In January 2010, I decided to try to locate Harley's previous owners to learn more about his life and training. I had purchased him through a broker, and had no information on the owners. I managed to find his former trainer, who put me in contact with his last owner who lives in Georgia. She emailed me the story of Harley's life from about three years of age.
When he was 3 years old, Harley was bought by a teenage girl who took him to a jumper barn. Sadly, it was one of those barns where ground work and flat work are unheard of. At age 4, they began jumping him. Or rather, forcing him to jump, with no regard for training, balance, conditioning...you get the picture. For the next 2 years, he was mistreated and abused by so-called trainers, but being a fighter, Harley found a way to get even. He became a "dirty stopper", stopping right before a jump and dropping his head, sending his rider over the fence alone. After several attempts to break him of this habit, without actually addressing the true problem of lack of training, etc., Harley was stuck in a pasture and neglected. In 2007, his owner, realizing he would soon starve, unable to feed or sell him, and wanting to avoid animal neglect charges, gave him to a trainer at a local barn.
Harley arrived at the new barn in horrendous condition, skin and bones and barely able to walk. His hooves crumbled in their hands and all of his joints were swollen and sore. After months of rehab, weight gain and joint supplements, and frequent visits by the farrier, Harley pulled through and his re-training began. The trainer gave Harley to one of her students, a 15 year old girl who set to work on his re-education.
Skinny and out of shape, but having fun! |
The dressage trainer in California doubled the asking price for Harley from what he had told the owner. Unable to sell Harley as a hunter at such a high price, he decided to try to make him into a dressage horse in 3 months. Having already been through "bully training" at the jumper barn, Harley did not take kindly to the cruel and painful tactics used by this new trainer, and fought back. Angry at not being able to cheat some innocent person by selling Harley at a ridiculously high price, the trainer stopped feeding him. Fortunately, a few kind people at the barn snuck food to him, until Harley was moved to another trainer's barn about an hour away. The new trainer fed him properly and calmed him down a bit, and then put him up for sale....at a reasonable price.
I had found another horse, an off track Thoroughbred, that I had put a deposit on, but he did not pass the pre-sale vet check. I went to DreamHorse.com a day after Harley's ad had been posted. I went to see him a week later, had him vet checked a week after that, and he became mine 2 weeks later.