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Stall Mats for Horse Shows?

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  • Stall Mats for Horse Shows?

    As our local show facility continues to raise the prices on shavings to an even higher price, I am looking at some other options....stall mats....to take to the shows. I would think it would be more comfortable for the horse, and over time it will save me money. (shavings are now up to $11 a bag) I just can't see spending almost $100 for shavings for each horse.

    What is out there that is "affordable", lightweight, and easy to put together and take out. I would be on my own doing this....

    Or if anyone has any other ideas

    Oh and the facility does not allow in outside shavings...so that's not an option.

    THANKS!!!
    Member of the "My Saddlebred can do anything your horse can do" clique

  • #2
    "almost $100 for shavings for each horse" would be around 9 bags. Just how big are these stalls? I don't think I've ever used more than 4 bags to bed a bare 12x12 stall.

    Even with stall mats, I think you'd want to put down some shavings to absorb the urine.

    Comment


    • #3
      http://www.buytack.com/products-ranc...mightylite.htm We use these from Country supply. They make a huge difference and 6 of them will cover most of a horse show stall. A couple bags of shavings are all you need to use with them. They stack in one corner of our trailer, and are amazingly light. They sell for about $40/each, but we saved that at our first show. If you are near Ohio, they sell them at Congress in October and you can save $$ on shipping.

      added: We always used a minimum of 10 bags/stall before the mats.
      Last edited by Sparky; Feb. 16, 2010, 10:56 AM. Reason: forgot something

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      • #4
        Originally posted by atlatl View Post
        "almost $100 for shavings for each horse" would be around 9 bags. Just how big are these stalls? I don't think I've ever used more than 4 bags to bed a bare 12x12 stall.
        9 bags does not sound like overloading the shavings at a multiple day horse show.

        For daily home use, sure. But not for a horse show.

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        • #5
          11 DOLLARS A BAG????? Holy cow! I would consider going to straw at those prices. That is outrageous! I thought 6/7 a bag was egregious but ELEVEN??? Show management has some hubris charging THAT much for something you really NEED....wow. Gee I wonder why horse show entries are down???
          The thing about smart people, is they look like crazy people, to dumb people.

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          • #6
            Another vote for mithty lite. Love that stuff. Try to google around to find the best deal though since the shipping can be drastic different among different retailers.

            Comment


            • #7
              Hmmm, maybe we're talking about different size bags/bales. I'm used to compressed bales that expand a lot. They run close to $15/bale here in So. Cal.

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              • Original Poster

                #8
                It's a compressed bag that you could buy at a local feed store for around $6-7......We all think $11 is outrageous. It is a multiple day show, we would come in on Wed and stay till Sunday. I just don't want to have sore horses come championships on Sat\Sun. Right now you "have" to buy 2 bags, so that would work well over a mat (I think).

                They USED to be $7 a little over a year ago, I guess we have a huge "inflation" margin here??? And it's our only big show facility in the area so our shows are really limited to the one place.

                I used only two bags at a 2 day show and it did not work out very well......
                Member of the "My Saddlebred can do anything your horse can do" clique

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                • #9
                  Yes ma'am!

                  I went to Home Depot and got 9 3' x 3' "holed" rubber mats designed for professional kitchens. They rock. Here's the run down:

                  Together they are heavy, but individually anyone can carry them.

                  They are mighty soft. They are mighty flexible, so you can roll them to carry them and use them over uneven surfaces.

                  They have puzzle-piece like edges that help them stay snapped together, more or less.

                  The holes let the urine go through. You don't really care about scrapping down to bedrock clean because you know what? You paid an arm and a leg for the stall and shavings at the show. Let management clean out the true nastiness after you leave.

                  On the other hand, you can take these up Sunday morning (one at a time after you move the shavings to other parts of the stall) and have essentially refluffed the bed, cleaned what you wanted AND begun the tear-down process.

                  The holes also make these easy to rinse off. If you bend them, the wet shavings fall out of the holes. Then you throw the cleaned set in your truck bed to dry on the way home.

                  At about $180 for a set, they will pay for themselves pretty quickly and they seem to last.

                  The section-ness of them lets you build to deal with square or rectangular stalls.

                  Either good or bad: These will not come all the way to the edge of a stall. If you have a stoopid or pawing beast, plan accordingly. I will put the mats all the way up to the front of the stall if I feed in front and bank the back. Chances are that the beast won't catch a hoof back there.

                  Catching a hoof can happen, I suppose. My shod horse never got a shoe caught in any of the holes. This could suck, so heed the warning. But the mats are light and flexible enough that the horse who picks one up for a moment will only be creating a problem for you and not himself.

                  The trainer I admired most used to put $100 of shavings in a stall to start. She figured that showing was the hardest work the horse would do. They deserved to be comfortable.

                  I took this philosophy and upped her a cheap set of mats that brings the cost of shavings back to Earth.
                  Last edited by mvp; Feb. 17, 2010, 08:49 AM.
                  The armchair saddler
                  Politically Pro-Cat

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                  • Original Poster

                    #10
                    Thanks MVP!
                    I will go check out the Home Depot tonight and see what they have.
                    Member of the "My Saddlebred can do anything your horse can do" clique

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      I'm glad I searched and found this thread. I'm taking my 5 y/o, who lays down A LOT, to a 3 day show at the end of March. Shavings are $9 a bag and I know that the facility has concrete floors. I was looking at the prices at Smart Pak and Schneider's

                      I'm headed to Lowe's to see what I can find!

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I don't show, but I bought frelonic's for my run-in, and they've held up incredibly well. They're about $350 for a 12X12 interlocking set, each 4X6 piece weighs about 30lbs and they're softer than standard rubber mats. They're also available in a 10X12 set, or singly with straight edges. I really can't recommend them highly enough http://www.frelonicstablemats.com/

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