Wednesday, May 15, 2013

The War on Mud

This year has been one for the worst years for mud I can remember and it's been especially bad where the horses are.  Granted, when I built my barn, I never anticipated having to maintain two separate herds (the main barn is dry and hard) and I never intended to use the shed roof area for the horses (you must know what I think about plans and intentions by now).  I did try, I put two truck loads of  drainage stone in that area last year and thought that would be enough.  I could not have been more wrong.

The poor horses ended up not having a single bit of dry land for the entire duration of mud season.  Even the shed was wet as it proved to be a very low spot with a 4 inch deep puddle across the opening.  I dug trenches and did my best, but it was a complete lost cause.

The thing that was really bad about this, is what all that mud does to equine feet in an amazingly short time.  Both Tessa and Gabe went from having nice, tough feet to having soggy, flat feet, battling terrible thrush.  All in just a couple of weeks.   I swore I was going to get the problem fixed this year, but I didn't think I would be able to do anything until July, which is generally the only time a truck can get near my barn.  However, after a stretch of freakishly dry weather, the ground was solid and I hurriedly made arrangements with a local gravel hauler to bring me a couple of loads of crushed stone.  He still almost got stuck once, but he made ot out, thank God, I really don't want my very own dump truck...




No sooner had the truck left and I had gotten the fence back up then my helpers arrived to spread stone.  Just in the nick of time too, because the rains came back the next day and I think it will be July before I can get any more.  Too bad my helpers aren't actually very much help.  Good company, but not much help.

I never did take any 'before' pictures of this mess, but you can get an idea of the problem.  This is dry and I have already filled in the worst of the puddle...

So, I spent a good portion of my "vacation" moving stone.

I put 4-6 inches in the entire shed area and I am still working on spreading the rest around the barn.



What an improvement!  We have had a lot of rain since and no puddle.

The really amazing thing is that, after just one week of walking across this stone (it is #2 crushed stone if anyone is interested.  Past experience has taught me that this is the greatest stuff), the horse's feet have improved dramatically.  Their shape is already improving, the frogs have gone from horrible, spongy, nasty things to tough callus and all signs of thrush are completely gone with no effort on my part (aside from shoveling umpteen tons of stone that is).  It just goes to show how a horse's hoof will heal itself if given any chance at all.

13 comments:

  1. You moved all that gravel yourself? By hand? I'm exhausted just thinking about that. What an excellent job. Love the picture of your helpers. :)

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  2. Holy crap! Just moving those MATS is hard enough, they are so heavy. I can't believe you did all this by hand and a sled :-o.

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  3. You are an inventive, hard working girl. Hope you are OVER your bronchitis --

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  4. Sweetie, you need a tractor!

    I need some gravel!

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    Replies
    1. The bad part...I HAVE a tractor. I just can't get the bleep, bleep, bleeping thing to start and I can't find anyone to work on it!

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  5. Kris, my gosh. You must be exhausted! I wish I were close enough to help you... you mus be just worn out.

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  6. If I was closer to you I'd loan you my wheel barrow. Or a cart that you can pull behind your lawnmower.

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    1. I have them, but they proved to be not up to the job. I just hate it when the darned machines wimp out before I do:)

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  7. I use crusher dust in my donkey pen, it's like an emery board for their feet. Makes a massive difference.

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  8. What Cindy D said ... only a skid loader!

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  9. Good for you, loads of work but will be so worth it! Hate mud, it is evil stuff! Let's hope for kinder weather this coming year :-)

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  10. I'm going to have to look into doing this! My barn floor is always soggy and I am forever fighting white line on my 3 little donks.

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  11. i need to do this but i cannot get a tractor or truck anywhere near my animals' area. our property was not intended to keep equines. that means they will have to dump it next to our street, and i will have to shovel it all up into a wheelbarrow and take it to the horse/donkey area, and then spread it. i've done this before for the area our run-in now rests on, but obviously need to do a lot more in the paddock. the problem is, out paddock is sloped so i'm told the gravel will just all run down the hill. i think i'm just screwed, i have no idea what to do, but i really want to provide gravel for hoof health.

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