Cheapest way possible to build an all weather arena??

crinster

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Hi, sure this has been asked hundreds of times before, but what have people found to be the cheapest way to build an arena? it doesn't need to be anything fancy, only going to be used by 5 or 6 people and not to do loads of jumping of hours of schooling, just to give us somewhere to ride in the winter. Our field is pretty flat and fairly well drained naturally. We had thought cheapest option could be to make an edging of sleepers and basically infill with a surface, like bark chippings. Has anyone done this with much success? or I've read about a product called Equitex Drain Membrane that can be put straight on the ground and surface put on top, has anyone used this? thanks
 

Asha

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I honestly don't believe there is a cheap solution to building an arena. You need drains and a good surface. Both of which cost the money

Until we could afford one, we used one of the flatter paddocks. Which was fine until it got really wet.

The cheapest surface I found was MartinCollins Clopf, bought direct, but even that had to go on silica sand.
 

*hic*

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We knocked in short posts and used 6 x 1 gravel boards with a Terram membrane and woodchip. I was religious about the maintenance to start with and it was raked and rolled every time I used it. The horses loved it as it was springy. Topped it up with an additional four inches after a year, then after another two years. The membrane needs to be sewn or sealed, you can't just lap it over and leave it - which I discovered to my fury was what the guy who put it in had done. It worked well.

It has now not been maintained by the current owners for the past two years and whilst it's useable as a turnout area I'd not be wanting to work any of my big horses on there now - but they have done nothing at all in the way of harrowing or rolling.
 

*hic*

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I honestly don't believe there is a cheap solution to building an arena. You need drains and a good surface. Both of which cost the money

Until we could afford one, we used one of the flatter paddocks. Which was fine until it got really wet.

The cheapest surface I found was MartinCollins Clopf, bought direct, but even that had to go on silica sand.

If your ground drains without the need for artificial drainage then there's no need for artificial drainage if you go above ground rather than below.
 

rara007

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When I was younger my dad (very non builderish!) made our first arena, a 40X20 of telegraph poles with wood chip surface. Not very all weather but more all weather than our field was before and perfect for the use it got (3 ponies under 12hh) (no hacking as on A road). We then upgraded to sand before we moved house.
 

abracadabra

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Face palming right now...Why didn't I think of that?! I want to build a lunge ring and it never occurred to me that it could go above ground instead of being excavated. Genius.
 

Princess Rosie

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Be cautious with bark chipping, can be very slippy in the wet weather. I would avoid woodchip at all costs, it rots down very quickly and you are left with an arena full of compost type surface which sticks to everything when wet and rides very deep, if you want to replace with a different surface at a later date then you need to remove this and it is costly. This is the situation we are in with an inherited arena with a house we bought. Just would hate anyone else to end up with this costly situation.
 

joycec

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Cheapest non rotting surface is 2-4mm grit. You can mix it with plastic granules from Manchester Plastics to make it ride with less depth, which then makes a surface which used to be sold as Passada, years ago it was about the best surface you could buy. You will need 100 or so tons of grit and twenty tons of plastic to start it off. The plastic is very easy to spread by hand/wheelbarrow because it's so light.

I had this for years with no land drains, and it worked all year round in a very wet area.
 

*hic*

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Be cautious with bark chipping, can be very slippy in the wet weather. I would avoid woodchip at all costs, it rots down very quickly and you are left with an arena full of compost type surface which sticks to everything when wet and rides very deep, if you want to replace with a different surface at a later date then you need to remove this and it is costly. This is the situation we are in with an inherited arena with a house we bought. Just would hate anyone else to end up with this costly situation.
If it's maintained woodchip is a reasonable surface. When you want to get rid of it as it's biodegradeable you digger the top off and use it as a mulch for paths or spread it or advertise it to gardeners / landscapers, then peel back the membrane to clear the last of it off roll the membrane back down and Bob's your uncle. It's not like getting rid of sand and fibre etc.
 

Princess Rosie

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If it's maintained woodchip is a reasonable surface. When you want to get rid of it as it's biodegradeable you digger the top off and use it as a mulch for paths or spread it or advertise it to gardeners / landscapers, then peel back the membrane to clear the last of it off roll the membrane back down and Bob's your uncle. It's not like getting rid of sand and fibre etc.

If you have a "well maintained" arena then you won't probably be considering disposal of it for a different surface. If however, you inherit a professionally constructed arena like we did that hasn't been maintained for just 12 Months then you are in trouble. The surface isn't suitable to use for gardeners/landscapers as it is effectively soil-ish with no richness in it, there's also a massive quantity (40x20 arena worth) and it definitely isn't for use on paths or spreading anywhere else. It is just as bad as having to get rid of any other surface and you are mistaken in your comment. On a maintained surface then yes your suggestions would work but no everyone maintains their surfaces or has the time to so do. At least with other surfaces lack of maintenance won't make your surface rot down to a pretty unusable surface.
 
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