MikePA
Super Moderator
For all you potential horse owners...
The other night, just as I was getting comfortable on the sofa, my wife called me from her car phone. She was on her way to dinner with 'the girls' and stopped to feed the horses. Our barn is about 100 yards from the house with a driveway out to our road. Seems one of the horses managed to pull the top of their hay rack loose. It was hanging out into the stall, being held by just the lower screws. Since it was dangerous to leave it this way, I had to go investigate and repair. I didn't have the right size screws to repair it immediately, I had to take the hay rack down. I got the screws on the way home last night and walked out to the barn with my tool box, drill bits and trusty DeWalt cordless drill. Of course, while I was out there, my wife (who was cleaning stalls at the time) found several other jobs for me.
Being a horse owner is sometimes like being an emergency room doctor. When something goes wrong at the barn, with either the barn or a horse, more often than not, it's something that needs addressed right away because if you let it go, things undoubtedly will get worse.
The other night, just as I was getting comfortable on the sofa, my wife called me from her car phone. She was on her way to dinner with 'the girls' and stopped to feed the horses. Our barn is about 100 yards from the house with a driveway out to our road. Seems one of the horses managed to pull the top of their hay rack loose. It was hanging out into the stall, being held by just the lower screws. Since it was dangerous to leave it this way, I had to go investigate and repair. I didn't have the right size screws to repair it immediately, I had to take the hay rack down. I got the screws on the way home last night and walked out to the barn with my tool box, drill bits and trusty DeWalt cordless drill. Of course, while I was out there, my wife (who was cleaning stalls at the time) found several other jobs for me.
Being a horse owner is sometimes like being an emergency room doctor. When something goes wrong at the barn, with either the barn or a horse, more often than not, it's something that needs addressed right away because if you let it go, things undoubtedly will get worse.