I'm not sure how to respond to all this - I feel embarrassed to have offered them for sale at all let alone so badly

but believe me I do know the cost of producing them to this stage, I am nowhere near asking those prices, and the equivalent stock were selling at 6 months of age (uncastrated) for £1500 less than two years ago so I'm asking little more for them now having put in a further 2-3 years of feed and care costs, farrier charges, vet bills and operations for the boys, and all the blood sweat and tears that livestock bring

My reference to winter project was aimed at those who can back a pony themselves and save the £600-1000 cost of sending them to be professionally backed and ridden away - those might want the 2/3/4yo unbacked stock tho I appreciate they probably won't want the backed ones which have that cost added already. the other possible market I was aiming at was those smallholders who don't want a pony to ride but to do crofting, snigging, stalking, driven or other specialist roles all of which Highlands have been successful at. Those folk I thought might lurk on here and want a clean slate youngster rather than one with the costs of ridden training added if they don't want a ridden pony. Highland ponies are versatile, strong working animals which also make great adults' ridden ponies for far less than the cost of running a horse.
I won't sell them for meat or for meat prices, nor to beginners who have no experience or professional backing to bring them on right. I don't pressure for a sale, don't haggle with folk that slag the pony to get a better price, and I never breed anything without a commitment to find a good home or see it to the other end of its life if necessary.
But I won't sell any if I don't advertise, and enquiries which just ask price and then disappear suggests that pricing up front is better practice. If you don't have the money to buy one and get it home, then you almost certainly won't have the ongoing money to keep it healthy, happy and in good fit state for the 20+ years it may live. And if you don't want a pony or don't have time to commit to a project or don't have the experience to back or break to harness or whatever the job is, then it isn't a suitable winter project for you. I am advertising to those that might have the above ie wish to buy, enough money, a job for the pony to do, experience to get it there - not to those that don't

Anyway, I'm sorry I put my ad up, please consider it withdrawn.