DIY Barrel Hay Feeders

January 12, 2015

If you feed hay, I am sure you have experienced some aggravation.  Filling nets to hang is time consuming and messy.  I consider it a giant pain in the butt.  Round bales in round bale rings is also messy, and those rings are expensive, and if there is no top on the ring they hay gets rained on.  Throwing hay on the ground is messy, and the ponies tend to poop and pee in it and then won’t eat it.

Too much waste.

I saw a few designs for slow feeders and other DIY (do it yourself) homemade hay feeding structures.  And I really liked the barrel ones.  So Rich and I decided to give it a try.

I needed to get some 55gal plastic barrels.  Preferably ‘food grade’, or ones used for non toxic stuff.   In the past Rich and I had made rain barrels and were able to pick them up from the local recycling center for $8 each.  But the recycling center no longer sells them.  I looked on Craigslist and did not see any listed locally.  So I posted an ISO (in search of) add. I got a response from a dairy farmer almost immediately and I swung by and picked a couple up that day.

IMG_4090

We have three white and one blue.

IMG_4091

First we cut a lid that I could use to fill the barrels and then latch them closed.  Rich sawed around the outside, and then across the top.  He then dripped holes across the top, and using zip ties, we made hinges.

NOTE: after a bout a week, the ponies had busted several of the zip ties hinging one top.  I have found that they smash the lid down, which is breaking the ties.  Ill be replacing the zip ties on the lids with wire or sturdy rope.

IMG_4097

There were two designs I wanted to try.  One –  Net Out The Bottom – was one I saw frequently on the internet.  The other – Net Inside – I sort of pieced together from several other designs.  We wanted to try both and see which we liked best.  So we made one of each, keeping two barrels in reserve, and then would use the design we liked best on those two.

These photos are of the NET INSIDE design.

Next, Rich drilled holes around the top of the barrel and I zip tied a slow feed net into the barrel.

IMG_4098

IMG_4099

The ponies have not broken a single zip holding the net on, or put any holes in the nets.

Lastly, we cut a hold into the front of the barrel leaving a tall lip at the bottom.  We also drilled holes into the bottom, so if any rain did get inside it would be able to drain out.

IMG_4095

IMG_4115

IMG_4117

Lastly we put a screw eye on either side of the barrels top and hung it from a tree.

Done.

IMG_4118

IMG_4119

020

NET INSIDE THE BARREL – What do I think of this design?

What I originally really liked about this design is that I figured all of the hay would be inside the barrel with very little falling onto the ground.  This ended up being true in practice too!  They hay stays inside the barrel.  What I did not really think about was that I would not be able to fit as much hay in this feeder as I would be able to in the other design.  I can generally fit about half a bale.  I could probably fit more if I took the barrel down and fluffed the hay more as I loaded it, shoving it down more.  But that defeats part of the less mess, easy and quick requirements of the barrel.  When I do fill it, I leave it hung up.  I can just reach over the lip to put hay in.  I fluff the hay just a little once it is over the lip into the barrel, but not before (I don’t want it falling all over the ground – like in the photo above).  The other draw back, is when my ponies do decide they will share, this barrel does not really allow that.  So it is a one pony feeder.

Positive – no hay on the ground

Negative – does not hold as much hay, only allowed one pony to eat at a time.

Moving onto the other design below.

 

008

019

002

NET OUT THE BOTTOM

For this barrel, we did the same lid, and again drilled holes into the barrel to zip tie on the net.  The difference here is we zip tied the net on much lower in the barrel.  In the photo below you can see a line of ties about a third of the way from the bottom.  This allowed the net to stick quite far out of the bottom.  (Note – when installing the net, make it a lot tighter than you think it needs to be.  It will hang down and expand just fine.)

013

IMG_4116

What did I think?

With this design I was concerned that there would be a lot of hay on the ground, and that the ponies would mess with the net hanging out.  Neither of these ended up being the case.  I can fit just shy of a full bale of hay without fluffing the hay up or packing it too tightly.  It also allows more than one pony to eat from it at a time.

Pros – Fits more hay, allows multiple ponies to eat at the same time.

Cons – I have not found any.

In Conclusion – I love the Net Out The Bottom feeder and will be making the other two barrels into two more of these.

Yea!

 

2015 New Years Day Horse Auction – 2015

January 5, 2015

Lindsey and I met at the Eylers Horse Auction in Thurmont, Maryland on New Years Day.  This has been a tradition the past half dozen years or so for us.  We spent the day looking at horses, bidding on a few stable goods, shopping the vendors and socializing.

This year’s sale was pretty weak.  The number of horses was nothing compared to past years.  It was comparable to a normal Friday sale several years ago.  I did not notice any decent horses either.  Nothing I was even interested in watching.

The inside tack took forever.  There were way too many non horse things like hats and purses.  There was even a pile of country music CDs.  Horrible.  Towards the end there were quite a few shouts to “sell the tack” and “we came for horse stuff”.  We did not bother to stick around for the used tack outside because the whole sale was so far behind and there was no sign they were going to be starting it any time soon when we left the facility at 2pm.

Lindsey and I still had a good time, which was the whole point.  But the sale itself was pretty weak.

/home/wpcom/public_html/wp-content/blogs.dir/121/30408126/files/2015/01/img_4078.jpg

/home/wpcom/public_html/wp-content/blogs.dir/121/30408126/files/2015/01/img_4079.jpg

/home/wpcom/public_html/wp-content/blogs.dir/121/30408126/files/2015/01/img_4082.jpg

Loading Practice Session 1

December 24, 2014

The one draw back with Spike is his lack of interest in loading onto a trailer. When Zoe and I picked him up it took a few minutes but we were obviously successful. When I took him to practice he was a little more difficult to load than the previous time, but again there was success. The trailer Load home from practice was even more challenging than the previous two.

So I decided that this needed to be a priority project. Last weekend I parked the trailer in one of the paddocks and got down to business. And that business went on and on and on.

I spent the first two hours (yeah, two flippin hours) doing the lunging method. Lunge = work, or get in the trailer = no work. So when he bulks at loading he gets a nice lengthy lunge. The thinking is that he will eventually get tired and agree to walk into the trailer. Nope. He was soaked in sweat. I was soaked in sweat. We were both huffing and puffing. And Spike was not getting any closer to the trailer.

My husband was kind enough to take on a few rounds of lunging for me otherwise there is no way I could have kept up that pace. We also tried the good ol “feed” technique which did not help at all.

So my husband and I worked together with a more aggressive “get your ass on the trailer” approach. This method completely backfired. Spike freaked out and wouldn’t even get into the vicinity of the trailer. And when I say we were more aggressive, I mean I put a chain over his nose and used a dressage whip (appropriately).

After a few minutes of that it was clear that it was not going to work. So I put a long line on Spike, I climbed into the trailer with a bucket of feed, and I stood there. I didn’t pull on the line, I just stood there. After about five minutes Spike walked into the trailer and stuck his head in the bucket. I let him eat a few bites and smothered him in pats and good boys. Then I unloaded him and did the same thing again. Me standing in the trailer with a bucket of feed and a loose line to Spike. It took about five minutes but he climbed back in and again, I let him chow down while I patted and good-boyed all over him. Then I did it a third time and called it quits for the day.

I should probably be clear, Spike is not afraid of the trailer. He is simply being a pig head. It is also notable that I am not the most patient person. This was an extreme challenge for me. I also have never had a really bad loader. Yeah I have had a few that bulked a bit but I trailer so much they quickly learn to jump on. This whole refusal to load thing is not going to swing.

So I decided to leave Spike in the paddock with the trailer and to put his feed and hay in the trailer. It’s a dirt paddock so if he wanted to eat he had to go in the trailer. Genius right? I sure thought it was. But I was wrong. The first down fall to this plan was me coming down with the flu. I was feeling really rough, and simply walking to the paddock to check his hay level and then walking back to my bad was enough to knock me back on my butt (walking from my bed to the kitchen for a ginger ale was almost as exhausting). The second problem with this plan is that Spike was left in the paddock alone, and the other two ponies apparently spent all their time taunting him. So spike was completely preoccupied trying to catch glimpses of Simon and Poe. He ran back and forth and whinnied a lot. The third and final downfall was Spike is complete pig head. He just flat out refused to give in. After 1 1/2 days of him not eating I moved his food down the trailer so he could reach it with his front hooves in the trailer. He ate the grain but only a little of the hay. Then he went right back to pony watching. So I moved him back to the main field with his buddies.

As soon as I am feeling a little better I plan to get back on this problem. I think I’ll try a reward for all forward momentum. Treats up to the trailer, each step gets a cookies. And me remaining completely patient. I’ll be sure to update our progress.

/home/wpcom/public_html/wp-content/blogs.dir/121/30408126/files/2014/12/img_4012.jpg

/home/wpcom/public_html/wp-content/blogs.dir/121/30408126/files/2014/12/img_4014.jpg

/home/wpcom/public_html/wp-content/blogs.dir/121/30408126/files/2014/12/img_4013.jpg

/home/wpcom/public_html/wp-content/blogs.dir/121/30408126/files/2014/12/img_4016.jpg

/home/wpcom/public_html/wp-content/blogs.dir/121/30408126/files/2014/12/img_4015.jpg

Games Practice 12/14/14

December 16, 2014

This past Sunday was another great practice in the books.  For this one Zoe, Val and I were joined by Devorah who drove down from PA to play with us!  Devorah rode Poe and they worked really well together.  Poe seemed to really enjoy Devorah, and the same in reverse.

We were also joined by a new friend, Becca.  She came with her pony, Jiggy.  A nice beefy Percheron cross pony that seemed to really enjoy himself.  Becca and Jiggy did really well and I hope they will come back and play with us again in two weeks.

Zoe and Petal just look better and better.  That pair really hits it off.  And Val, well gosh, her and Sprite are always spot on.  Both Zoe and Val were getting vaults and riding like champs.

I started off on Spike, as I talked about in yesterdays post, and then I switched onto Simon.  I kept saying how much I love riding Simon and how easy he is.  I raced him through carton twice with no thought, smooth, good dunks, and kicking all the way home.  Next was litter, and again, just a gallop down and a scoop on the move, no thinking involved.  And Simon loves it.

Becca was not able to join us for pizza but the rest of us stopped and grabbed a bite and has some social time at a table.  It would be nice if we all lived closer and could do this more frequently.  But I’ll take every two weeks, its better than nothing!

003

013

016

026

040

042

049

058

060

061

065

089

107

image1

/home/wpcom/public_html/wp-content/blogs.dir/121/30408126/files/2014/12/img_39501.jpg

Spikes First Games Practice

December 15, 2014

Yesterday was one of our scheduled games practices and I was extremely excited to take Spike.  It was his first time around the games equipment and also the first real ride I got in on him.

Starting out, loading on the trailer was a bit of a struggle (and again on the way home), so that’s something we will be working on next weekend.  We arrived and tacked up, and Zoe took him for a spin so I could see him move out and hear her assessment.  We both agreed he is a little sticky going away from the other ponies, but not ridiculously so.  She said he was a little looky, but nothing bad, and his response at something spooky was to slow down.  She walked through bending poles and took a walking handoff.  He didn’t mind.

We switched bits, and then I hopped on.  After a bit of hacking around, Val rode next to me, to see how he felt about other ponies, and he was fine with that.  Of course most ponies are just fine next to old man Sprite.  Next I dove into bending, trotting through including slow changeovers.  The second time through he was much more efficient.

From bending we moved onto mug shuffle, which we trotted through happily several times.  No big deal.  Then three mug, which went rather smoothly, surprisingly so actually.

Next we moved to flag fliers.  Val flapped the flag around and Spike didn’t care.  So I took the flag and started out.  He actually had a nice end turn, and we did a nice smooth trotting pick up and handover.  We ran a few times through with him being completely comfortable.

The final bit of games I threw at him for the day was bottle shuttle.  I rode the pattern, just touching the barrels and he was fine.  Then Val rode with me, making lots of noise with the bottle, shaking and squishing it and then handed it over to me.  Spike was a little interested in it but that was about it.

This all took about an hour, and I decided that it was a good start and I would end him on that note.  He was really fantastic.  He listens to leg, which will make a lot of things easier.  At first he was a little unsure of making so many tight turns, squiggles, and weaves but after a few minutes he got the picture and was happy to take up the task.  He does not neck rein yet, which is something I will be putting on him, but he does like to carry himself with his head tucked.  We decided he was very dressagey.

My plan is to bring him along slowly, putting a solid games foundation on him. I want to install good stops, turns, stands and trust going both ways before I add any speed.  I am in no rush, so this should be a fun opportunity to make myself the perfect games pony-partner!  I am extremely excited!

I am so thankful to my team and friends for being so helpful and encouraging with Spike and me.  They are the best.

In the photos Zoe and I had on the same MGAA sweatshirt.  Hilarious!

006

Above: Zoe at the canter, and below: Devorah giving Zoe Spike’s first hand off.

017

019

Above and Below: Zoe walking out

023

028

Above: Me hacking out with a pat on the neck, Below: me trotting through flag fliers

029

030

Above: me and Spikes first flag pick up, and Below: trotting back up for our next run through the race.

032

033

035

036

And we run through flag again.

037