While at Pleasant Hill, I saw this sign in the barnyard. It sure made good sense to me! Do any other states have this policy? If not, they sure need it!
While at Pleasant Hill, I saw this sign in the barnyard. It sure made good sense to me! Do any other states have this policy? If not, they sure need it!
Jim D.
Adapt...Improvise...Overcome!
That is good and, IMHO, applies to life in general!
The true measure of a man is how he conducts himself when things don't go his way.
^^^Ditto!
here's a listing that might help or be of interest...
http://www.horse-insurance.com/law.html
Good sign. Should be inherently known.
Stupid should hurt![]()
Bill Arnold - Website - ShopCam
Citizen of Texas residing in Georgia.
Food for Thought: The Ark was built by amateurs, the Titanic by professionals.
Ignorance is only skin deep, but stupid goes all the way to the marrow!
Live every day like it's your last, but don't forget to stop and smell the roses.
How does one determine the difference between inherent risks and negligence? Or does it make a difference in the eyes of the law in these states?
________
Ron
"Individual commitment to a group effort--that is what makes a team work, a company work, a society work, a civilization work."
Vince Lombardi
Indiana has the same type of law. Usually says equine on it as that is the largest purchaser of signs for activities.
Inherent risk, getting stepped on, thrown from your own horse, your own gear breaking causing injury. Negligence, a large nail sticking out of a gate entrance and ripping the guts out of your horse.
God and family, the rest is icing on the cake.
I'm so far behind, I think I'm in first place.
Premier Bovine Scatologist