One of my training clients is looking for a thoroughly broke horse for his beginning rider wife. This horse on Craig's List locally looked like a possible prospect:
"Excellent beginner or child safe AQHA 18yo 15.2hh mare. This is a wonderful mare for trail riding. She has been camping and in the woods many times, she does not spook or act silly. She has a barrel pattern on her but has not been competed on. She has plenty of flex and bend. If you are looking for a safe kids horse this is it. Foundation blood lines on paper The Old Man and GoDickGo. Asking $750 obo."
I made an appointment to go check her out for him and this is what I found; wouldn't willingly lift feet, feet had not been trimmed in at least 6 months, horse had no clue about how to move away from pressure or back up, indentations above the eyes were deep enough to cradle bowling balls, chronic euvitis in her left eye and... ALL THE TOP FRONT TEETH HAD BEEN REMOVED!!!! ...supposedly, according to the owner, to stop her cribbing! Yeah. OK. We all know perpetual episodic colic is MUCH more preferable than cribbing. The owner's other 4 horses appeared to be healthy and cared for. But by her own admission, this one had been "on the back burner" because nobody was riding her. And, once again, we all know you don't have to keep up care on a horse that isn't ridden. Right?
My guess is the teeth had been removed (not recently) to make aging the horse difficult so registration from a dead horse could be passed off on a lookalike. Between the upper eye indentations on this horse and from what I could see of the lower incisors made me place this horse closer to her very late twenties than 18. And if this horse "had a barrel pattern on her" it must've been drawn on with chalk and washed off in the rain.
I was as courteous as I could be to the owner and did not pick the horse apart. I simply told her it was not what I was looking for and left. I'm sure she was disappointed she didn't sell the horse. But I think the horse was more disappointed about not leaving there than she was. ~FH

"Abuse is when a human action or reaction is obviously accompanied by anger, rage or adrenaline. Proper correction and reprimand are done in silence with thoughtful intent. Your horse knows the difference." ~FloridaHorseman