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Those of you without an indoor....

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  • Those of you without an indoor....

    Please tell me your thoughts!

    In the next year or so I hope to finally be able to get a horse. However, I do not live in an area with a lot of indoor arenas, so the horse would most likely be in a place without one. I'm in KY, so we have a lot of decent weather here, but currently I ride at a place with one, so.... I just worry about it.

    If I'm spending the $$ to have a horse, I plan to ride at least 5-6 days per week. I have no problem riding outside, but I wonder how much of a damper not having an indoor puts on you during bad weather? Do you just ride in the rain anyway? What about snow and ice? Do you feel that training is severely limited in the winter?

    Thanks!

  • #2
    I don't have an indoor but I have a nice ring with excellent footing so I can ride all year ( I am in PA). I don't ride in the rain outside but it has not hampered my riding ( I tell myself I'll clean my house when it rains- yeah right...) . My ring gets plowed and then raked so the footing is good even after a snow . I enjoy riding outside all year.
    Come to the dark side, we have cookies

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    • #3
      It really depends on your footing and grading. The barn I board at has a poorly graded, turf arena. It's rained two nights in a row, and I can't ride because of the soft ground. That's why I paid for a new 20mx40m with proper grading and footing to be installed. If only we could get it finished, I'd be riding between thundershowers. Snow and ice may be a deal breaker, but I live in GA.
      "Rock n' roll's not through, yeah, I'm sewing wings on this thing." --Destroyer
      http://dressagescriblog.wordpress.com/

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      • Original Poster

        #4
        Thanks. What about no arena at all but large grass fields?

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        • #5
          Depends on drainage. I have a friend who rides in fields all the time, but they drain well.
          "Rock n' roll's not through, yeah, I'm sewing wings on this thing." --Destroyer
          http://dressagescriblog.wordpress.com/

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          • #6
            As a kid I rode a horse that had no access to an indoor. I would ride in the winter, but I knew the footing well enough (and also checked it on foot regularly) to know there wasn't ice under the snow. I would not ride in my regular ring during muddy season - then I would ride along the road or in fields before the farmers planted anything (with permission!). I would ride in the rain on a warm summer day. My regular ring was a flat grass field with good drainage - it would get slippery if the ground was hard and it rained, but other than that it was a decent ring with low maintenance.

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            • #7
              We don't have an indoor at our farm, and our arena is on the small side, but....we do have plenty of awesome trails. Between the arena - which drains really nice - and the nice shady trails, really the only time our boarders are NOT able to ride is during a thunder storm. That said though, I DO really wish we had lights, since that would open up many more hours of riding time, on these nice summer evenings.
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              • #8
                Originally posted by Freebird! View Post
                That said though, I DO really wish we had lights, since that would open up many more hours of riding time, on these nice summer evenings.
                You ain't just whistlin' dixie. We have A light. I haven't tried the new TB with it, but the last one just couldn't handle the weird, long shadows.
                "Rock n' roll's not through, yeah, I'm sewing wings on this thing." --Destroyer
                http://dressagescriblog.wordpress.com/

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                • #9
                  I ride in the rain as long as there's no lightening. Snow doesn't bother me if I can get it so it's not very deep. Ice is a no go for me. During winter I'll just trail ride and stay off heavy traffic areas. I haul to an indoor when I can, but I usually can't because the trailer gets snowed in.

                  I have a field I dragged up for an arena, nice drainage, nothing fancy.
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                  • #10
                    For those of you who ride in the rain, how do you protect your saddle?
                    ETA: sorry to hijack
                    "Rock n' roll's not through, yeah, I'm sewing wings on this thing." --Destroyer
                    http://dressagescriblog.wordpress.com/

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                    • #11
                      I don't have an indoor, and I ride 5-6 times a week all year round (I'm in NC). I ride in all weather - kinnip: I don't do anything different in the rain, I just make sure that my saddle is totally dry before leaving it in the tack room. I have found that in the case of weather that requires an indoor, most barns are more than happy to rent one by the hour.
                      Always pay equal, if not more, attention to your own self carriage, than that of your horse.

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                      • #12
                        Hay

                        I have no indoor or riding arena. I have an "area" I can ride in and yes, it severely hampers my riding.

                        If I had quality footing and a larger place to ride, I'd definitely school more.

                        Currently, I'll trailer to a public park with an arena but there's no indoor I can trailer to without paying a fee. While, that's not a problem, it just eats into the time. Drive to a place, f.i.n.d the person to pay (this usually takes the longest), then tack up, ride and leave.

                        If I had to pay to board, I would definitely want a quality arena and would try for an indoor. I mean if you're paying to board, then you want the riding time.
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                        • #13
                          I have a field to ride in, my neighbor has an outdoor.
                          She rides just about every day. Me? Not so much but its less about the weather and more about my motivation. I ride for pleasure, so riding in inclement weather is not a pleasure to me.

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                          • #14
                            I ride pretty much whenever, unless there's lightening (obviously) or if the snow is hiding ice. The arena and pastures all drain pretty well, so mud isn't an issue. In KY I wouldn't think snow would be, either, so my only real concern would be, like lots of people have mentioned, drainage. At my parents' place the flat part of their corral where we usually rode is part of the river flood plain and the soil is very marshy. I wouldn't want to only have an outdoor when the ground was like that, but at the place I'm at now it's not a problem.
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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by kinnip View Post
                              For those of you who ride in the rain, how do you protect your saddle?
                              ETA: sorry to hijack
                              I keep it covered with my butt.
                              __________________________________
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                              • #16
                                I have an outdoor with all-weather footing. Here in the Pacific Northwest, there are usually only a few days where it freezes or snows hard enough that I chose not to ride. I also don't ride when it's icy, for obvious reasons.
                                I have good drainage, a good base, and sand/shredded rubber footing. I also salvaged two good lights from an electrical contractor supply place that was going out of business. They provide plenty of light for evening riding without being obnoxious enough to annoy the neighbors.
                                Honestly, once you get used to riding in rain, for the most part you don't notice it. Carhartt makes a fabulous waterproof raincoat, and the Irideon winter breeches shed the rain pretty darn well. I just make sure that my tack is wiped off and kept clean, and I make frequenl use of the Passier conditioner. Most of our show venues here are outdoor, so if your horse doesn't go in rainy weather, you're gonna be in trouble.

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                                • #17
                                  Originally posted by kinnip View Post
                                  For those of you who ride in the rain, how do you protect your saddle?
                                  ETA: sorry to hijack
                                  Bought wintec

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                                  • #18
                                    no indoor or outdoor or anytime of areana for me.
                                    And its always raining
                                    but i'm blessed with quiet (ish) road hacking, hills and woods i can hack in. So this results in schooling while hacking, jumping homemade jumps in the field (when it's dry enough) and i rent an outdoor areana for an hour most wednesdays. I compete most weekends in the summer. But in winter i just have to settle for lunging and weekends

                                    yah its tough, i dream about having my own areana and hell yah i'd settle for an outdoor

                                    but its possible
                                    www.sallymetharryhorse.blogspot.com

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                                    • #19
                                      I'm in the Northeast and I ride all year 'round, no indoor. We have a public arena about a 10 minute hack from the barn.

                                      I rarely ride in the rain (maybe drizzle) but I love riding in the snow. We have big open fields to ride in and unless it's icy, winter is one of my favorite times to ride. No bugs!

                                      I also have a Wintec for inclement weather.
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                                      • #20
                                        In Europe, most people didn't own horses, they came to ride to riding centers, that provided horses to the public.
                                        There were outdoor cross country and jumping field classes and regular trail rides.
                                        We did have a small indoor, that we used all the time anyway for many lessons and flat and some jumping work.

                                        Talk about motivation, if we had torrential rains or a blizzard, as long as clients could make it to the stables and it was safe for the horses, not too slick, or ice, we went on our trail rides.
                                        Clients didn't have much of a chance to ride and if there was any earthly way we could go on the scheduled trail ride or outdoor lesson, no matter what the weather, we would do it.

                                        No one of us working there minded, we wanted to go as much as the clients did.
                                        When you have a passion for horses and doing whatever you do with them, weather is not an inconvenience.

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