Round Pen for Horses

   / Round Pen for Horses #31  
David
Your pasture is too small for your number of horses if the grass is only 3/16th's tall. Do they look skinny? Is there any sign of a fat crease down the middle of their backs?
The stuff they won't eat is probably where they poop but if they get too hungry they will eat that too or break your fence and find more to eat elsewhere.
Look at Beez post #17 pictures in this thread.
What is that green stuff inside his 80' pen/ring?
It's a lot higher than 3/16th's.

why do you assume his animals are starving because his grass is low.? that's a horrible way to go thru life assuming the worst about other peoples situations. nosie neighbors like that are the worst. I have a couple 30+ yr old horses that my neighbors called animal control on my 3 months in a row claiming they were starving. and had no food or water.

barn has 1000# of bagged feed in it in clean dry rodent / bug free storage.. pasture has baled hay in it.. grass is very low due to no rain, and 100g water trough is freely accessable. horses are thin as they are VERY OLD. if the people would worry what's on their side of the fence more than whats on my side.. this would not be an issue.

low grass is common in an area not getting enough rain. as long as he has feed and fodder and roughage out fo r the horses.. they can live on sand pastures.

:(


soundguy
 
   / Round Pen for Horses #32  
in florida.. grass control is just setting around and watching it die because we went 6m with no rain. this week is an exception.. but to little too late....
 
   / Round Pen for Horses #33  
why do you assume his animals are starving because his grass is low.? that's a horrible way to go thru life assuming the worst about other peoples situations. nosie neighbors like that are the worst. I have a couple 30+ yr old horses that my neighbors called animal control on my 3 months in a row claiming they were starving. and had no food or water.

barn has 1000# of bagged feed in it in clean dry rodent / bug free storage.. pasture has baled hay in it.. grass is very low due to no rain, and 100g water trough is freely accessable. horses are thin as they are VERY OLD. if the people would worry what's on their side of the fence more than whats on my side.. this would not be an issue.

low grass is common in an area not getting enough rain. as long as he has feed and fodder and roughage out fo r the horses.. they can live on sand pastures.

:(


soundguy

Why don't you read complete posts, and replys, before picking phrases out of context, to make up your own rebuttals?
I know you are trying to be helpful, but are you?
I have no more time for you.
Ron
 
   / Round Pen for Horses #34  
Why don't you read complete posts, and replys, before picking phrases out of context, to make up your own rebuttals?
I know you are trying to be helpful, but are you?
I have no more time for you.
Ron

i read your entire post before making thast reply.

I then read your later reply.

makes no sense to me why you would ask if his horses are starving in one post, then comment that you know they are fine in another.

that seems quite odd to me.

I'f my posts bother you. please.. PLEASE put me on your ignore list so you won't see them. that may solve 2 issues in 1.

I don't know if your first post was meant to be a joke or not.. but joking about starving animals is no joke. mere mention of that sort of thing gets process rolling that can become a BEAR for the person on the recieving end. As I said. i went thru MONTHS of false animal cruelty complaints. the control office will let the complaint go in anon. and then they have to open a case, and send out an investigator.. that investigator comes out by themselves first and takes pictures, then comes back and has to schedule a meeting with you on property and inspect your animals. To blazes if you have a job or find it inconvienient to answer boges fraudulent charges.. but if you don't show.. they just take your animals. Ok.. so you show up.. they look them over, tell you everything is fine. Fine? if it was fine why am I here.. whay are you here? " well we have to investigae every complaint"... so.. I asked them.. if someone calls in every day on me you have to come out every day? " yes'

what a crock! waste of taxpayer resources.. etc. this happened on and off for 3 months. got to the point where the animal control investgator and myself traded cel numbers and when complaint would com ein, they'd call me. i got lucky and a few times the animals would come up to the fence and the investigator could clear the case on initial visit. many times i had to iss work ($$ ) and be there for them to drive out.. see healthy ancient animals, and leave... all because somebody made comments about hungry animals.

so yeah.. I'm quite sensitive when someone makes comments about the welfare of an animal before they have any proof there is an actual problem. which, in that first post.. sure seemed, to me, to be the case.

soundguy
 
   / Round Pen for Horses #36  
i'll save you a seat :)
 
   / Round Pen for Horses #37  
Wow, I like the clamps! Did they make a big difference in the leaning of the panels? I see you clamped tops, did you clamp near the bottoms too?

As I said, my round pen is 100'. I do have some lean...not a huge amount but definitely noticeable.

Here's mine when it was first finished and the first load of sand dumped. You can see part of the lining up to keep the footing in:
sanddelivery.jpg


Here's part of it after spreading drainage rock around it:
Ringrocks.jpg


We had to do a lot of clearing and destumping and then the area was *low* and wet. So one end of the round pen area is about 10' higher than ground level, LOL! It was supposed to have been a 100x200 ring but the amount of work and material went WAY over budget. :ashamed:

I'm going to check out those clamps.
 
   / Round Pen for Horses
  • Thread Starter
#38  
Wow, I like the clamps! Did they make a big difference in the leaning of the panels? I see you clamped tops, did you clamp near the bottoms too?

As I said, my round pen is 100'. I do have some lean...not a huge amount but definitely noticeable.

Yes we had a problem with ours leaning, in fact I had sections fall over when I tried to assemble it alone. The chains didn't keep sections really tight so they would flop back and forth, weren't very stable and made a lot of noise when a horse or human bumped them. Also the chains don't allow a way to support a changing elevation of each section- they're designed to squeeze the sections together at the same height. I put clamps top and bottom, and used a level on each section as I bolted it on. Note if you buy the clamps where I did you have to buy carriage bolts separate, they don't come with. I see you have pins, might make it a little harder to use clamps because the frames can't get close enough. I think you could offset each section slightly, one section bumped in slightly, the next one bumped out.
 
   / Round Pen for Horses #39  
I agree
Honestly I would never use t posts for a round pen panels either. I have never had a round pen, I have worked my horses on a lunge or we have a small field. It is really bigger than ideal but I have learned to use what I have.
 

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