This message is from: "Nancy Missault" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

 I am confused here-

are you saying that you can find a good adult Fjord mare for about 1000
euro which would be about 1300 dollars because that is what the exchange
rate would give.

The dollar is about 3/4 of the Euro.

Nancy Missault
-------Original Message-------

Van: [email protected]
Datum: 08/02/07 22:50:03
Aan: [email protected]
Onderwerp: Fjord Prices

This message is from: Linda Bain <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

On Jul 30, 2007, at 11:45 PM, Nancy Missault wrote:
>
> I do not really wish to upset anybody but how come prices in the US
> are that much more than Europe.

I was thinking the opposite!!!  With the exchange rate the way it is
at the moment, US prices are cheaper than both UK and Swedish
prices!  If the transport was cheaper, it would be a good time to
start re-importing some of those old bloodlines!  The prices I have
seen in the US I would consider very reasonable.


> I got a really nice friendly mare with foal for 1500 euro; no pedigree
> but Fjords with papers are about the same price.

In the UK you can expect to pay (for fully papered, evaluated,
quality fjords) a lot more, and having lived in Sweden for the last
year, the prices here are similar.  There is however, a very
important distinction to be made between papered and non-papered
fjords, you cannot compare the two, as without papers, it could be a
Heinz 57.  I have bought fjords from both Norway and Sweden and 1500
euros wouldn't have bought 1 leg of either of them!!  Even foals sell
for more than 1500 euros.

Before I left the UK there were a lot of fjords being imported
without papers, which we call "meat-market fjords".  In some of
continental Europe horses are bred for meat and considered
agricultural animals, which they are not in the UK.  These fjords
were coming into the UK and being passed off as fjords.  In truth
they could have been anything as there was no way of tracing their
breeding.

  It is important for breeders to register their youngsters in order
to preserve the breed and prevent devaluation.  The Highland pony,
which could be described as similar, is now on the endangered breeds
list because there are so few papered, pure examples of the breed
left.  It is not that there aren't pure breds out there, but if they
are not registered as such and given the recognition they deserve,
they effectively don't exist.  I hope that this is not a route that
the fjord will follow because people won't/can't register them (even
if it is in an upgrade register).

Sorry for getting on my soap box!

Linda Bain
Sweden

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