Hanging Rugs

pistolpete

Well-Known Member
Joined
29 July 2009
Messages
4,445
Visit site
How does everyone deal with rugs in use? We have five horses all of which use two or three rugs each at any one time. We have a drying area for when they are soaked but the rest of the time they are just in a heap! How does everyone organise rugs?
 

lewis2015

Well-Known Member
Joined
29 July 2015
Messages
433
Visit site
It's a pain, I agree! I don't have much to offer - we just dry where we can e.g. hung on rug rail, hung on stable door. I just try to keep enough spare rugs so he doesn't have to go back out in a soaking rug. It doesn't suit everyone, but some leave the rug on the horse to dry as it dries with their body heat.
 

PorkChop

Well-Known Member
Joined
11 June 2010
Messages
10,646
Location
Scotland
Visit site
Luckily we have the facility to pop them over the partitions between stables for drying out - but I know what you mean, there is just never enough room.

I do have a large five arm swinging rug rack that I fold and lay the rugs over the arms. I also have normal rug racks, like a towel rail, for their travelling rugs.

Its all about using the space you have as well as you can :)
 

Liane

Well-Known Member
Joined
20 June 2001
Messages
353
Visit site
I have some really strong 6ft clothes rails that are on wheels and they are great for hanging rugs on and they can be wheeled together and out of the way when needed.
 

ponydi

Well-Known Member
Joined
1 January 2013
Messages
430
Location
Yorkshire
Visit site
If you fasten sheep hurdles together (number dependent on space available) and arrange them in a zig-zag so they stand firmly you have an instant rug rack
 

SuperH

Well-Known Member
Joined
15 July 2010
Messages
1,275
Location
Powys
Visit site
I made a rug rack with two pallets stood on their ends then slotted bars through the slats to hang the rugs on. Mine is screwed to the wall and floor as it is in an area where one of mine can reach and I didn't want her to rub on it and flatten it, so far she hasn't bothered with it and it has been there a couple of years now.

If you have no indoor area to put it you can build a bay outside with straw bales then put a tin roof over and more bales on top to hold it on. If you have to put it in an area where horses can eat the bales you can wrap the bales in plastic/silage sheet/tarpaulin etc so they can't eat them.
 

Llee94

Well-Known Member
Joined
1 October 2014
Messages
597
Location
Devon
Visit site
I have several ways of storing them, but they always end up in a heap on the gate. I do have hooks to hang them up on when wet, but I find spiders love this and to be honest I am sick of finding massive creepy crawlies on me or horse once I have put a different rug on. I hate spiders so even the thought of swapping for a different rug fills me with dread. The only good storage solution I have found is to keep them in a old chest freezer. No spiders can get in and it is fully water tight but can only fit a few of my rugs in them.
I tend to just use the same few rugs in the winter and leave wet rugs on the horses to dry unless they are soaked through.
 

Gift Horse

Well-Known Member
Joined
30 October 2013
Messages
1,426
Visit site
I hang mine on coat hooks fixed quite high. I pass the fillet string D rings over the hooks. I get spiders in them but they are off the floor hopefully out of the reach of mice.
 

9tails

Well-Known Member
Joined
20 January 2009
Messages
4,844
Visit site
I have ropes hung from the beams threaded through a length of drainpipe. Rugs are hung over these, they tend to dry fairly quickly but I don't buy rugs that hold water.
 

MagicMelon

Well-Known Member
Joined
6 November 2004
Messages
16,324
Location
North East Scotland
Visit site
I've got two long pieces of heavyduty gutterpipe threaded onto strong rope which is hung from my tackroom rafters - love them, brilliant for chucking rugs over and they are able to drip dry if wet etc. Otherwise, if they're not in regular use I fold them up and store them either on shelving or in big plastic boxes.
 

PolarSkye

Well-Known Member
Joined
7 July 2010
Messages
9,562
Visit site
Wet turnouts are left on horse to dry overnight, all other rugs are either hung up in stable on mahoosive rug rail (plastic drainpipe, reinforced with wood down the middle - I think it's a good five foot long - suspended on hard-wearing rope) or if especially manky hung up on hooks (just fasten the front and sling over the hook) in the feed room so that the excess mud and gunk can be brushed off when dry. Those not in regular use are stored folded up neatly on shelves and in trunks in the garage at home. We have far too many - I am taking a good 10-15 of them to a local horsey car boot next weekend.

P
 

Jericho

Well-Known Member
Joined
26 February 2008
Messages
2,564
Visit site
Hooks on baler twine hanging from rafters in spare stable for dry rugs and 2 X 8ft pole hanging horizontally on baler twine from rafters 5 foot off ground for wet rugs
 

Jericho

Well-Known Member
Joined
26 February 2008
Messages
2,564
Visit site
Hooks on baler twine hanging from rafters in spare stable for dry rugs and 2 X 8ft pole hanging horizontally on baler twine from rafters 5 foot off ground for wet rugs

Eta to say that not sure what to do if you have no undercover! If you have a field shelter you could make rails along the walls in side - a livery yard I was on once did this so everyone kept their rugs in stable but no good if your horse likes to play with them like mine!
 

applecart14

Well-Known Member
Joined
12 March 2010
Messages
6,269
Location
Solihull, West Mids
Visit site
We used to just dangle old 3/4 length jump poles from bailing twine but we have a rug rack on this yard that we are all allocated a section of. We also have a rug rail by or outside our stable to hang rugs on and a laundry room which has a barley boiler boiling barley and washing machine and dryer so its quite warm in there when the doors shut, so we can hang rugs on there if we are desperate.

Each stable has a hay manger with access from outside the stable via a little door in the side. We often do up the breast strap and hang rugs from there. My friend badly tore her ankle ligament tripping up on a fillet string hung in this way years ago from a stable door at the last yard so I am always aware of how dangerous fillet strings can be when they are hung low or touch the floor so will try to hook them over the buckle on the surcingle so the rug doesn't hang completely down to the floor.
 
Last edited:
Top