There is a saying, “never look a gift horse in the mouth”. It’s an old saying and suggests that people should not question or be ungrateful for something they are receiving free. This is Sunday, she wasn’t a gift horse, but she illustrates the point I want to make. The cost of keeping Sunday over many years is the same whether she cost money initially or was free. There are vets fees, blacksmith fees, stabling costs, transport costs, haylage, pony nuts and the cost of replacing tack. Local authorities take an interesting approach to a gift horse, they are always welcomed whether free or as a highly subsidised purchase. Of course a horse needs a paddock costing say £20,000 but if you can get 4 paddocks for £60,000 then the unit price is £15,000 and better value for money. It also needs a stable, but if you have 4 paddocks you have room for more stables and more horses, so just in case more gift horses appear, you build more stables. More stables and more horses mean ...
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