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Reasonably priced boarding options???

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  • Reasonably priced boarding options???

    One of my best friends has been accepted into a bunch of grad schools across the country and needs to take her horse with her. The following cities she is looking at moving to thus far are:

    San Diego, CA
    Los Angeles, CA (UCLA)
    Boston, MA
    Providence, RI (BROWN)

    She doesn't need a show or training barn, and she is a primarily western rider, but doesn't really care if the barn is western or not. Just something low key, and willing to cater to the special needs of her horse. The horse is a chronic choker and cannot have hay (soaked alfalfa cubes or Denji, and pasture is fine). By "reasonable" she's trying to stay under $750/mo. and prefers to be a half hour or less away from the school.

    FWIW, she's double majoring in Civil Engineering and Physics (a testament to her work-ethic...it's unparalleled.)

    Any recommendations?
    Last edited by Dramapony_misty; Mar. 31, 2010, 08:49 PM. Reason: Spelling..to make Lori B happy ;) Please note I'm not the one with the super-smart double major. :-P
    The only thing the government needs to solve all of its problems is a Council of Common Sense.

  • #2
    Providence might be her best bet for affordable board. As a grad student, I'm betting she doesn't have time to be driving an hour each way to her horse.

    And please, it's 'testament', not 'testimate'.

    Good luck.
    I tolerate all kinds of animal idiosyncrasies.
    I've found that I don't tolerate people idiosyncrasies as well. - Casey09

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    • #3
      There is nothing within a half-hour from UCLA campus.
      Sorry to be a Debby-downer, but that's the way it is.
      ...somewhere between the talent and the potato....

      Comment


      • #4
        Traffic and cost of living circa West LA and Cambridge, MA are prohibitive.

        I haven't been to San Diego recently enough to judge. But boarding in the citified parts of CA has gotten really, really bad with respect to turn out. I grew up in the SF Bay Area and I'm not sure I would even own a horse if I moved back to the Peninsula. The East Coast has spoiled me.

        That leaves Providence which looks good, at least on a map.
        The armchair saddler
        Politically Pro-Cat

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        • #5
          Don't know about CA, but I'm guessing there either won't be any place available within the distance she need or it'll be above her price range. With the New England areas, she'll have to keep in mind that she'll want an indoor if she wants to ride during the winter. Boarding prices in the Boston area will be pretty brutal...as will the commute. I'd also place Providence as the best bet. I'd suggest she look for barns in the Rehoboth area (Mass) if she does pick Brown.
          "Last time I picked your feet, you broke my toe!"

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          • #6
            I know of a great place that is sort of inbetween both Providence and Boston, under $600 a month, experienced in caring for a choker who actually ruptured his esophagus or trachea (i am not sure which) and needed extra special care for years. PM me for contact info.

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            • #7
              the above mentioned place does have an indoor and owner lives on site

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              • #8
                I have a friend in Cambride who said she can't afford to keep her horse with her so she gave him away.

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                • #9
                  Ditto what everyone else said. Those are very difficult criteria to meet - within 30 mins of campus means it's probably going to be a pretty urban area, in which case $750 is on the low end for board.

                  In general, CA is notorious for long commutes and really outrageous board prices, coupled with limited to no turnout. (At the barn in SoCal where I learned to ride, "turnout" meant 15 minutes of free-lunging in a round pen. And if you went 16 minutes, other people waiting would chew you out and demand you remove your horse immediately, even if it were bucking and farting around like a demon.)

                  Boston might be an option if your friend doesn't need to get out to the barn every day. There's definitely reasonably priced stuff in that area, it's just fairly far out from the city area.

                  Is your friend going for a master's or a Ph.D.? If it's only a 2 year program, it might be worth considering giving the horse a "break" and pasture boarding it somewhere (at home, or far from school) without the expectation of riding regularly for a while.

                  Alternatively, boarding it at a more expensive facility, near campus, might be possible if she were willing to part-lease it out...

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Tell her to ask her school administrators. If she is really such a good candidate, the graduate admissions director and the department administrators will move heaven and earth to help her alleviate any concerns about living in that geographic area. They can often point you to horsepeople in graduate school, either in their department or others, who can help you find those diamonds in the rough.

                    Whatever tack shop is most local to the school can often help as well because they get this question every year, as can the IHSA team at the school (a lot of their students bring their own horses and don't necessarily board them at the IHSA facility, so they should know about other local options).

                    Can you tell that I speak from experience? I'm at my top-choice graduate school right now, with horse in tow. He was originally 25 minutes from campus but I've moved him to a better facility 38 minutes from campus, I'm much happier there.
                    Last edited by jn4jenny; Apr. 1, 2010, 11:36 AM.
                    Head Geek at The Saddle Geek Blog http://www.thesaddlegeek.com/

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                    • #11
                      Well done, jn4jenny. Work the system any way you can, OP!

                      I have a friend who took her horse to Brown many years ago; if your friend is leaning that way, PM me, and I'll hook you up with her contacts, if they are any good.

                      Good luck.
                      I tolerate all kinds of animal idiosyncrasies.
                      I've found that I don't tolerate people idiosyncrasies as well. - Casey09

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Lori B View Post
                        Well done, jn4jenny. Work the system any way you can, OP!
                        No joke about "working the system".

                        Ultimately, COTH recommendations and some local horsepeople who knew of my previous trainer (and therefore had some idea of how I ride and what kind of horse care I believe in) were the most helpful contacts. Both the last barn I was at, and the one I'm at now, do not advertise and even most locals don't know about them.

                        So if your friend is very serious, it might behoove you to put the names of the cities in your title line to attract the right helpful folks.
                        Head Geek at The Saddle Geek Blog http://www.thesaddlegeek.com/

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