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Q: Why do you call it "adopting"? Do
you sell horses or don't you?
A: We call what we do adoption, just as an
animal shelter does, because ownership stays with CWER for a set period
of time. In the case of most shelters, the shelters continue to own the
animal for its entire life. CWER realizes that an adopter has an
enormous amount of time and expenses tied up in a horse, and feels that
we must trust our adopters to accept full ownership of the animal and
provide the proper care and future for it. We keep ownership with us
during the first 180* days that the adopter has the horse living with
him/her to ensure the situation is a proper fit for animal and human
alike. Additionally, we call our program adoption because we screen our
adopters carefully via application and references, unlike most "horse
sales" wherein the first person with the right amount of money walks
away with the horse. We are not a for-profit "horse trader" operation,
but rather a nonprofit charity rescue, with our primary focus being
finding out what each horse is best at, and fitting him/her with a home
that will best utilize those skills and fit the animal's personality
and any special needs s/he may have.
*If a payment arrangement is in
place, the "180 day period" includes the entire time period of payments
plus an additional 180 days.
Q: How do I adopt a horse?
A: Please see "How
to Adopt".
Q: Do you require an adoption contract?
A: Yes, we do require an adoption contract; however,
ownership of the horse does transfer to the new owner 6 months after
delivery and payment in full of all adoption fees, assuming all terms
of the contract are met.
Q: How do I get an application?
A: After
becoming a member (as required by our
Bylaws - $25/year donation),
the adoption application is the first stage of adopting a horse
from
Crosswinds:
Application
as a pdf (Open this, print it, fill it out and mail
it to us.)
Application
as a form you can fill out and click "send email" to have
automatically emailed to yourself and to us.
Application
as a downloadable Text file to email later (so you can look up and
fill in
the information at your leisure)
(The easiest way to
use this form is to click
this link so it opens. Open a new email on your email software. Come
back to the
window showing the form. Hold down CTRL and A and then CTRL and C. This
will
copy the entire form. Go to your new open email. In the body area,
press CTRL
and V. This will paste the questions into the email box. Fill in all
the
brackets, then email: info
@
cwer . org.)
Contact
us to mail you a paper copy.
Q: Do you adopt outside your immediate
area?
A: Yes. Crosswinds adopts horses all over
the country, with proper references. We also provide delivery to most
locations for a reasonable transportation fee.
Q: Have you ever had to terminate an
adoption contract and take back a horse?
A: Yes, we have requested a horse be
returned to Crosswinds. It was an amicable, mutual agreement situation
wherein the horse and rider simply did not click well together, and the
boarding situation was not a good fit for the horse's particular needs.
There were no harsh words or hard feelings, and the horse was later
placed in another home which was a far better fit for her personality.
Q: Do you do site inspections?
A: Yes, a representative of Crosswinds
will periodically check in on the horse during the "180 day" period
prior to transfer of ownership, to ensure that horse and adopter are
both happy and everything is working out well. While the contract
allows for unannounced visits, every effort is made to work with the
adopter to visit at times easiest for the adopter.
Q: How much is your adoption fee?
A: Our adoption fees vary by horse. We get
to know the horses well, find their strengths and skills, and
learn their personalities. We then set their adoption fees based upon
half of the sale price of an equivalent horse who had not been in
a rescue situation. In many cases, this is actually less than we have
spent to rehabilitate the horse; in a lucky few cases, the horse's
expenses have been reasonable and that horse's adoption fee then helps
to offset the cost of the more expensive special needs cases as well as
basic farm operating expenses.
Q: What if an adopter cannot afford the
adoption fee?
A: Every situation is different, but in
general we work out payment arrangements with those adopters who cannot
afford to pay in full at the time they select a horse. Once they have
been approved and a contract is in place for the horse, that horse is
considered theirs and is no longer offered to other adopters. Typically
our payment terms are over a
3-month period to give the potential owner some time to gather the
funds, while
still not being so long that it keeps us from helping another horse. In
this general scenario, the horse stays at Crosswinds' facility until 2
of the 3 payments have been made, with the 3rd payment due within 30
days after delivery.
Q: Do
you ever adopt to first time horse owners?
Absolutely!
We do so all the time. In general, we strongly recommend/require that a
first
time owner board the horse for at least 3 months. This helps ensure
that the new
owners have the help they'll need
to learn the basics of horse care and ownership. Special circumstances
have been
met where a first time horse owner was allowed to immediately keep a
horse at
home.
Q: Do
you ever allow adopters to board rather than keep their horse at home?
Absolutely!
We do so all the time. In general, we strongly recommend that a first
time owner board the horse for at least 3 months. This helps ensure
that the new
owners have the help they'll need
to learn the basics of horse care and ownership. Boarding is a GREAT
way to have support, help, friends, and increased enjoyment from your
horse ownership, and we encourage it, assuming the facility is able to
meet the basic needs of the horse.
Q:
What about companions?
Except in
special circumstances, we will
not adopt a horse into a single-large-animal situation. They MUST have
a companion --
ideally another horse, donkey, mule or pony, although we do allow goats
as
companions, particularly for ponies who seem to really enjoy them as
partners.
Horses are herd animals and we do not feel it is fair to deprive a
horse of such companionship.
Q: Please explain about the 180 days?
The 180 day "placement period" begins
after the horse has delivered to the adoptive family's location. (If
the horse is delivered prior to payment in full, ownership transfers
180 days after payment in full has been made, NOT 180 days after
delivery.) Ownership of the horse remains with Crosswinds during this
placement period. The horse is living in its new home, and we certainly
expect the relationship will work out. For all intents, the adopter
'owns' the horse, but it is just like adopting from an animal shelter
-- ownership of the animal stays with the rescue/shelter for the safety
of the animal during this time period. During this six month period of
CWER maintaining ownership, the adopter may not breed, use the animal
in a professional capacity (ie riding lessons or a carriage business)
without prior written approval, or, of course, sell or give the animal
to anyone else. However, the adopter is fully responsible for the
animal, and any liability associated with it, including veterinary
bills, boarding, feed, or training bills, etc.
This 6-month period gives us -- and the
adopter -- the chance to ensure this is a proper fit for horse and
human alike. Should either the adopter or CWER decide the situation is
not working, then s/he is returned to Crosswinds at the adopter's
expense. (In the first 3 years, this happened only once, and it
was by mutual agreement.) At the end of the "placement period",
ownership of said horse is transferred in full to the adopter, and they
own the animal completely. At this time, we have really had a chance to
get to know our adopters, and trust the adopter to do what is best for
the animal. We still encourage them to return him/her to CWER should
they no longer be able to care for him/her for any reason, but there is
no requirement that they do so.
Additional questions? please be sure to contact us!
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