Buying Trainable Horses vs Buying Finished Horses
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Narrated by:
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About this listen
Most problems in horse sales don't start in training — they start at purchase.
In this episode, we explain how we think about buying horses, what trainable actually means to us, and why walking away early often protects both the horse and the buyer. We talk about the real differences between trainable and finished horses, why "finished" doesn't always mean lower risk, and how pressure, timelines, and expectations can ruin otherwise good horses.
We also recap a real week at the ranch — including a surprise calf, cold-weather challenges, a viral broken-rib incident, travel prep, and a horse that showed up lame at auction — to show how real-world problems shape how we make decisions.
This episode covers:
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The true cost difference between trainable and finished horses
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Why finished horses aren't always the safer buy
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What trainable really means — and what it doesn't
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Why buying right matters more than training hard
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How timelines and pressure ruin good horses
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Mental softness without fragility
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Willingness to try and recover after pressure
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Soundness standards required to hold up over time
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Non-negotiables we won't train through
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Structural and soundness issues we walk away from
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Temperament deal breakers and unsafe behavior
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Why some horses are cut loose early
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Why walking away is part of responsible horsemanship
We also share real examples:
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A horse that looked good on paper but didn't hold up
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A cheap horse that became expensive
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A horse we walked away from — and why
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A horse that surprised us in a good way
If you buy, sell, or work with horses — or want to avoid expensive mistakes — this episode lays out how we think long before training ever begins.
No shortcuts. No justifying bad purchases. Just honest decision-making that protects horses and people.
📧 Email: support@blackknuckle.com