Showing posts with label backyard horsekeeping. Show all posts
Showing posts with label backyard horsekeeping. Show all posts

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Nikki’s Notes: Manage Your Horsey Housework By Grand Prix Competitor/Coach/Clinician and Published Author Nikki Alvin-Smith

Nikki’s Notes: Manage Your Horsey Housework By Grand Prix Competitor/Coach/Clinician and published author Nikki Alvin-Smith


 

I simply love spending time in the barn. While some jobs are less favored than others, I am very content to complete the majority of the horsey housekeeping tasks. But most equestrians want more time riding and less time barn cleaning. For me, the meditational moments of mucking out a stall can be a peaceful interlude but for many horse owners they find the daily chores are time-consuming necessities that take valuable training time away from their precious hours at the barn. 

 

A tidy barn is not only more pleasurable to use, but it also offers a more professional impression to visitors. A cluttered environment can also add stress, so keeping things tidy can help you focus and feel more peaceful in your barn.

 

Here are some tidy-up tips as a horse barn owner that you can employ to maximize efficiency and safety around the horse barn.

 

 

Make A Smart Site Choice

 

When you park at the supermarket you generally try to park close to the entrance doors. This saves time and effort walking back and forth with bags of groceries. Think the same way when siting your barn and the adjunct use areas. Careful selection of spaces not just for parking, but placement locations for manure storage, hay and bedding supplies and distances to turn-out paddocks, is a must do in the design phase.

 

The most common site design for a busy working horse facility, is to place the barn centrally on the site and span out the paddocks around the structure. But this is not always viable due to the restrictions of topography, geology and geography of the property. As a Portuguese fisherman once said to me when de-boning a complex fish for dinner, “You have to learn to work with the fish.” This is especially true if you have inherited a horse farm already built and designed by someone else. Existing farms can be improved with a little imagination. Review how you use the barn on a daily basis and eliminate those things that annoy you most or that cause the most problems. It could be an improvement as simple as adding a new gate to one side of a paddock or replacing worn heavy wooden entrance doors to the barn with sliding metal ones.

 

Minor changes are usually not expensive to make. You can have a concrete pad enclosed by three side walls installed for shavings storage or manure staging close to a barn that offers a drive-in option for efficient pick up utilizing a tractor with bucket attachment. Or have a ramp constructed with compacted materials that you can pull up to with a low-profile manure spreader on its downside to empty wheelbarrows of manure into the top. Sometimes a little ingenuity can save a big headache.

 

Consider the fire hazards and dust issues with siting combustible materials and supplies close to where the horses reside. Proximity of manure storage to the barn needs to be evaluated for its ease of use in all seasons. In summer, the choice of too close a site to the horse housing structure will encourage flies and other unwanted visitors to breed and infiltrate the barn, but if the manure site is too far away from the barn in winter in areas where there is significant snowfall, then manure removal can become difficult to manage over many months of cold weather. Best option for manure storage may be a transitional area where it can be temporarily stored and regularly removed.

 

Lose The Obstacle Course

 

There is nothing more annoying than having to move items back and forth to clean. Particularly when those objects are heavy or unwieldy to manage on your own.

 

Invest in a powerful vacuum with accessories that offer a good reach. Thankfully today you don’t even need to switch out filters to go from a dry vacuum to a wet vacuum. Which makes cleaning much simpler when you need to switch between tasks. While sweeping up with a broom is cheap, you are simply moving the dust and detritus around. Which is unhealthy for the respiratory well-being of you and your horses. Keeping floors clean will also minimize tracking of debris into tack rooms and feed rooms, saving the need for further cleaning.

 

Best practices for ease of cleaning are to keep blankets hung up and off the floor; place tack boxes in a designated space rather than in an aisleway; use collapsible saddle racks that mount on the wall;  place ropes/halters on bridle hangers by stall doors; hang tools like muck forks on the wall; elevate the bottom shelving for grooming/bathing supplies to a 12” or more off the floor so you can easily clean beneath at every turn.

 

It is also a good idea to avoid creation of hard-to-reach corners in the building as these will inevitably become a haven for spiders, vermin, snakes and other unwanted visitors. Instead place larger objects or items along a wall, rather than tucked in a corner spot.

 


 

 

Ditch The Water Problem

 

Snow melt, adverse weather conditions like unusually heavy rainfall, can all cause unexpected problems with flooding that require massive efforts to clean up. Try to get ahead of the issue by keeping gutters and downspouts clear of debris all year around and have overflow ditches in areas that are likely to be prone to excessive water run-off.

 

While these ditches may remain dry for much of the time, their immediate availability when they are needed is a boon for preventative care of any structure and its foundations. Running water run-off downhill to daylight away from paddocks, walkways and structures is a great way to discharge it.

 

Keep The Barn Bird and Bug Free

 

Ensure that soffits are guarded from intrusion and nesting by birds with wire mesh if you want to avoid cleaning up bird droppings from water buckets, floors and walls. Bird infestations can also spread disease such as West Nile and Avian Flu, so keeping your barn free of birds is a good idea.

 

Make repairs to window screens and door screens before the insect season arrives, to minimize having to clean windows and surfaces of flyspecks and cobwebs. Seal small holes and refresh caulk around window sills to keep insect ingress to a minimum.

 

Whenever you switch out light bulbs take the opportunity to give a thorough cleaning to the fixture and the surrounding area.

 

A Tidy Barn Is A Safe Barn

 

Even without a catastrophic event like evacuating horses from a barn in a fire event or a river breaching its banks and flooding a yard with torrents of water, the barn that is kept tidy will not only be more pleasurable to use, but it will also be safer. Fire safety measures and the ability to quickly batten down the hatches of a barn to keep animals safely confined to its interior are all good barn management practices.

 

In any emergency it is obviously advisable to have unobstructed exits, but even during daily tasks of leading a horse from A to B, the absence of obstacles in aisleways and by entrance doors offer another level of safety should the horse spook or crowd the handler’s space.

 

I was once complaining to my mother about the recurring routines that come as part of running a household and she gave me some sage advice.

 

“Do one bit of extra housework every day. Even that small extra chore you do in addition to the necessary daily ones stops it building up into a massive task.”

 

This works a treat.

 

The best ways to manage any task is by following a regular routine. And of course, get everyone to follow it!

 


 

All Rights Reserved. Copyright © 2025 N. Alvin-Smith - Author 


 

 

 


Sunday, December 28, 2025

New Year - 2026 Marks 14th Anniversary of Publication

2026 will mark the 14th year anniversary of the publication of Catskill Horse Magazine and The Merry Band at the Catskill Horse is very proud of that achievement.

 

Now reaching over 165,000 views per month the readership has blossomed far beyond the reaches of where it began in the mountains of New York's Western Catskills. What began as an earnest attempt to create a central hub for all equine enthusiasts in the Catskill Mountain region of Upstate New York now finds avid readers up and down the Eastern U.S. and even across the seas. 

Feature articles found among the digital pages include an impressive array of topics from advanced level dressage training advice that professional equestrians appreciate; to research overseas of horse breeds under threat of extinction and activities and events that readers interested across multiple equestrian disciplines can enjoy.  

Amazingly perhaps given the increase in expenses and the changes in the publishing world the magazine is still free to read for all. And it is still the community resource its original mission intended. The premise was to spread human-authored thought led advice and education from its band of dedicated volunteer contributing writers and the editorial features, news pages and event pages have all delivered on that original intent.

Over time writers have come and gone. Some have moved along to create their own marketing enterprises or advanced their writing careers where others have continued on their life journey in other directions. For each one that has made a contribution however big or small we thank you. 

Helping writers and horse aficionados navigate their careers has always been a central part of Catskill Horse's ideals. To have played a part, however small, in helping a writer gain confidence through publishing their works or by providing thoughtful, full reviews of their books in the Yay or Neigh review column is a wonderful ripple effect of working hard to create the magazine.

The expenses of producing the publication are in part covered by the stalwart advertisers, and in part underwritten by the publisher Horse in a Kilt Media Inc.



The intention was always to keep the magazine available to all, and to create a diverse and inclusive publication that would help horse people and of course then indirectly, horses themselves.

As Catskill Horse Magazine canters into 2026 we hope and expect that to be able to continue. Though for security purposes it may be necessary for readers to enter an email address to enter past a viewing wall in the future. That is all yet to be figured out. 


 

A heartfelt thank-you to you all dear readers, and of course to our advertisers, and to our band of contributing writers and IT professionals. 

The Merry Band at the Catskill Horse wish you all a Happy, Healthy and Prosperous 2026.

Catskill Horse Editor: Nikki Alvin-Smith

 

 

 

  

Saturday, March 6, 2021

The Best Therapists Eat Grass ~ But Give Them Some Peace Too

Photo Credit: Nikki Alvin-Smith Studio

  

Whatever life throws at you, and let's face it during the last 15 months that has been a lot for all of us, there have to more options than 'suck it up' and deal with it. The time has been especially difficult for women in the workforce as they do double duty with home schooling kids and lay offs at work or working weird hours from home.

Our kids are stressed out. Youngsters toil with remote learning, our adult kids fight to keep their jobs and income and if they have a family, their sanity. Grandparents find themselves babysitting the grandkids as useful adjuncts to the daily life of their children and find it hard to go back to work even as the job market opens up once more.

For equestrians horses have become more important than ever in their lives in their role of emotional support. The perfect therapist! Plenty of hugs and interaction, no backchat, no noise. Just a peaceful coexistence with joyful time spent outdoors exercising during schooling time or the incomparable calm companionship of just hanging out in the stall grooming and spending time together.

It's no wonder that more and more folks are bringing their horses home to their backyard if they have the option. Sharing the equestrian passion with other members of the household can offer valuable stress relief to everyone.

What do the horses think of all this attention? From their POV I'd expect quite a lot. Boarding barn owners report that their human clients are spending more quality time with their equines and building better partnerships. Horses love attention and having something to do. Freedom to roam and move about being essential to their mental and physical health just as it is for ours.

But is it possible to overdo all that attention to your equine therapist? The answer is yes. Horses can become just as stressed by too much input as by too little. Obviously it all goes to the nature of the beast and the relationship that is currently enjoyed. Trust is essential in this emotional equation, as a horse that is distrustful of its caregiver or rider will become undone quickly with ever more time spent in the presence of the tension-inducing homo sapiens species. Homo sapiens, (Latin: “wise man”) being the species to which all modern human beings belong. But perhaps sometimes not all that wise.

 


 

It is important not to forget to give your horse his downtime and to establish a routine that works for both sides of the partnership. For example, rowdy kids climbing up and down all day on a pony can easily turn a respectful trustworthy critter into a cantankerous beast. 

It's also not fair to suddenly decide to increase the riding time just because you have more free time available. A horse needs to be 'legged up' gradually and new demands must be made with a clear understanding from the horse of what is being asked and how to answer the requests.

A horse may become lame out of seemingly nowhere. It may be possible to get away with a once a week one hour ride on a badly fitted saddle that works well for neither horse or rider (so often heavier riders sit in saddles far too small for their posterior). But when you start riding for longer periods or more frequently the pain may be unbearable and cause behavioral and soundness issues. A horse simply cannot be expected to 'suck it up' and manage any more than the rider should be asked to do. 

So give some thought to your trusty steed and their needs and as always, place them well in front of your own. Our noble beasts deserve our very best efforts and we must not take too much even though equines will so often give so much more than we should ask.