Jason and I have been doing some true glamour jobs around the farm lately. Today's was particularly glamorous as it consisted of cleaning out a run-in shed so we could spread new gravel in it. Since it hasn't rained in about a month, and we're currently about 17 inches below normal rainfall for the year, it would be an understatement to say there is a lot of dust. A LOT of dust. Everywhere.
Armed with shovels and the front end loader of one of the tractors Jason and I created an epic dust cloud as we cleaned out the shed. As I was inhaling dust while shoveling poop and dirt I did have the thought, "so this is why I went to college?"
Jason and I were disgusting by the time we were finished. When I shook my hair dust came off me. I told Jason I was doing my best imitation of a horse shaking after a roll in the dust. Despite being so dirty all I wanted to do was get away from myself, I still wouldn't trade my life for a return to corporate America. Been there, done that - I'll take the dust.
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despite choking on dust the entire time Jason and I did a thorough job; Cocomo and Gus admiring our work
Jason moved right into spreading the gravel when we were done
Donneur was very curious about what we were doing in his shed
Hesse, Remmy and Baner
Grand and Rip
Toledo and Wilson
Revy and Baby
Walon and Rubrico being wild
Murphy and Sam
Roho and Ripley
Rocky and Gus
Blu and B-Rad
Lighty and Happy
Maisie and Lily having a grooming session with Renatta grazing nearby; Dolly and Cuffie are in the background
7 comments:
Have you ever thought about putting mats in the sheds?
We are still in a drought, but have had enough rain to produce nice green grass. Your run-ins are so nice and deep.
We have a lengthy list of reasons why we don't use mats in sheds. That is a definite NO.
I'm curious, Melissa. Mats make my life so much easier--but I have stalls open to paddocks, not just run-ins. Is it because they're slippery when wet? I do bed mine with pellets, which wouldn't work for you guys...
That would be a great blog post!!
We use mats in stalls. We have them over the compacted gravel in our stalls with a deep bed of shavings on top of the mats. Using them in stalls is nothing like using them in a run-in shed. Our (7) sheds are 50 feet long and 16 feet deep. The horses can and do gallop into them, take running starts out of them, come to sliding stops in them, and have play sessions in them, none of which happen in a stall. That means there is no safe, effective way to keep mats from sliding, shifting and curling. That's just a few of the reasons why mats are unsafe and impractical in our sheds for our uses.
Gotcha! Makes total sense. Thanks for the explanation.
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