T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1345.1 | | BOSOX::LCOBURN | If it works, break it. | Tue Aug 28 1990 09:11 | 17 |
| We're in the process of putting in an outdoor ring at my house,
too. Our land is gravel based, and all our excavator is doing is
leveling a 70 x 180 area and adding 4 inches of sand. We are lucky
in that our land is gravel, and the spot we picked is high and dry.
I had looked into Fibar, but the cost is ridiculous (no wonder you
see very few Fibar rings around!), and I am told a sand ring is
generally considered the best option. For lighting, I am having
my dad, who is an electrician, install two spotlights on tall
metal poles. We had this on the farm I grew up on and it worked
out super for years upon years. These will be at both short sides
of the ring itself. I am going without fencing for at least a while,
will probably just fill old milk jugs with sand and paint dressage
letters on them as markers. Good luck!
Linda
|
1345.2 | ideas | PFSVAX::PETH | Critter kids | Tue Aug 28 1990 09:47 | 10 |
| The farm over the hill from me put in a Fibar surface on their indoor
ring about one year ago. They chose it because it is supposed to be
dust free. They are dissappointed, after a year it is as dusty as the
sand surface they had before was. It needs a new top coat to restore
it, more $$$. The best outdoor ring I have seen is built from a base
of 4 in stone covered by 2 in gravel covered by pea gravel covered with
sand. The big stone is 6 to 8 inches deep and the other layers are 4 in
deep. After two years it still is as nice as when it was put in.
Sandy
|
1345.3 | Drainage and more drainage. | LEDS::HORSEY | | Tue Aug 28 1990 15:27 | 9 |
| The key thing is proper drainage. We put in 4" of wood chips over
basically what is forest loam soil (the pine trees that were there
furnished the chips) and it is not good in the early winter, because
it gets rutted and muddy, then the ruts freeze and become
ankle-breakers until we get enough snow base for cushioning. If I were
to do it again, I would scrape off the loam and put a gravel and sand
base on the subsoil, then chips on top of that. I would also back-hoe a
couple of trenches along each side and fill them with stone and gravel
for assured drainage.
|
1345.4 | can it be done? | HEEHEE::JOHNSON | | Tue Aug 28 1990 16:07 | 21 |
|
Is it really possible to ride through the winter months
in an outdoor riding arena? Townsend gets as much cold/snow
as I get in Southern NH and I'd like to know how people can
do it without resorting to walking and road hacking.
My sand outdoor solidifies round about mid October and
there is no way I could hold a trot for very long on
such hard ground. Even if it snows, don't you run into
the same problem? Do people plow their riding arenas?
Also, how does this help the hard-footing problem? I
suppose borium would be a must, but then you can run
into tendon problems. I've found I can't use my outdoor
between mid October until about mid March.
Its too bad there isn't a cost effective way to heat
the ground of an outdoor to prevent it from freezing.
It would probably end up costing as much as an indoor... :^}
Melinda
|
1345.5 | You can do some things in the cold weather. | LEDS::HORSEY | | Wed Aug 29 1990 15:50 | 13 |
| We pull the hind shoes and put the borium front shoes on in case of
ice, and only ride if there has been sufficient snow to provide a
cushion - say 4-5 inches or more. The snow over frozen ground is not
too bad a footing, but over ice is too slippery and if there is little
snow (like last december) the ground is too hard and dangerous. Also,
the time you can ride is probably less than in warmer weather because
the rider gets too cold. The horses are fuzz balls anyway, so if you
do work them much you should give them a belly clip so they don't stay
wet and get cold. If we get slick sheets of ice we sling forkfuls of
shavings and manure from cleaning the stalls out onto the ice, to
prevent falls. Watch that the type of snow and the shoes you have on
the horses don't cause build-up of snowballs in the foot, which could
contribute to an injury.
|
1345.6 | no manure problem | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Mon Jul 13 1992 17:17 | 16 |
| It's me again, the one with the desert horses. We have started using
manure in our arenas. When dried out and mixed with the sand it
produces less dust than the sand alone. Also, when it is weted, it
holds water longer. We have never had to dump or have our manure
picked up. Of course, here manure dries out alot faster so there is no
chance of attracting flies or other bugs. It does attract rabbits and
chickawas.
Any way, my neighbor is now complaining because his dogs are eating
manure and bring it home. I cited the city code about dogs being
restrained or fenced inside the city limits. He shut his mouth
directly, but I do believe he was thinking of something else to
complain about. I'll just have to wait to get home and see what
senceless note he has left for today.
vlm
|
1345.7 | | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Plan B Farm | Mon Jul 13 1992 17:21 | 5 |
| Re: mixing the manure with sand footing....
What does that do to the consistency of the sand? Make if softer, or
firm it up??
|
1345.8 | sand sand sand | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Mon Jul 13 1992 17:44 | 15 |
| Actually, we have to bring the sides down once a week. Meaning, we
rake down the burm that is created when horses track along the same
path. This makes the footing deaper. The only reason we add the
manure is to keep the dust down. So, at first it will firm it up.
Eventually, it ends up being the same consistency as the sand itself.
It needs to be understood, we don't put sand in our arenas, that is
the base material. We have tried dirt, shavings, and any other arena
treatment on the market. The desert has a way of reclaiming itself no
matter what is done to try and stop it. So sand it is.
There are areas where the sand is so fine and deep it is perfect
for hindquarters work. I drive my babies with tires or logs in these
areas. Some even have some good slow sloping hills for the riding
horses.
vlm
|
1345.9 | | BUSY::MANDILE | | Tue Jul 14 1992 10:27 | 6 |
| My riding ring is a natural mix of sand/clay. We dump and
spread the manure out there, and it helps keep the soil from
becoming a dustbowl, softens up the footing, and gives us a
place to get rid of the manure!
L-
|
1345.10 | | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Plan B Farm | Tue Jul 14 1992 10:53 | 8 |
| My ring is sand with a clay base, I like the idea of keeping down
the dust, but the sand is too deep already in spots, Id like to
firm it up rather than soften it....which it doesn't sound like
the manure would do for me. I think when I can afford to, I will
rent a bobcat and scrap the sand down some in the offending corner.
Ive been lucky, I have a friend who lives locally who has been carting
off my manure pile to fertilize his HUGE lawn....:-)..
|
1345.11 | keep it even | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Tue Jul 14 1992 11:54 | 12 |
| It's great that someone can take your manure off your hands. The best
way to keep the arena sand even is to grade or rake often. We do it
once a week. I don't have a tractor but all my horse have been taught
to ground drive so I took and old harness and modified it to pull a
drag. The horses love it. It gives them something different to do and
a reason to act a little goofey.
As far as getting rid of manure, that isn't a problem. It's
biodegratable and can be spread just about anywhere out here. Like I
said before, the rabbits and other desert dwellers love to pick
through it and they spread it out enough to dry by morning.
vlm
|
1345.12 | | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Plan B Farm | Tue Jul 14 1992 12:13 | 9 |
| Interesting idea, ground driving a horse pulling a drag on the ring!
I do have a mare who is trained to drive, now all I need is a drag and
an old harness.....hm, anyone have an old harness hanging around they
are not using..??? :-) I do rake my ring by hand a few times a month,
but THAT gets tedious fast, it's just too darn big to do that way. I
really dont seem to have much of set "track" though, my ring also
doubles as a part of my turnout area, so the horses wander around loose
in there all time, it probably beats down the track.....
|
1345.13 | drag drag | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Tue Jul 14 1992 14:10 | 15 |
| To be honest, ours isn't realy an arena. To say, it isn'n enclosed, no
rail. It is just and area that has telephone poles to show
boundries.(laid down). It is easier to maintane because we just move
the poles and drag the whole thing.
For the driving part, our main "pulling" horse is a 21 year old TB
broodmare. She has mellowed with age and is very quiet. I wouldn't
recomend any horse that doesn't stop well because sometimes you hit
something that catches the drag and stops the horse short. If your guy
doesn't stop right off the drag can come loose and smack him right in
the rear, and we know what that will produce. I haven't had that
happen so far.
vlm
|
1345.14 | Keeping dust down in arenas | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | May the horse be with you! | Tue Jul 14 1992 14:29 | 22 |
| Re keeping down the dust in an outdoor arena...
This probably won't work for our desert dweller but there is a product
on the market which is supposed to help control dust when an arena is
dry AND control puddles when it rains!
The product is a synthetic crystal of some kind that absorbs enormous
amounts of water when it rains and then slowly releases that water back
into the soil as the soil dries out.
I checked it out for our arena because we get rain all winter and
virtually no rain in the summer. I haven't put the stuff into our arena
yet but I'll probably do it this summer. The stuff was originally
developed for potted plants I think but works fine outdoors if it's
covered w/soil or footing material. Sunlight is supposed to break it
down. The stuff costs about $0.05 per square foot. I was quoted a price
of $650-700 to do a large dressage arena. Actually, a large dressage
arena is 66'x198' or 13,068 sq feet but ours is slightly oversized
(70' x 200') at 14,000 sq feet to allow for markers, etc.
I've seen this stuff advertised by 2 different suppliers in magazines
like The Chronicle and EQUUS.
|
1345.15 | interesting product | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Tue Jul 14 1992 15:52 | 7 |
| That stuff might work for us. We still water our area. Although it
isn't recomended(water wastage), we still have to if we are showing
horses to a potential buyer. No one likes to eat dust.
Let me know how it works for you. We will always try something new
if it can help our problems.
vlm
|
1345.16 | tires? | MPO::ROBINSON | with imagination, I will get there | Tue Jul 14 1992 16:57 | 10 |
|
Is anyone using the shredded/ground tires in their ring?
I'm curious to hear how you like it. A friend is considering
trying it, right now he's got clay/sawdust mix (the clay in
indigenous, VA) but it gets dusty when it's stirred up. We
have sand, it's packed down pretty well but it does also get
dusty when there are several people in the ring.
Sherry
|
1345.17 | I saw it once | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Tue Jul 14 1992 17:04 | 9 |
| I have seen the "tire" stuff used in Mexico on the race track. I have
never gone into finding out if it is available to small farm owners. I
did notice that there was virtually no dust and the dirt kicked up fell
back to the ground rather quickly. Also, I was told that it doesn't
decompose or get broken down as quickly as other track or turf
products. That is something to check out myself. If I find out
anything I'll let you know.
vlm
|
1345.18 | Crystals work great to cut down dust. | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Wed Jul 15 1992 09:06 | 5 |
| My instructor uses something on the indoor surface in the winter. It
gets dusty! I thought she said it was DE (Dianatious Earth), the stuff
you use in pool filters, but maybe she spread that for flies and uses
the crystals for the arena. I'll have to ask her. But whatever she
uses works!
|
1345.19 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Wed Jul 15 1992 09:12 | 5 |
| What are the environmental issues around that stuff? Massachusetts is
VERY strict on many things. Wouldn't that be considered dumping or
pollution or some such?
Ed..
|
1345.20 | | ESCROW::ROBERTS | | Wed Jul 15 1992 09:21 | 19 |
| re .19
Which stuff? The water-absorbing crystals, or the diatomaceous earth,
or the ground tires?
Re the water-absorbing crystals -- I had some literature on this stuff,
because I was considering it for my garden, but I decided against it.
Anyway, if you are putting the stuff down yourself, be VERY careful.
It says in the literature I had that it is very dangerous to inhale
this dust. I guess it must do as good a job at absorbing fluids in
your lungs as it does on the ground...
As for the ground tires, I've been interested in this ever since I first
heard about it in England. Does anyone know if this stuff is available
here? Other than to tracks and other large consumers, that is. I've
also wondered if this stuff would be softer to land on that the dirt!
8^)))
-ellie
|
1345.21 | | KAHALA::FULTZ | ED FULTZ | Wed Jul 15 1992 09:26 | 9 |
| I was referring to the tires. A note got in before mine.
It seems that with the stink (no pun intended) that Mass makes about almost
everything they would take issue with tires being put (buried in their mind)
in the ground (even though they are ground up). Would it not be an issue
when you are using it, but only when you decide to use the space for
something else (or sell the property)?
Ed..
|
1345.22 | let me ckeck | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Wed Jul 15 1992 12:13 | 9 |
| That is a good question. (about the tires). I'll have to call my
In-laws in Texas. They go to the Mexico tracks every summer. They
also have draft horses and I belive they were concidering using the
tires in their drag area. It will probably be a few days before I can
get an answer. I think they are in Mexico now.
I think they got their tire stuff from one of the tracks also.
vlm
|
1345.23 | | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Wed Jul 15 1992 12:23 | 11 |
| I sent away for the sample of the shredded rubber. My uncle is in
the recycling tire business and I sent it along to him for a marketing/
business building FYI. He does not think the shredded material is
actually a used tire. (He shreds tires for fuel in energy plants).
My concern was what would happen when the rubber combined with soil,
sand? WHat happens in 20 years if someone decideds it's not a good
thing to do (similar to oil tanks in the ground)? Tires are considered
hazardous waste....so I'll probably stick w/ clay/sand mixture and deal
with the dust.
|
1345.24 | | STUDIO::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Wed Jul 15 1992 12:25 | 4 |
| re: spreading manure in the riding ring
I don't advise it, all it does is turn the ring to muck....the kind
that removes shoes!
|
1345.25 | Most rings don't drain... | BUSY::MANDILE | | Wed Jul 15 1992 12:45 | 8 |
| I can only hope that my spreading in the ring would make
it that damp! (-;
My ring is actually about 20 ft of very well draining
sand/clay mix. Even after last nights downpour, it
has already drained off. The manure/shavings keep it
from becoming a dustbowl....
L-
|
1345.26 | not in my barn!!! | SWAM2::MASSEY_VI | | Wed Jul 15 1992 14:47 | 10 |
| The only reason I use manure in the riding area is to keep down the
dust. We also have no where to put a "pile". There is a man at the
local nursery that will come and pick up the pile but he comes when he
wants to and I hate for the stuff to sit around too long. I use what I
can. We only have 4 horses right now and they don't seem to produce
alot of manure.
The information on the tires is greatly appreciated. I was
seriously concidering using it. not now!
vlm
|
1345.27 | | MPO::ROBINSON | with imagination, I will get there | Wed Jul 15 1992 14:59 | 7 |
|
Equus has been regularly advertising the shredded rubber, the
ad says they will send you a sample. But of course I can't find
the ad right now.....
Sherry
|
1345.28 | | MAJORS::SPORNE | | Thu Jul 16 1992 08:44 | 10 |
| I know a number of people here in the UK that use shredded rubber as a riding
surface. I is supposed to excellent for dressage as it not a dead surface and
imparts a bounce which enables the horse to perform better. I have heard that
it is not so good for jumping as it tends to be slippery, especially when wet.
Other types of surface that are in common use here are mixtures of sand and
plastic fibre and sand and plastic beads. The effect of the fibre/beads is to
bind together the grains of sand an produce a firmer surface.
David.
|
1345.29 | | COMICS::PEWTER | | Fri Jul 17 1992 11:41 | 5 |
|
Another interesting one I have seen here (UK) quite a lot is the
plastic insulating stuff they put round electric wire. Seems quite
effective.
|