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South Carolina Bound! Need advice please

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  • South Carolina Bound! Need advice please

    Greetings! My husband and I are relocating to South Carolina, Columbia area, and after the cold Pennsylvanian winters, I can't say who will be happier, me or the horses I have been set to the task of finding the following:
    • Small horse property for rent, 2+ bedrooms and room for 3 horses or..
    • Self care or inexpensive facility for 3 horses, pasture board is fine for 2, but my older mare needs stall rest
    • Vet, Farrier, feed store, etc.
    • Real Estate agent with experience in horse properties.


    So far, I love Camden, and Aiken, but Aiken seems a bit far for commuting. Also, what would the local horse publication be? Is there a facebook group? I am really looking forward to meeting the new horse community!!

    Victoria

  • #2
    Watch the Columbia area, the gang and crime rate is very high. I lived about 1 hr north of Columbia and no one wanted to go down there. We moved away because of the crime rate and the low income areas that were impossible to avoid (because it is everywhere.) Even an hour up north we would never leave the house without a gun because of the crime rate, and Columbia is much worse. Several close friends worked law enforcement down there so we were not exaggerating about the crime rate. Please be careful and watch were you move.

    I found South Carolina miserable horse wise. I found a good barn, but the horse scene was horrible. Crappy shows and not a lot of nice places. We moved out of there as soon as possible. I couldn't find a decent farrier and my horse was lame half the time. I had to actually use a vet from North Carolina because the local vets were absolutely horrible. My horse hated the humid summers and winter was so much colder than it was in Colorado. My horse was very happy to move back and has excelled since moving away from South Carolina.

    Comment


    • #3
      Camden is awesome! It has a great small town feel and is very horsey. Go and visit the Tack Room. The folks there are so nice and i'm sure could fill you in on the area, plus they have local horse magazines/flyers that may help get you in touch with horse professionals. The SC Equine Associates are the vet group in Camden and they are very nice and educated. They can handle all your typical horsey ailments but work closely with the bigger vet clinics in Aiken and Tryon if you need a referral for something like a major surgery or complex lameness. I don't live there so no knowledge on the real estate except riding through hunt country and drooling over the properties there.

      The South Carolina Equine Park is in Camden and they hold horse shows almost every weekend (in tons of displines.. h/j, dressage, western, roping, gaited, breed shows, etc). The footing is great and they are just finishing a new covered arena. It's one of my favorite places to show.

      GucciJumper is right that the summers are very hot and humid but I've never heard anyone complain about the winters. The temperature rarely drops below 40 during the day and snow is pretty non existent here. Yesterday it was 87*F and I was wearing shorts and tank top....

      Blythewood has a horse community and is very close to Columbia, but I have a feeling it may be $$$ since it is so close. Could be worth checking out? I lived in Columbia for 4 years and that is where I boarded my horse. It was a 20 minute commute to downtown.

      Comment


      • #4
        Another vote for Camden. I used to spend a lot of time there when I was training and competing my retrievers, and it's one of my favorite towns. Summers are hot, but winters are pretty mild.

        Comment


        • #5
          Aiken has a great horse publication-The Aiken Horse. I believe it's also online. I would imagine that there might be more boarding and horse property rental options in Aiken than in Camden? Perhaps you might settle your horses in Aiken for a bit while you identify a more permanent situation closer to Columbia. If you are close to I-20 though, it's not a bad drive at all. There are a couple of good Aiken equine Facebook pages. Rentals are sometimes listed there. Tracy Turner with Meybohm Realty in Aiken would be an excellent resource for you for identifying rentals and boarding options as she is a horsewoman. Camden is beautiful. The summers are totally doable. Fans for the horses, a/c for you! We came from the Northeast and have never looked back. You're going to love it! Good luck!

          Comment


          • #6
            Ummm, if you couldnt find a good vet in Camden, well you know how that ends.
            Camden would be my pick for horses, Aiken is where we show the most.
            "You can't really debate with someone who has a prescient invisible friend"
            carolprudm

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            • #7
              Some posters seem to have a VERY WRONG idea about columbia. Maybe if you live in the few bad neighborhoods, you would feel threatened, but I challenge you to find a city without a "bad" section.

              I have lived in columbia for 5 years. The crime rate is no different than any other "big city". Yes, there are bad areas, but goodness it is not some gang ridden village that is out of control. That is a VERY inaccurate, exaggerated, and false sense of the town. Would I recommend going to "five points" (college party area that has trouble with underage drinking and other crimes) after dark, no. But columbia has so much more to offer and the surrounding suburbs and even main street/vista area (look up the vista, columbia) are wonderful! Really, columbia is a great place to have a family, be close to a good downtown, and have an easy drive to horsey areas.
              I have had horses here at a semi-self care barn for my five years and love it. Blythewood is a very horsey area now and offers a lot of NICE properties. Camden is nice, but if you are concerned about crime, the camden has it's fair share of bad neighborhoods. Once again, not saying either area is bad, but obviously if you live in the terrible parts, crime could happen.
              Just keep in mind, columbia is a great town that has a lot to offer. I wouldn't recommend living in the bad area (obviously).
              If you need a realtor or someone to give you the lowdown on the area (camden and aiken too), I can connect you with one of my good friends. She was born and raised here and knows all the ins and outs.

              Comment


              • #8
                Also, Camden has an amazing vet team. If you have a major emergency, Tryon is just up the road (surgery wise). Farriers are easy to find, but good farriers can be tricky. It is not too bad to find a good one though, as many aiken or camden guys come up. I can give you names when you begin to look!

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by GucciJumper View Post
                  Watch the Columbia area, the gang and crime rate is very high. I lived about 1 hr north of Columbia and no one wanted to go down there. We moved away because of the crime rate and the low income areas that were impossible to avoid (because it is everywhere.) Even an hour up north we would never leave the house without a gun because of the crime rate, and Columbia is much worse. Several close friends worked law enforcement down there so we were not exaggerating about the crime rate. Please be careful and watch were you move.

                  I found South Carolina miserable horse wise. I found a good barn, but the horse scene was horrible. Crappy shows and not a lot of nice places. We moved out of there as soon as possible. I couldn't find a decent farrier and my horse was lame half the time. I had to actually use a vet from North Carolina because the local vets were absolutely horrible. My horse hated the humid summers and winter was so much colder than it was in Colorado. My horse was very happy to move back and has excelled since moving away from South Carolina.
                  Well, I don't know where you live now or how you choose your residence or how you go about finding vets and farriers, but your experience is ... Umm... Pretty unique I think.

                  Having lived in a lot of places I can tell you that the summers are not much different than summers in NY or CT or PA or TN or KS. Summer is hot and humid for a large portion of the U.S. The spring, fall and winter riding is what makes the Columbia/Camden/Aiken area so wonderful. There is a LOT going on, why else would so many pros come down here for the winter? So many services, good vets, good farriers, good supply stores. I've lived in a backwater of the horse world, and this ain't it, believe me.

                  As to crime? Of course there's crime. Point me to a major metro area with a big University that doesn't have crime...? Just because some place is low income doesn't mean you're going to be murdered in your bed, and the rural south is a gun culture, they are part of many people's daily dress, like a hat or a purse. I'm not a gun fan, but it came with the territory.

                  I live in Gaston, about 20 mi South of Columbia and maybe an hour from Aiken & 45 from Camden. I LOVE it here. I live in the middle of farms and there's lots of "cheap" housing around. Yes, meth is a problem in the area, but it was in the much more affluent area of Chattanooga that we moved from. I don't care.

                  I love my 13 flat and sandy acres. I love having good things available if I want them, plus the peace of rural living. I love that I've got vets and farriers and feed stores and tack stores and a plethora of horsey things to do and horsey people to do them with. I love the good restaurants, the non-horsey fun stuff that's around, and the fact that I can be in the mountains or at the beach in under 2 hours if I want a change of scene. I love that I can show all winter if I want to, or just give back to my sport with some volunteering. And it tickles me no end when a multiple-times Olympian is chatting with me at the in gate, cracking jokes and waiting for their turn in the ring.

                  I absolutely do not regret this move at all.

                  Oh, and the cold wnters? You either struck a bad winter, or you're from someplace really warm. We get a couple of weeks of really cold nights and some really cold days, but that's interspersed with days warm enough for me to open windows and pad around barefoot outside. not exactly harsh conditions!Really cold is maybe in the teens, too, not sub zero. Nights in the 20s and days in the 30s are usually it for bitter midwinter.
                  Last edited by saje; Mar. 12, 2015, 09:28 PM.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    amen saje!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by saje View Post
                      Well, I don't know where you live now or how you choose your residence or how you go about finding vets and farriers, but your experience is ... Umm... Pretty unique I think.

                      Having lived in a lot of places I can tell you that the summers are not much different than summers in NY or CT or PA or TN or KS. Summer is hot and humid for a large portion of the U.S. The spring, fall and winter riding is what makes the Columbia/Camden/Aiken area so wonderful. There is a LOT going on, why else would so many pros come down here for the winter? So many services, good vets, good farriers, good supply stores. I've lived in a backwater of the horse world, and this ain't it, believe me.

                      As to crime? Of course there's crime. Point me to a major metro area with a big University that doesn't have crime...? Just because some place is low income doesn't mean you're going to be murdered in your bed, and the rural south is a gun culture, they are part of many people's daily dress, like a hat or a purse. I'm not a gun fan, but it came with the territory.

                      I live in Gaston, about 20 mi South of Columbia and maybe an hour from Aiken & 45 from Camden. I LOVE it here. I live in the middle of farms and there's lots of "cheap" housing around. Yes, meth is a problem in the area, but it was in the much more affluent area of Chattanooga that we moved from. I don't care.

                      I love my 13 flat and sandy acres. I love having good things available if I want them, plus the peace of rural living. I love that I've got vets and farriers and feed stores and tack stores and a plethora of horsey things to do and horsey people to do them with. I love the good restaurants, the non-horsey fun stuff that's around, and the fact that I can be in the mountains or at the beach in under 2 hours if I want a change of scene. I love that I can show all winter if I want to, or just give back to my sport with some volunteering. And it tickles me no end when a multiple-times Olympian is chatting with me at the in gate, cracking jokes and waiting for their turn in the ring.

                      I absolutely do not regret this move at all.

                      Oh, and the cold wnters? You either struck a bad winter, or you're from someplace really warm. We get a couple of weeks of really cold nights and some really cold days, but that's interspersed with days warm enough for me to open windows and pad around barefoot outside. not exactly harsh conditions!Really cold is maybe in the teens, too, not sub zero. Nights in the 20s and days in the 30s are usually it for bitter midwinter.
                      I'll listen to my cop buddies who actually knows what goes on in all the areas, instead of a dream world. I was told that there wasn't anywhere good to live in actual Columbia. I have no idea about the suburbs, as I was a little too far away. But it is a fair warning for the OP to actually look at crime rates before moving to an area, as everyone should. I was upstate South Carolina, but looked into the good hour commute into Columbia for a job that actually paid decent.

                      And the pony and I are used to a no humidity climate but it does get cold and we regularly get snow. It must be the no humidity thing, but the winters are worse the way the cold soaks into you. The way that people react to snow on the other hand is rediculous.


                      I heard Aiken and tryon were good horse scenes but that's just about it, and both were too far too commute that way.

                      Camden was way too far for a vet or farrier to come to me, but the vet I did use (for anything serious or lameness issues) was Tryon, and they were fantastic.

                      I guess it just wasn't our cup of tea, but we got our of there as soon as possible for the reasons mentioned.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        My BIL has worked for the South Carolina Highway Patrol for 22 years. His office is in Blythewood and he lives down in Lexington. His first two years out of USC he worked for the Columbia police department. As others have said there are hot spots of crime in the city that are easily identified but most of your torment will come from mosquito's.

                        The horse scene is very strong in central SC and OP you will find something that works for you!! Enjoy!!!

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Take a look at the Landrum/Campobello area of SC. Very close to Tryon and a good horse scene.
                          ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
                          I'm not an outlier; I just haven't found my distribution yet!

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Do you have any insight on what the schools are like where you are? High school specifically. Thanks!

                            Comment

                            • Original Poster

                              #15
                              Well, we ended up in Aiken! We're renting a small farm for now, while we get to know the different areas and search for a farm of our own. Now I'm starting to worry about trailering the horses for such a long distance. I'm hoping it will be under 11 hours, but I have one mare recovering from a suspensory tear.

                              Comment


                              • #16
                                Welcome Victoria! Our guys had a very long transit here but all did well.

                                Comment


                                • #17
                                  Welcome! Hope you enjoy the Aiken area. It's a great one for horsey stuff, lots of barns, shows, etc.; I have several clients in and around that area.
                                  Equinox Equine Massage

                                  In the depth of winter, I finally learned that there was in me invincible summer.
                                  -Albert Camus

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