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Farm Sitting

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  • Farm Sitting

    Hi everyone!

    I am considering starting a farm sitting business. I was curious what the going rate was, where you are located, how many horses you have and what the farm sitter does for you?

    Thanks in advance!

  • #2
    The going rate around here is $15/per trip for a private barn. I'm one of four folks I know who charge this, and it's a small town. It doesn't really change with the number of mouths to feed. I have one client with one horse and two goats, and I have one with 9 horses and a million cats. They both are charged per trip, usually I make two trips per day. For that price, I do feeding and haying, mucking and sweeping, keep the water buckets and troughs clean and full, light grooming (no one's getting bathed for that price), maintain any salt blocks or supplement feeders, turn out/in, blanket if necessary, keep everyone sprayed for flies, I even soak hay for the IR horse and generally maintain an orderly barn-- and of course, feed the kitties and goats. I like to be sure that the place looks just as good or better than when I took the reins. If someone asked me to lunge or hand walk a horse, the price might go up. I'm not really sure what the other sitters provide. I don't really care. I enjoy the work and like to see a smile on my client's face when they see the place.
    Last edited by kinnip; Jun. 12, 2010, 06:37 PM. Reason: I also treat boo-boos and cold hose when necessary. Vet and farrier calls do NOT cost extra.
    "Rock n' roll's not through, yeah, I'm sewing wings on this thing." --Destroyer
    http://dressagescriblog.wordpress.com/

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    • #3
      I just had someone sit for my three horses, and all she had to do was throw hay twice a day, make sure the auto waterers were working, and feed pre-measured grain/supplements. My horses are out 24/7 with free access to their stalls when the gates are open to their runs. I have other people come as stall cleaners, and boarded the dog. I paid her $25/day. She lives around the corner from me, about 3 minutes away.

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      • Original Poster

        #4
        I have been looking to provide a more affordable option my sitters are 25 a visit or 50 a day and I know they do a good job but they only have to throw feed for my 3 outside, no handling, and hay in the winter so it is a bit costly.

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        • #5
          I pay mine $100/day to stay in my house and feed dogs and cats, pick litterboxes and give meds to one cat. At the barn I have 7 horses 1 donkey. They are out 24/7 and at this time of year the barn chores take less than an hour twice a day (feed all, fly spray/fly mask, give meds to one horse and muck one run in.
          https://www.facebook.com/SugarMapleFarm
          Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/peonyvodka/
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          • #6
            I charge $25/hour door to door
            I wasn't always a Smurf
            Penmerryl's Sophie RIDSH
            "I ain't as good as I once was but I'm as good once as I ever was"
            The ignore list is my friend. It takes 2 to argue.

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            • #7
              kinnip~ I would just hire you to be my groom. you do stalls, groom, water/feed/hay, tend to boo boos, hold for farrier, and all those other things you do for $30! No matter how many there are to do?


              I think you may be short changing yourself.
              www.facebook.com/doggonegoodgoodies
              http://doggonebakedgoods.com/

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              • #8
                I agree- kinnip, that's pretty cheap. Once you take out for gas (especially if they are a good drive away) and calculate by the hour, I have to say I wouldn't work that cheap. How many hours does it take to feed/muck/groom/turn in/out for the barn with 9 horses?

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                • #9
                  I won't drive more than 15 min. away for $15. It takes me about 2-2 1/2 hrs to handle the large barn in the morning. In the afternoon, about an 1-1 1/2 hrs. It is cheap, but it's competitive and I love the work. The large barn is where I keep two of my horses, so I'd rather do it on the cheap than have someone I don't know handling my honeys. It's also put me in a good place with the B.O. She's slowly relinquishing some of the daily duties to me and I hope to run the place when she retires. I'd say my generous work ethic has paid off.

                  I'm open for more clients any time you guys need a hand. I just like to be around horses. Don't tell anyone, but I'd do it for free.
                  "Rock n' roll's not through, yeah, I'm sewing wings on this thing." --Destroyer
                  http://dressagescriblog.wordpress.com/

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                  • #10
                    For me it depends on the situation- I have one client with two horses and many cats (indoor and outdoor barn cats, and sometimes bottle-aged kittens) who I actually charge less than a client with one dog and two cats. The dog needs to go out every 4-6 hours minimum, but the horses only need care twice a day and are pretty low maintenance. Although the two horse family was one of my first clients- I may charge them more if they were coming to me now with the experience I've gained since starting to work for them.

                    I feel that when I'm caring for animals like horses/camelids/larger farm animals that a part of what you're paying for is the caretaker's experience/expertise, something the kid next door might not have. I've owned horses for 20 years and worked for several different well-respected farms and have managing experience, so I expect a little more than the kid next door who has been taking riding lessons once a week for a couple of years.

                    I generally charge by the day/night spent on the farm- I don't have any clients that don't expect me to stay overnight (although sometimes there's a little overlap and I sub-contract). It ranges from $25 a night for two low maint. horses/bunch of cats, to $75 a night for several higher maint. horses, the number/horses frequently changes, usually between 5-7 horses with three "regulars".

                    Also- if there are some awesome perks for the job I tend to be less firm with what I charge I do enjoy the HEATED pool w/ spa and twice-weekly CSA share!

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by kinnip View Post
                      It's also put me in a good place with the B.O. She's slowly relinquishing some of the daily duties to me and I hope to run the place when she retires. I'd say my generous work ethic has paid off.
                      I hope you're right.

                      I hope you don't look back on it someday and think: Wow, I really let that person underpay me for a long time!

                      Ask me how I know about this.

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                      • #12
                        Whoo Eventaholic!!!! Where are you?! I may need to relocate. :P
                        "Rock n' roll's not through, yeah, I'm sewing wings on this thing." --Destroyer
                        http://dressagescriblog.wordpress.com/

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by MHM View Post
                          I hope you're right.

                          I hope you don't look back on it someday and think: Wow, I really let that person underpay me for a long time!

                          Ask me how I know about this.
                          That's a fair speculation. Ultimately, I can't live my life for the things that may go wrong. If it all bites me in the tookus, then I've learned a lesson. If it doesn't, I've laid a fine foundation for my future in this industry. It's a gamble, but I think it's a good one, and I've given a lot of thought.
                          The fee I cited really is the norm here. She has others who will do the work for that amount. When I farm sit around here, I'm just glad I don't get paid in tomatoes or home pickles. Though some of those home pickles are
                          "Rock n' roll's not through, yeah, I'm sewing wings on this thing." --Destroyer
                          http://dressagescriblog.wordpress.com/

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