suellennapa@comcast.
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- May 26, 2008
- Messages
- 9
Does anyone have a suggestion for how to communicate with Disney re: port excursion quality? We went to Hacienda las Moras and felt so sorry for the horses.
I have heard that other excursions in Mazatlan do have horses in better condition. My first impression after riding at a Hacienda las Moras in Mazatlan was that I would just not ride again in Mexico because I felt so guilty the whole time I was riding there. I felt the horses were in poor condition. I think an American vet should take a look before too many cruise ship passengers go - I wonder how they screen the trips. Our horses were very thin, with prominent ribs and hips, seemed desperate to eat, were not brushed, and a few had saddle sores. Some did not have shoes - maybe ok for the beach, but we were on a ranch and there were sharp rocks, on which a few horses stumbled and caught themselves. My daughter saw a horse lying in the field apparently dead, which was able to rise when she approached it, and later learned it had gotten a worming shot - I imagine in some other places, the horse would be kept stabled until it recovered. My son saw a dead horse and skeletons at the ranch's dump while hiking. I ended up just feeling terribly guilty about the whole thing, and feeling so sorry for the poor horse having to carry me as I talked it along the trail, and also feeling kind of culturally insensitive, just uncomfortable all around. Does anyone have suggestions for communicating to Disney about this? I don't know much about horses at all, but if even I, an inexperienced rider, felt they were not in good condition, I wonder what a vet would think.
Otherwise, the ranch was beautiful, but the condition of the horses really made me feel bad about the overall experience.
I have heard that other excursions in Mazatlan do have horses in better condition. My first impression after riding at a Hacienda las Moras in Mazatlan was that I would just not ride again in Mexico because I felt so guilty the whole time I was riding there. I felt the horses were in poor condition. I think an American vet should take a look before too many cruise ship passengers go - I wonder how they screen the trips. Our horses were very thin, with prominent ribs and hips, seemed desperate to eat, were not brushed, and a few had saddle sores. Some did not have shoes - maybe ok for the beach, but we were on a ranch and there were sharp rocks, on which a few horses stumbled and caught themselves. My daughter saw a horse lying in the field apparently dead, which was able to rise when she approached it, and later learned it had gotten a worming shot - I imagine in some other places, the horse would be kept stabled until it recovered. My son saw a dead horse and skeletons at the ranch's dump while hiking. I ended up just feeling terribly guilty about the whole thing, and feeling so sorry for the poor horse having to carry me as I talked it along the trail, and also feeling kind of culturally insensitive, just uncomfortable all around. Does anyone have suggestions for communicating to Disney about this? I don't know much about horses at all, but if even I, an inexperienced rider, felt they were not in good condition, I wonder what a vet would think.
Otherwise, the ranch was beautiful, but the condition of the horses really made me feel bad about the overall experience.