T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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250.1 | Not a fan of automatic waterers | BOTTLE::MONTVILLE | Sharon Montville | Mon Apr 20 1987 14:03 | 13 |
| I had an automatic, heated trough. Personally, I did not like it.
For one, you can't monitor the horse's water intake. Also, it was
a pain in the *** to clean. I had to dissemble it and drain it from
underneath. I used to clean it once a week, which must not have
been enough because the water was black (from decayed hay). Maybe
there are better models. Anyway, I junked it. I now have a regular
trough with a portable heater. I rarely fill it all the way - just
enough to last a couple of days. Then I dump out the dregs and
refill. The water stays real clean that way.
The only drawback to this, is that in the winter I have to make
sure I drain all of the water out of the hose after I fill the
tank - a minor irritant.
|
250.2 | not a fan #2 | TOPDOC::NAJJAR | | Mon Apr 20 1987 16:36 | 8 |
| I used to board at a barn that used automatic waterers (individual
ones for each paddock, not one big trough). It takes the horses
a few days to figure out how to use it, and once they do, they
like to play with it. They will sometimes keep playing with
it enough for the water to spill out over the edge and create
a nice mud puddle under the waterer. The cup type waterers get
real dirty from horses putting their noses in there so much.
Personally I prefer the large watering troughs or individual buckets.
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250.3 | A conditional yes to auto waterers | CSC32::M_HOEPNER | | Mon Apr 20 1987 17:09 | 26 |
| I used a Ritchie automatic waterer (float type) in my turn-out area for
15 years. I really liked it.
During hot weather, the horses have fresh, cool water after a few
swallows. (Have you ever really looked at and/or felt a large water
trough when its 100 degrees outside?)
During COLD weather, I turned the thermostat up to 50 degrees and the
horses had tepid water to drink--which encourages them to drink even
when the temperature is a -25 degrees. I had no impaction problems
after I upped the temperature. (Would you like to drink only ice
water when its really cold out?)
The drain was handy for cleaning the water basin--I could easily
clean it during cold or hot weather. I cleaned it once a week during
the winter and every day or every other day in the summer. (Sometimes
water on some farms contains a type of brown algae which can be
fatal if ingested in sufficient quantities.)
I was able to monitor water usage by supplying water buckets in
stalls at night. I would not use waterer's unless I could have
a way of monitoring how much the horses are drinking. (I have heard
horror stories of horses for some reason or other locked in stalls
and not able to get to their water.)
|
250.4 | In favor of automatic waterers | SQM::MURPHY | Is it Friday yet? | Fri Apr 24 1987 10:49 | 30 |
| When I lived in Mass. the place I boarded my horse had some of the
stalls equipped with automatic (not heated) waterers. My horse
occupied one of those stalls and learned in a matter of minutes
how to operate it. Some of the other stalls that did not have
automatic waterers in them were usually used to board lay-ups from
the track - trotters, pacers, turf runners. Those horses were only
used to drinking from water buckets from being at tracks so rather
than waste the owner's time in trying to teach them to use them,
she merely kept them in "bucket" stalls.
The owner had installed a heated automatic waterer for her own
Thoroughbred mare to use. She said she liked it and, of course,
she cleaned any debris like grain or hay that might get into any
of the waterers or buckets each day.
Where I board now, they have all buckets but in the summertime usually
two waterbuckets per stall is used if the horse is known to be a
big water consumer. My horse consumes more due to the heat in the
summer as most horses do so I think she needs the two buckets.
The buckets are usually checked a few times a day in between feedings
to make sure they have plenty.
I still wish my mare had an automatic waterer in her stall but at
least she has the two buckets. Oh, by the way, she is not one of
those horses that plays with her water. I saw a Standardbred gelding
at that place in Mass. I boarded at who used to play with the water
in his bucket all the time and have more of it on the floor of his
stall than he'd drink.
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250.5 | Anyone use a heated outdoor tank? | DELNI::MANDILE | Toepick! | Mon Dec 28 1992 09:38 | 7 |
|
Does anyone use a heated outdoor water tank? (not automatic)
I want to get one of those Rubbermaid 150 gal tanks and a heating unit
for outside, as my shoulders can't take the constant lifting and
carrying of the water needed to refill the outdoor water supply.
How do you get it set up safely for the electricity?
|
250.6 | Tank heater hookup | BSS::ZINN | | Tue Dec 29 1992 13:00 | 12 |
| Have an outlet set up close enough to the tank so that you can plug the
heater cord directly into the outlet - the manufacturers recommend
against using an extension cord. Since most heaters are 1500 watts (some
are 1000 watts), you'll need a 15 amp breaker or fuse for the heater
line. That's really all there is to it. By the way, the floating-type
heaters are not for use in the Rubbermaid tubs - you need the
submersible ones. Also, the heaters come with a guard around the lower
part of the cord, usually plastic. Honest, they aren't chew-proof! My
gelding chewed through it; fortunately, we caught it before he chewed
through the wire itself. I got flexible metal conduit and put the cord
inside it for further protection. You probably won't need to do this,
but keep it in mind if you have a "mouthy" gelding.
|
250.7 | Safety first! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | When in doubt, cop out! | Tue Dec 29 1992 14:45 | 36 |
| I am pretty paranoid about electricity around horses. Horses can and do
chew anything and everything that they can get their teeth on. So, I
would put the heater's cord in metal conduit even if I didn't have a
known chewer. One of them will probably chew on it eventually! Or maybe
next year you'll buy your "dream horse" whose only bad habit is chewing...
Because this is going to be used 24 hours-a-day for extended periods
without human supervision, I'd be extra careful about preventing
shocks in rainy weather. A properly installed outdoor outlet will be
pretty safe WHEN THE COVER IS CLOSED(i.e. when it is not in use)! When
they are in use, the cover on an outdoor outlet is open and, therefore,
it will be exposed to the wet weather. ALL the outdoor outlet covers
that I've ever seen say something like "Suitable for wet locations when
the cover is closed."
By properly installed, I mean that 1) the underground wires are the
direct burial type and/or are installed in conduit, 2) the wiring box
that contains the outlet and the cover for the box/outlet are waterproof
and approved for outdoor use in wet locations 3) the underground wires are
brought up from the ground into the box inside conduit with a
waterproof connector(or else the box won't be waterproof!).
To reduce the chance of the box shorting out in rainy weather, I'd make
sure it faced AWAY from the direction the wind usually blows and place
it in a little open fronted box about 6"-8" deep to keep the plug-outlet
connection as dry as possible when it rains.
BTW, you should also unplug and check your tank heater regularly. Inspect
it for cracks in the heating element, etc. A faulty heater would give the
horses quite a jolt when they went for a drink! Cracks can develop in
heating elements beacuse the repeated heating/cooling causes metal fatigue
or some such thing.
Good luck with your project
John
|
250.8 | USED AND ALL WAS WELL... | ASABET::NICKERSON | KATHIE NICKERSON 223-2025 | Wed Dec 30 1992 08:18 | 13 |
| We have used one in the past in a one of the large metal water
troughs...used it through the winter for about four years. Haven't
used it in the rubbermaid. The outlet was close, about 2 feet away.
If I remember correctly we didn't have any chewing problems and one of
the boys was a mischief maker.
Be sure you get the right heater for the amount of water that you have
in it.
Good luck
Kathie
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250.9 | Winter Watering Methods | KALE::ROBERTS | | Wed Dec 30 1992 08:40 | 26 |
| Lynne,
IF you decide against an electric setup, or until you get one, here's
something that might work. I have one of those Rubbermaid tubs you
mention. WHat I do is to fill it with the garden hose, then disconnect
the hose and either drain it or bring it inside. So far this season,
I've been able to just break the ice on the tub, and the thaws have
been frequent enough so that I can refill it every few days. I filled
it again yesterday, after breaking several inches of ice out of it.
Even if there aren't enough convenient thaws, you can keep filling it
to replace what your horses drink. Each morning, I bring a small
sledgehammer out with me to break the ice. When you break it, remove
the floating pieces, since they will freeze together fairly quickly.
YOu can refill the tub with a hose even if it's below freezing; you
just have to bring in the hose or drain it. I used this method for
years when I lived down your way. It's a little harder up here in
northern Mass, since it's definitely colder at night here in general,
but it still works wellenough to get by. I've only had one night when
I had to put water in the stalls -- a few nights ago when it was near
zero. Even that froze, of course, but I start out with warm water on
those nights and this gives the horses a chance to drink most of it
before it freezes.
Gee, I hate winter!
-ellie
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