Hey all
I'm interested in getting into horse hauling. Wondering if there are any horse haulers on here. And if there are, I have a few questions ...
How many miles a week/month/year do you reckon you do hauling horses?
Best to work for one of the bigger hauling companies or work for myself?
Biggest issues?
Anyone here haul horses?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Tabs, Sep 24, 2023.
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I have not, but my Aunt has her show horses hauled all over the country. And, they travel in a trailer that rivals the nicest RVs. Also, she’s had the same driver for probably 30-40 years.
Never say never, but from what I know of her operation, I’d say you have about as much chance breaking into that biz as you would trying to be a NASCAR hauler.Last edited: Sep 24, 2023
Sirscrapntruckalot, ducnut, tscottme and 2 others Thank this. -
I've seen a few ads in Florida for drivers to haul horses. I'd imagine an 0/0 would need outlandish insurance.
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LOL...now they'd like to retire but the money coming in is a powerful incentive to stay working.
EDIT TO ADD One of the reasons for their success was that they have their own farm with lay-up facilities for the horses. They have people who exercise and groom the horses and trainers use the place also. Kind of a "full service" deal. High class, too.Last edited: Sep 24, 2023
ducnut, Speed_Drums, Oxbow and 4 others Thank this. -
I doubt that job is available to more than 30 drivers in a year.86mechanic, Speed_Drums, JoeyJunk and 2 others Thank this. -
According to my friends that haul race horses most of the owners are pretty laid back and mellow. Having zillions of dollars affect some people that way.
The trainers, on the other hand, are described mostly in very unflattering four letter words. They have a turnover rate similar to NFL coaches and for the same reasons...too many losses. It makes them a little insecure and they tend to scream a lot. No matter if the horse is a clumsy clunk that should be pulling a milk wagon in the local Fourth of July parade, the owners paid good money for it and they expect a certain level of results. Reality has nothing to do with it. Those zillions of dollars I mentioned also insulate people from bothersome little details of reality.
The horses are a little flighty but the grooms handle them most of the time. The drivers drive. They stop overnight fairly often to get the horse out of the trailer and let it rest. Hauling is stressful to some horses. My friends have contacts all over the US of quality places to rest a horse overnight. It's part of the service.77fib77, ducnut, Speed_Drums and 3 others Thank this. -
tscottme Thanks this.
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I don't know your background, but your question reminded me of the newbies or prospective drivers that pop on hear and say something like "I like (speed boats, sail boats, motorcycles, muscle cars, carnival rides, etc) and I would like someone to point me toward a job where that's all I do with my truck. New drivers aren't getting those jobs and people with those cool toys aren't just putting their toy out on the open market in case some newbie wants to play with it. That's the position from which I was answering the question.Last edited: Sep 25, 2023
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
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