horses) out," said Chuck Fisher, ranch manager at Equine Outreach in Bend, Ore., which rescues and rehabilitates horses and puts them up for adoption.

Just last week, he said, he'd gotten a call about taking in three tame horses found starving in Ochoco National Forest.

A year ago, he bought hay for $125 per ton. This year, he is paying $200, Fisher told The Bulletin newspaper in Bend.

"Hay, if you can find it, is very high right now," said Rodger Huffman, program manager of livestock identification at the Oregon Department of Agriculture. "That situation is statewide."

Tony Aceti, owner of Hay Depot in Bend, said he is selling his premium hay for $200 per ton, and oats-and-alfalfa hay for $140.

"There's people that just can't afford it," he said. "It's sad."

Huffman said that cattle are being auctioned off in record numbers this year as a result of hay costs. Hay shortages last winter prompted many ranchers to hoard as much as they could buy and store this summer, which resulted in the large price jump, he said.

Fisher said that between the high cost of feed, fuel and fertilizer, horse owners feel they are just "out of options."

Aceti said that until recently, it was easy to find local farmers who grew hay and sold it cheaply from their property. But then developers bought up the farmland and built subdivisions, reducing the local hay supply considerably.

He said he can usually count on having sold 20 percent of his inventory by the start of December. But this year, he said, 80 percent of what he bought over the summer is already gone.

Lynn Ouchida, community outreach director for the Humane Society of Central Oregon, said where the farms and ranches once were, ranchettes have sprung up to take their place, many of them bought by people who always dreamed of owning a horse.

Some of them "just don't know what they're getting in to," Ouchida said. "You can buy an inexpensive horse around here, but it's the maintenance that really costs."

Fisher said that hay and supplements can run a horse owner at least $60 per month, depending on how large and how active the animal is.

Abandonment of a horse is a misdemeanor, with a maximum fine of $2,500, according to the Deschutes County sheriff's office.

appyday
11-30-2006, 03:38 AM
:(

CarolU
11-30-2006, 03:42 AM
That's heartbreaking.

It's also a LOT to pay for hay! I don't know why they can't bring it in from Idaho...it's right next door and not any higher then here....about $115 a ton.

Terry Wallace
11-30-2006, 03:42 AM
Horses get turned out here fairly often and often in the forest.....to be found nearly starved to death later...

Right now alfalfa is $8.99 a bale for compressed hay....it weight about 55-60 lbs per bale... higher for non-compressed

appyday
11-30-2006, 03:45 AM
I got some GOOD hay for the new llamas the other day..got 4 nice bales at $10.85 bale...baby llama loves it...

motorgypsy
11-30-2006, 04:19 AM
We're also running into increased hay prices and shortage. This is why doing away with the slaughter houses really worries me. People don't want to watch their horses die, don't want to pay to euthanize them and have them buried or carried away, don't want to feed an old or lame horse, so they do the same thing they do with their dogs and cats - turn them loose near where they think someone will take them in. It's very scary.

Andrea G.
11-30-2006, 05:11 AM
We pay $16-$18 per bale in Southern California for Bermuda Grass or Alfalfa! It sounds cheaper every where else! Our bales are much heavier -about 80-100 pounds.

Monty
11-30-2006, 06:08 AM
:oops: Haven't had to pay more than $2.00 a bale for alfalfa mix - last winter spring - it was up to $4.50 to $5 a bale - But - we try to reserve it early in the summer -
We are getting in 2 more horses this coming week - for a total of 6 - so next summer will order 10 or 12 ton - should last a year .

appyday
11-30-2006, 02:07 PM
Oh BTW someone in OH has 600 bales of NICE alfalfa mix for $2 bale...ON EBAY

Terry Wallace
11-30-2006, 02:16 PM
By the time I would go to Idaho or any other state... it won't be $115.00 a ton! It would make that $3.80 a bale hay be at least $5.80 not counting a day to get there and a day to get back... by the time it was all said and done, its hardly worth the trip...UNLESS you are forced to travel due to inavailability of hay in the area.

I feel for the people who own one or two horses, as they rarely own a big flat bed trailer to GET hay with, let alone a truck to pull it and be allowed the time off to go get it....

I have seen the price of the "hobby horse" upkeep nearly triple in the past two years.... it is scary...I agree with MG's... we already see wandering horses here... too bad most are not permanently ID'd and traceable to an owner.... ;-)

Jane Hurl
11-30-2006, 05:46 PM
While your hay prices make my head reel, the idea of people turning horses loose to starve makes me see red. I can't believe the inhumanity of that!

Abejita
11-30-2006, 05:58 PM
too bad most are not permanently ID'd and traceable to an owner....
First I agree it is awlful to let your horse loose like that BUT lets say that they are traceable..so leave them in their pastures to starve? Are there any auction houses nearby and again if they dont have the vehicles to transport hay how are they going to transport horses to a sale?I guess they could be shot but i bet many of those 'hobby horse' people dont own a gun..and if they really cant afford hay, again how are they gonna pay any fines or pay for euthanasia ?I want to point out that I am assuming the owners CANT afford hay as opposed to not wanting to give up something the really need :roll: like cell phones and 160 channels on TV and three vehicles and designer clothes..you know the important stuff..so they can afford to feed their horses :mad: )I am not really trying to be asmart butt Terry ..just wondering if these people feel so desperate that they really think they are giving their horses a chance by doing this? I hope I never feel that desperate about anything.

Our local TV station has done 2 segments on the slaughter issue as New Holland Sales is right in their county..Both were pretty biased on the anti slaughter side.I emailed the reporter basically begging them to do the other side of the story and brought up all kinds of points as to what problems not having slaughter will do.I also emailed this story to her when it showed up in my email last night.No response and I doubt I will get one

Jasfino
11-30-2006, 06:09 PM
That is sad. It has happened around here as well.

Slaughter houses are still up and running now. I wonder why this is happening?

(Edited to add).... Dont answer that. People must be held more accountable for their actions.

appyday
11-30-2006, 06:18 PM
Yeah I have bought horses from the kill pens at new hollands...I got a paso there 2 yrs ago...I had to lead my horse out of the barn around a dead horse to get out to the trailers..

Terry Wallace
11-30-2006, 06:25 PM
..just wondering if these people feel so desperate that they really think they are giving their horses a chance by doing this?

I don't think so.... I think they are getting out from under having to buy feed with money they "don't have" or would not have turned horses out in the first place.

As far as the auction....the local one is once a month, and is pretty far from where horses have been let out into the forest. Lots of horse owners don't own horse trailers ya know ;-)

Jasfino
11-30-2006, 06:41 PM
Yep.. and the cost of euthanasia would probably be alot cheaper than buying a new trailer. :D

I have heard of instances on netposse where horses have been stolen and then set loose.