Mark4510
Gold Member
Rollerskate,
as you can tell by this thread there are a number of different options depending on personal preference. To me what drives this decision is: what you are going to use the arena for (what type of riding), how big it is, how much you are going to use it, and what the footing is. Richard is right, Kiser does most of the big name shows and for those types of arenas his drags work the best though they are pricey. If you are not going to use a sand type of footing then conditioning is probably a better way of going. Personally I don't think you can wrong with a rotary harrow. They do a great job regardless of the footing and, for me, they do a much better job than a chain harrow as they tend to level as well. Additionally, if you have fencing around your arena and overshoot a bit, they tend to bounce off the post rather than catching on it.
If you are going to use it a lot or cover rough ground, I would get the ones with replacable teeth. For my money Gibbs Manufacturing makes the best but they are in CA and shipping would probably be prohibitive.
One of these days I am going to post some pics of the low cost version of a Kiser drag I made. With water and replacable teeth my total cost is less than $500.
as you can tell by this thread there are a number of different options depending on personal preference. To me what drives this decision is: what you are going to use the arena for (what type of riding), how big it is, how much you are going to use it, and what the footing is. Richard is right, Kiser does most of the big name shows and for those types of arenas his drags work the best though they are pricey. If you are not going to use a sand type of footing then conditioning is probably a better way of going. Personally I don't think you can wrong with a rotary harrow. They do a great job regardless of the footing and, for me, they do a much better job than a chain harrow as they tend to level as well. Additionally, if you have fencing around your arena and overshoot a bit, they tend to bounce off the post rather than catching on it.
If you are going to use it a lot or cover rough ground, I would get the ones with replacable teeth. For my money Gibbs Manufacturing makes the best but they are in CA and shipping would probably be prohibitive.
One of these days I am going to post some pics of the low cost version of a Kiser drag I made. With water and replacable teeth my total cost is less than $500.