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Nellie Gail boarding facility, CA

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  • #21
    Originally posted by ontarget View Post
    Me too! I guess if the horse is stall bound and has low workload, the thinking is that they consume fewer calories? I'm also finding it hard to believe how these places disregard horses' individual needs!
    Well, for an average pleasure horse in these boarding barns and if that hay is alfalfa, as it tends to be out there? It's probably plenty. Was for my 3 times a week trail ride horses that did a few western shows. Would not be for a high performance type in heavy work...but how many in the average recreational, community run or public boarding barn are really in need of being fed like a high performance show horse?

    Far as individual needs ? For 450-600 a month depending on stall/pen size when the barn also has to pay for things like manure disposal? You are not going to get hay 24/7.

    Like I said, it's a compromise. Those that need more will have to provide for themselves and spend a little more or move and pay alot more then 450-600. As in alot alot. Probably not going to find a place in the hills overlooking the Pacific at any price...some sandy riverbed someplace more likely. Or out in the desert.

    I'd kill to pay that and be more then willing to compromise on the stall cleaning and bring in my own extra feed.
    When opportunity knocks it's wearing overalls and looks like work.

    The horse world. Two people. Three opinions.

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    • #22
      I pay $525/month at a barn in a, shall we say, less fortunate climate than Nellie Gail. That includes cleaning once a day. Star gets two flakes of alfalfa. They will provide oat hay for a small additional fee. Or, you can buy pretty much any sort of hay and they will feed it for you. You get a bit off your board if you do this, but less than the extra feed ends up costing.

      The head barn worker has installed a waterer for me, put up plywood (that he found in a storage shed) on his majesty's stall door to keep him from attempting to destroy his $$$$ collateral ligaments, and recently re-installed said plywood when it got shredded during an escape.

      Rings are groomed every day except Sunday.

      We even get to pick oranges, lemons, and grapefruit off the BO's trees.
      The Evil Chem Prof

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      • #23
        Peggy, you crack me up ! I had a horse delivered from Vancouver a couple of weeks ago and the shippers looked around in amazement at all the citrus trees on my property.
        They politely enquired about taking a few , I laughed and brought out huge grocery bags and said, knock yourself out, take it all !
        There are always tradeoffs and compromise - findeight you are right on about this one.
        What I see as a modest facility in CA is an incredible land of plenty, sunshine and fresh ocean breezes to an outsider.
        We all manage to keep the horses happy and healthy. FWIW my boarding rates start at $550 without the pristine trails surrounding Nellie Gale.
        Last edited by Wanderluster; Apr. 9, 2010, 12:41 AM.

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        • #24
          Just read their boarding contract, and the prices are in line to where I thought they were- and for the area and amenities:

          Alfalfa
          Homeowner $480.00
          Non-Resident $565.00
          ½ Alfalfa + ½ Grass
          Homeowner $515.00
          Non-Resident $600.00
          All Grass
          Homeowner $550.00
          Non-Resident $635.00

          Because it is a private stable managed by an HOA is why the rates are different for community residents and non-residents- it's been that way for as long as I remember. I'll have to ask my friend if they are still cleaning 2x daily- they always would except on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Years when they would clean once.

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          • Original Poster

            #25
            Originally posted by mypaintwattie View Post
            Just read their boarding contract, and the prices are in line to where I thought they were- and for the area and amenities:

            Alfalfa
            Homeowner $480.00
            Non-Resident $565.00
            ½ Alfalfa + ½ Grass
            Homeowner $515.00
            Non-Resident $600.00
            All Grass
            Homeowner $550.00
            Non-Resident $635.00

            Because it is a private stable managed by an HOA is why the rates are different for community residents and non-residents- it's been that way for as long as I remember. I'll have to ask my friend if they are still cleaning 2x daily- they always would except on Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Years when they would clean once.
            Hmm. Where is there contract online? I wonder if those prices are the box stall vs pipe corral prices are?

            I think I'm just going to find someone with an empty spot in their backyard!
            Click here to feed a rescued animal for free!

            Sponsors feed rescued animals for every free click!

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            • #26
              On the hoa website. As far as I am aware the prices are the same for box or pipe- but there is always a huge waiting list for pipes- there are only maybe 25 of them? Most of the barns are box stalls. The whole facility only has I think 95 stalls- 4 box stall barns and 2 pipe stall rows. Usually there is a waiting list for stalls, used to be almost impossible to get a stall as a non-homeowner if you were not in training. Current trainers are H/J- Mickey Hayden and dressage- Mary Kehoe. Geeze, 10 years ago I could have drawn a map and with every stall and the name of the horse in it!

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              • #27
                sorry about the increase, but it's true that it was way too low. All a boarder has to do is buy a bale of hay and throw in another flake or 2 when they come out to ride. Problem solved. And, it might not kill them to pick piles out of the stall too. Takes 5 minutes max for the messiest horse. Or just let them get cleaned 1x daily, like everywhere else. (I boarded at 8 places in So. Cal and they all cost more than that, and that was in the 1990s!)

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