A Llandysul man with a life-time ban from keeping horses has been convicted of horse neglect so bad that a long-standing vet described it as the most horrific case he had ever seen.

David Robert Davies, of Maes Dilen, Pentrecwrt, admitted leaving two ponies to suffer so badly that they had to be euthanised to end their pain when he appeared before Llanelli magistrates on 13 August.

The case was brought by Carmarthenshire County Council whose animal welfare officer found the ponies being kept in the dark in waist-high soiled bedding with their hooves so badly deformed that the vet said it was the worst he’d seen in over 40 years of practice.

Davies, who had previous convictions for similar animal welfare offences which meant he had been banned from keeping horses for life, pleaded guilty to two offences of causing unnecessary suffering to two horses and breaching a disqualification order.

The case came to light in February 2020, when a council animal welfare officer carried out an unannounced inspection of sheep kept by Davies at fields he rents in Drefach Felindre, the court heard.

While waiting for him to arrive she noticed a shed covered with wood pallets and tarpaulin - and on peering through a hole could see two ponies standing in their own faeces.

Accompanied by a vet she entered the shed to find the cob-type ponies in soiled bedding with their coats matted in dried faeces, their hooves badly overgrown and tails so short it “appeared they may have eaten their own out of boredom.”

The ponies had nothing to eat - one had no water and the other had faeces in his water bucket.

They were kept in the dark, unable to look out of the shed and were only able to touch each other over a wooden barrier that separated them.

When Davies arrived and was challenged about the condition of the ponies he said they were not his - at first saying they belonged to the owner of the field and then, when this was denied, saying they belonged to his step-daughter with whom he has no contact.

He did agree however to arrange urgent attention for the ponies, muck out the shed and give them food and clean water.

The court heard it was only when the ponies were brought out into the daylight that their true condition became evident, with both ponies suffering deformity from badly neglected feet.

Both were taken away for treatment but just days later had to be euthanised, the vet saying he believed they had been suffering for at least 12 months.

During interview Davies said the ponies had been in the shed since around October 2019, but maintained he didn’t know who had put them there.

Although he would occasionally throw hay and food in for them, he said he had never seen anyone actually feeding them or tending to them.

Davies was sentenced to 12 weeks custody, suspended for 24 months, and was handed a 12-month community order with 250 hours unpaid work and rehabilitation.

He was also ordered to pay costs of £6,367 and a victim surcharge of £122.

Following the conviction, Cllr Philip Hughes, Carmarthenshire County Council’s cabinet member for public protection, said: “If it were not for the actions of our animal health officer, who acted on a hunch to check the shed, these ponies may still be suffering today.

“This is an awful, and entirely avoidable, case of shocking neglect.”