polly1976
Well-Known Member
Now this has not happened to me in a very long time and I will stand to be corrected by any sensible factual answers.
Last night a friend and I were out trying to get in a quick hack before it gets too dark after work. There is a small lane which goes alongside 2 long fields which have been stubble for the couple of months or so. I am a great stickler for not riding in fields once they have been ploughed right up till they are stubble fields again for obvious reasons (crop damage etc) and at all other time stick to bridleways and rights of way etc.
So on the way back passed we opted for a slow collected canter along the edge of the field (which we and other horse riders do often). The farmer happened to drive past and pulled up to talk - we know him and see him often out so nothing unusual. He then asked if we could not ride on the field.
My first thought was ok, it is officially trespassing, no harm done - very sorry won't do it again, didn;t realise it was a problem etc. But then he continued that the horses were damaging the ground! This is where I started to wonder what he was on about. I work in construction/engineering and know a bit about the ground, but his reason was the horses compact the top layer of ground/earth and this damages it??
The ground was firm enough and hooves were not chopping up the ground or anything, small hoof prints just visible kind of thing.
My thoughts were the field when it is ploughed is down a foot deep, turned and then harrowed. So I cannot see what 'damage/compaction' would remain post ploughing.
Had he said get off my land and been done with it would not be writing this at all, but wondered if anyone else out there can confirm the connundrum of horses damaging the earth by compaction?
Its just puzzled me ever since.
Yours truly
a told off 35 year old ;-)
Last night a friend and I were out trying to get in a quick hack before it gets too dark after work. There is a small lane which goes alongside 2 long fields which have been stubble for the couple of months or so. I am a great stickler for not riding in fields once they have been ploughed right up till they are stubble fields again for obvious reasons (crop damage etc) and at all other time stick to bridleways and rights of way etc.
So on the way back passed we opted for a slow collected canter along the edge of the field (which we and other horse riders do often). The farmer happened to drive past and pulled up to talk - we know him and see him often out so nothing unusual. He then asked if we could not ride on the field.
My first thought was ok, it is officially trespassing, no harm done - very sorry won't do it again, didn;t realise it was a problem etc. But then he continued that the horses were damaging the ground! This is where I started to wonder what he was on about. I work in construction/engineering and know a bit about the ground, but his reason was the horses compact the top layer of ground/earth and this damages it??
The ground was firm enough and hooves were not chopping up the ground or anything, small hoof prints just visible kind of thing.
My thoughts were the field when it is ploughed is down a foot deep, turned and then harrowed. So I cannot see what 'damage/compaction' would remain post ploughing.
Had he said get off my land and been done with it would not be writing this at all, but wondered if anyone else out there can confirm the connundrum of horses damaging the earth by compaction?
Its just puzzled me ever since.
Yours truly
a told off 35 year old ;-)