Spring Feather
Well-Known Member
Fields get checked regardless of Poo picking, surely?
Lol! Mine certainly do. Any diligent farmer/land owner checks their land and stock as a matter of course daily.
Fields get checked regardless of Poo picking, surely?
Thank god for good land owners, managers and yo's.
Sorry muckypony, that's simply not true.
I just don't get the bigger fields therefore don't need to poo pick argument.If you have 3 acres per horse, it will look as bad after 3 weeks as one acre per horse does after one week. It looks awful! Horses won't eat where poo has lain for a long time, fresh manure is actually BAD for the soil and the grass which is why you should only use well rotted manure to fertilize. And it is bad for horses due to worm eggs. The longer poo stays in the field, the longer the contamination lasts. Our horses have had a clear wormcount for seven years! Except for the mare that went to stud and the pony that goes to shows where they can graze on the grass.
Really? So no yard exists where people just rent a stable and a field and are left to get on with it?
I have first hand experience - my last yard was owned by someone totally non horsey and we all (four of us) paid for a stable and the land and had to get on with it. This is a full DIY yard. Whats the point having a yard manager on a full DIY yard?.... Poo-picking after 4 horses doesn't take all day, every day...
Of yards like that exist MP. But not all DIY are run in that way.
I've always been DIY - Always with a very conspicuous YO and a beautifully maintained yard and land.
Interesting. So you girls who are on DIY livery, how do you go about refencing fields and fertilizing and reseeding your fields? Do you all chip in and pay a tractor man to come and do the pasture maintenance? And fencing contractors to refence? What about when water pipes burst or valves break in the water trough mechanisms? I'm just trying to get an idea of how you all decide what needs to be done and what order to do them in. What happens when something breaks and needs repairing with immediate effect?
We don't fertilise, we reseed if we need to but only around gateways, yes we pay a tractor man to top the fields once a year as we have so much grass or the actual land owner will do it free, we have wells for water, we fix our own troughs and collect water from roofs in containers we bought ourselves, borrowing the land owners trailer to pick them up and getting our OH's to install them. The land owner repaired our toilet recently too and we bought him a bottle of whisky to say thankyou. Things pretty much tick over nicely. We are all responsible for our own rotation of paddocks and our own fencing and we are pretty strong ladies, handy with a pole basher! We can always find a solution between us to most things - and if not, the actual land owner is fair and fabInteresting. So you girls who are on DIY livery, how do you go about refencing fields and fertilizing and reseeding your fields? Do you all chip in and pay a tractor man (or we borrow a tractor by flirting :0 and do it ourselves) to come and do the pasture maintenance? And fencing contractors to refence? What about when water pipes burst or valves break in the water trough mechanisms? I'm just trying to get an idea of how you all decide what needs to be done and what order to do them in. What happens when something breaks and needs repairing with immediate effect?
Bodging fences? Hope you've got good public liability insurance.
You make do with what you have and fix things yourself!
Electric fencing - easy to put up. I was at a yard where everyone chipped in to buy fertiliser and we did it ourselves! Although I've always had good-doers so don't actually need to do this! If a farmer is needed with a tractor then yes, you all chip in. However, if you've been in an area a while and get to know the local farmers they sometimes do you deals or help you outour hay supplier cut the hedges in the fields for us!
I went to the yard one morning, late for work, and broke the pipe that connected to the water trough and water flooded everywhere - I went a got the owner (non-horsey) and explained and he got his handyman to fix it! In the meantime the water was turned off, so for 1 dat we bucketed water to the trough, no problem at all.
If sometihing breaks, theres always a way to patch it up immediately and then you can fix it properly when you have time. I've spent several evenings bodging fences with show jumps/electric fencing old peices of wood until I have time to do it properly!
I'm currently mid-move to my 'own place' where I pay the owner (again non-horsey) to rent their stables and land and have to maintain everything myself... Having a useful dad helpsSo far he's fitted my new lights, built shelving, put up fencing, collected loads of hay, given me a supply of water and cut down any poisonous plants...
Where theres a will theres a way!