By Catherine M. Sheets Tauer - Hill
View Farms
(Written by request of the Minnesota Department of Natural
Resources, 2002)
Dear Horse Riders,
The debate regarding the best ways by which to secure an
equine has come to my attention. Therefore, I will share
the various methods that I have had encountered over
the years.
First allow me to introduce my self. My name is Cathy
Sheets Tauer. Since 1965, I have been involved with horses.
I have a B.S. degree with honors in Animal Science-1982
specializing in veterinary medicine with emphasis on equine
management, and ESMT Certification (Equine Sports Massage
Therapy) from Equissage. I am a member of both the International
Association of Equine Massage Sports Therapists, and Minnesota
Horse Council.
I have worked in corporate sales and marketing for over
a decade and have ridden and trained horses all of my life.
I have been schooled abroad and at home in the hunt-seat,
equitation, dressage, western and English pleasure and
saddle seat riding styles and I have participated in gaming.
Now as a family we trail ride, participate in endurance
and competitive rides, logging 20 to 100 miles nearly every
weekend. We own, ride, breed and train both gaited and
non-gaited horses. In 1996 we decided to share our knowledge
and experience with others by providing products that we
ourselves use and have thoroughly tested, so we launched
a national company called "Proven Products for Horse and
Rider", where we test and provide products for the horse
people. Our business has its own catalogue and Web site.
We have since expanded, and now import products from abroad
and have a wholesale division.
We travel extensively conducting clinics, educating horse
lovers, testing new products and evaluating equines and
their facilities. Here is some of the ground we've covered.
In Minnesota
• Beaver Falls Co Park
• Camden State Park
• Cedar Rock Ranch, Delhi
• Crow Hassen Park Reserve
• Forestville State Park
• Fort Ridgely State Park
• Granite Falls
• Hay Creek State Park
• Huntersville State Forest
• Huston, "The Bunk House"
• Huston, Whispering Hills Resident Girl Scout Camp
• Isabella, Boundary Waters of Northern
• Jorden River Bottoms
• K-Bar Ranch, Franklin
• Lake Elmo Park Reserve
• Lake Louise State Park
• Lake Maria State Park
• Maplewood State Park
• Morton, Franklin Redwood River Bottoms
• North Redwood
• Outback Ranch, Houston
• Pillager State Forest
• Pillsbury State Forest
• Reno Unit Dover Forest
• Renville County Park
• Sand Dunes State Forest
• Sibley State Park
• Spirit Mountain, Duluth
• St. Croix, Hinkly
• St. Croix State Forest, Tamarack
• Sunburg
• Upper Sioux Agency State Park
• Wetbark Oak Ridge Unit Dorer Forest, Houston
• Wild River State Park
• Zumbro Bottoms Unit Dorer Forest
The United States and the World
• Yellow River St. Park, IA, - Paint Creek Unit
• Brushy Creek, IA
• Volga River State Park, IA
• The Natural Gait, Harpers Ferrey , IA
• Wild Cat Mountain, Ontario WI, "End of the Trail Equine Camp"
• Kickapoo Valley-Reserve, WI
• Black Hills, Custer, SD - T.C.Ranch
• Sisseton-Prairie Sky, SD
• White, SD, - The Leiferman Cattle Ranch
• Jamestown TN, East Fork Stables
• Kedron Valley, - VT
• Phippsburg, ME
• South Hampton, Long Island, NY
• Malibar Farm, OH
• Pikes Peak, CO
• Meyer, AZ - Quarter Circle V Bar Ranch
• Shawnee National Forest, IL
• Lexington, KY, - Long View Stables
• Buffalo National Park, AR
• Lewis & Clark National Forest - Bob Marshall & Scapegoat Wilderness, MT
• Coasta Rica - cross country to: Parque Prussia, Tucanet, Tango Mar, Valley
of the Monkeys, Monteverde Cloud Forest and Tabacon.
• Valle de Bravo, Mexico - Finca Enyhe-La Sierra Cabalgatas
• Ontario, Canada - Muskoka Region
• Le Touquet, France
• Bermuda
• Buenos Aries, Argentina, - The Jockey Club
We ride our horses over 1,000 miles every year and have
seen lots of things and will continue to see and do new
things as life allows.
I will now share with you the good and bad things that
I've seen or experienced over the years about the ways
campers secure their horses.
Let's get started. We need to look at the three areas:
• The horse camper.
• The horse and its safety.
• The Park or Equine Camp and its financial and legal obligations.
1. The Horse Camper
Horse campers and their horse trailers:
- Horse trailers can be bumper-pull style towed by a
pick-up truck, SUV, van, RV, bus or even a utility truck.
- Horse trailers can be gooseneck or 5th wheel style
towed by a pick-up truck or a semi tractor.
- Horse trailers can accommodate anywhere form one to
eight head of horses, and be up to 60 feet long! The
park or campground has to plan for these various rigs,
which are getting to be larger and larger.
Horse campers themselves:
- Horse campers come either by themselves or with families
or friends or both. You may see several vehicles at one
campsite and even several trailers if the family is large
and needs more than one trailer to haul all the horses.
The park or campground has to accommodate all these variations.
- Horse campers have different sleeping arrangements.
Some sleep in their horse trailers, some in tents or
RV's, or in a combination of these. What they all have
in common is that they all would like level camping spots.
2. The Horse and It's Safety
(The horse owners must be able to see or hear their horses
from their rigs so that, in the case of an emergency,
they can quickly get to their animals and lend assistance.
This is an absolute must for all of the following types
of equine restraints - or indeed, any other type of restraint
you might devise.)
Using portable corrals:
- This is a great way to allow your horse to move around
and not tie up, (cramping of the heavy muscles in the
back and hind quarters, a medical condition that can
lead to colic, which is an intestinal disorder that,
if not properly treated, can lead to death).
- Horses roll, play, jump, squeal and kick. I have seen
horses trapped under the portable gate panels. I've seen
legs stuck, and shoes pulled off. When trapped, some
horses lie calm and allow you to help them, but most
will struggle and injure themselves.
- Horse campers bring and set their own corral. But not
every camper has the means to do this. The park or campground
has no expense is associated in securing the equine.
- Because this corral is portable, the wear and tear
on the campground's "lawn" will be widely distributed
and not confined to one spot. This is pleasant for the
next camper, but the campground has to provide more room
to accommodate these corrals.
Tying to the trailer:
- This method allows minimal movement by the horse, thus
increasing his risk of tying up or colicing, especially
after a hard day on the trail or if he isn't as fit as
he should be.
- People try to compensate for the horse's lack of mobility
by leaving lead ropes long, furthering the risk of major
injury. I've seen horses tangled in their leads from
scratching, lying down or rubbing pulling the rope so
tight that the only way to free the horse is to cut the
rope with a knife. The quick release fastener, if used,
usually is not on the trailer, but on the horse's halter.
(Have you ever tried to get close to a thrashing horse's
head to release him? It won't happen). I've seen horses
that lie down and get stuck under the trailer. These
horses' legs look like raw burger when they get unstuck
and sometimes the soft tissue damage is so severe that
the horse is out for the season. If tying to the trailer
is your only option, tie the horses short enough so they
can't get their head below their knees.
- Ideally, this method of securing the horse tying should
only be used for tacking him up.
- This method is easy for the park or campground. No
extra cost is involved and wear and tear to the ground
is spread out. But this method carries a very high risk
of injury to the horses. I have witnessed two horse deaths
associated with trailer tying.
Using a portable electric fence:
- This method is super for allowing your horse to move
and graze, but as I said before, horses will be horses.
I've seen horses play in the morning and run right through
the fence. Others get chased through the fence by their
best buddy reinforcing the pecking order. These horses
try to stop but end up sliding through the fence, getting
tangled, panicking, breaking the wire, and then being
free to run.
- Sometimes the posts that hold these lines can't be
set into the ground properly and topple over in the slightest
wind. And horses also try to eat that last blade of grass
from under the fence and get themselves into trouble.
(This goes for portable corrals as well.) The worst incident
I witnessed was at an endurance ride in the fall when
the horses were blanketed. For some reason they got out
of the pen (maybe they didn't feel the shock of the fence
through their blankets), but for whatever reason they
escaped and got out on the freeway. One horse was killed
instantly as it went through the windshield of a car.
the people were not hurt. The other was horribly injured.
I knew both the girls who owned them and the horses.
I cried. Granted, nothing is entirely safe, but we all
do our best.
- The park or campground has no expense is associated
with this system because the horse owners bring and sets
up their own corral. But not every camper will have the
means to provide this for their horses.
- This corral is portable, so the wear and tear on the
campground "lawn" is distributed and not all the damage
is confined to one spot. The down side is that these
corrals require a lot of space, which the park or campground
must provide.
Using a picket line or high line, with a permanent
line (rope, cable, or chain) attached:
- Using this method allows the horses to move, walk or
trot in a small circle, and lie down. They can kick and
rear, and even scratch themselves with a rear foot. The
freedom of movement helps prevent tying up and colic.
- The issues I have had over the years (and I picket
5 or 6 head each time we hit the trail) is that during
an itch, a horse may get his foot in the lead rope or
even tangled in a halter. When a horse is attached to
a permanent cable or heavy marine rope, he may be hard
to release if he gets tangled, but, more importantly
a cable does not give or stretch, so the horses leg is
rubbed so raw that, once released, the horse will be
lame for an extended period of time. The horse owner
must have a quick release snap on the end that attaches
to the line, for a lead that is tied can't be released
quickly, especially if the lead it is damp or pulled
tight, which it will be in a case of entanglement.
- Sometimes these permanent lines are not set far enough
apart to avoid horse entanglements or horsy disputes.
Standard-sized horse needs 8 to 10 feet of space between
them to allow for the weaker or lower ranking horse to
move away from an aggressor.
- Many of these permanent lines do not have loops or
rings permanently affixed on them, so the horse owner
must figure out a way to jerry-rig the rope so the horses'
leads do not slide together.
- The park or campground has the expense of installing
and maintaining posts and the high line. Because this
is a permanent fixture, erosion will occur in one spot
and that one spot must be maintained so when it rains,
the horse is not standing in mud or water and the rider
will be able to approach and tend the animal with out
getting covered in mud and slop.
- The park or campground also must make sure that the
camp is large enough to secure the number of horses that
one camper unit may bring (1 to 8 horses).
Using a hitching rail: (Two posts with a cross
piece at the top)
- Using a hitching rail works well for tacking up horses.
The horse can stand fairly still while the rider moves
around him.
- The hitching posts horizontal crosspiece should be
made of a material other than wood because horses will
chew wood.
- The park, has an on-going expense of replacing crosspieces.
- The horse gets splinters in his gums and mouth.
- The owner has the responsibility and expense of treating
the horse, which could involve the assistance of a medical
professional to remove splinters treat abscesses in the
horse's mouth. To avoid this, the park could choose to
use a pipe cross piece.
- The height of the crosspieces also is an issue. Horse
owners bring horses in many sizes, from a miniature,
standing at 9 hands (36 inches) high. To a warm blood,
who can easily be 17 hands high (5 feet 6 inches) high.
Ideally, the crosspiece should be at the horse's chest
level, so where do you put a crosspiece.
- I also have issues with these crosspieces themselves.
Not only are they never the correct height, but a small
horse or a horse who lies down can get under these crosspieces
and get into serious trouble. I have witnessed a permanent
back injury to a horse that got stuck under on hitching
rail crosspiece. One of my horses got under a crosspiece
and came up on the other side. Of course she could not
get down and crawl back under, so she struggled with
her head below her knees and the lead rope so tight that
she could not move. Fortunately the horses on the "wrong" side
did not panic or viciously attach her, but she did receive
a kick (from one of her herd mates, telling her to go
back to her own space, which clearly she could not do)
before I got to her.
- Because the hitching rail is a permanent fixture, it
will cause erosion in one spot and that one spot must
be maintained so that when it rains the horse is not
standing in mud or water and the rider will be able to
approach and tend the animal without getting covered
with mud and slop.
- The park also must make sure to provide enough area
to secure the number of horses that one camper unit may
bring. (1 to 8 horses)
Using a hitching rail and picket line combination:
(Looks like a goal post or the letter 'H', with a cable,
chain or heavy rope at the top)
- The horses can move, and lie down (with a risk of back
injury, but does allow them some freedom of movement
as the do not to tie up). They can kick, rear and even
scratch themselves with a rear foot.
- The issues I've had with this arrangement over the
years (and I picket 5 or 6 head each time we hit the
trail) is that, during an itch, a horse could get its
foot in the lead rope, or even a halter. Releasing a
horse attached to a permanent cable or heavy marine rope
can be hard. Also a cable does not give, so the horse's
leg can be rubbed so raw that the horse will be lame
for an extended period of time. The horse owner must
have a quick release (panic snap) on the end of the lead
that to the line, cable, chain or rope, because a lead
that is tied can not be released quickly, especially
if the lead is damp or pulled tight.
- Some of these permanent lines are not set far enough
apart to avoid horse entanglements or horsy disputes.
A standard size horse needs 8 to10 feet of space between
tying to allow for the weaker or lower ranking horse
to move away from an aggressor.
- Many of these permanent lines do not have loops or
rings permanently affixed to them, so the horse camper
must figure out how to improvise an attachment that does
not allow the horses' leads to slide together.
- The height of these cross pieces also is an issue.
Horse owners bring horses in many sizes, from a miniature,
standing 9 hands (36 inches) high to a warm blood who
can easily be 17 hands (5 feet 6 inches). Ideally, the
crosspiece should be at the horse's chest level, so where
do you put a crosspiece.
- I also have issue with these crosspieces themselves.
Not only are they never the correct height, but a small
horse or a horse who lies down can get under theses crosspieces
and get into serious trouble. I've already talked about
some of the injuries this arrangement has caused.
- The park or campground has the expense of installing
and maintaining the posts and high line. Because this
a permanent fixture, erosion will occur in one spot,
and that one spot must be maintained so that, when it
rains the horse is not standing in mud or water and the
rider can approach and tend the animal without getting
covered in mud and slop.
- The biggest expense for the park would be the crosspiece
that runs parallel to the ground attached to both upright
poles if it is made of wood. Horse's love to chew on
these crosspieces; in fact they chew on any horizontal
positioned piece of wood. This chewing is bad for all
involved. The park has the ongoing expense of replacing
these crosspieces. The horse can get painful splinters
in the gums and mouth, which can become infected. The
owner has the expense of treating whatever damage the
horse does to himself. To avoid this, the the park could
choose to use a pipe crosspiece.
- The park must also provide enough area to secure the
number of horses that each camper unit will bring (from
one to eight horses).
Using a picket pole and hitching post: (For either
high or low tying or for use as a picket line):
- A hitching post should be a metal pole at least 5 feet
tall and 8 inches in caliber with a rounded top. The
pole should have rings welded at several heights to accommodate
different sized horses. This configuration gives the
horse nothing to chew on and is tall enough that a horse
rearing would not come down on the post and impale himself.
It also allows horse campers to secure their horses at
the proper height for each horse.
- The picket poles should be arranged in-groups of three,
spaced so that the campers can secure up to eight horses.
Each pole should be at least 10 feet high with rings
at various levels so that the campers can select the
proper height for their horses. Campers can either tie
their horses directly to the poles of or use the upper
rings to run their own rope between the posts to set
up their own picket lines for the number of horses they
plan to tie. Using their own unattached rope lets the
camper space their own rings or "stops" in the rope using
the proper spacing avoiding the horsy conflicts that
so often arise.
- Using a picket post allows the horses to move, walk,
trot in a small circle, and lay down. This gives them
enough freedom of movement to prevent tying up. The horse
can kick and rear, and even scratch themselves with a
rear foot.
- I picket 5 or 6 head of horses each time we hit the
trail and have only one issue with a picket line. While
trying to scratch an itch, a horse can get his foot caught
in the lead rope or even a halter. Using a removable
picket line, all it takes to free the horse is to drop
the line or undo a quick-release snap on the lead rope
or cross tie. To free a horse's foot from a halter requires
sheer strength. Then make sure the halter is properly
tight the next time! The worst injury I ever encountered
was a slight rope burn on a rear pastern and the horse
could still be ridden; he was not lame. The "give" in
the picket line keeps the rope from binding and cutting-and
laming-a horse. The only other incidence had happened
when we left a young horse behind by herself. She reared
up and her front feet went over the picket line. The
line gave, so she could move around. She felt as if she
had a girth or lead rope under her belly, and all we
had to do to free her was release the lead rope and drop
the line. She didn't have a mark on her because the line
gave.
- The horse campers will have to bring their own rope
for a picket line or they will just have to tie off on
the post using their own lead ropes.
- The park or campground will have to install the round
posts, preferably not wood if they're being used as hitching
posts. Square wood posts have corner edges that invite
horses to chew on them. Large round 10 to 12 inch caliber
utility posts, such as electrical companies use, last
for many years and do not invite much chewing. The campground
also will have the expense of setting the rings or wooden
blocks with the tops nailed to the posts at the various
heights. The height selection allows the camper the option
of using the picket post as a hitching post, eliminating
the need for an additional hitching post. Also the post
should have wooden blocks nailed to it or metal blocks
welded or bolted to it as a two step, step-up so the
campers can set their picket line or "high line".
- Using this system makes erosion easier to manage because
campers will try to select the highest ground for their
horses; they too do not want to step in mud and muck,
so the war pattern at the posts will be fairly even.
- The park or campground will have to determine the number
of horses it can safely accommodate and space the posts
so that the campers can safely secure that many horses.
- Safely setting your lead rope on your line. Adjust
your line so that with your picket fasteners, rings,
or other stops are spaced far enough apart so that your
horse's leads can't tangle with others. Then tighten
the line with your "tight rope" or self-tightening knots,
hang your leads so that when tugged on, they won't get
closer to the ground than 16 to 18 inches. This allows
the horse to get his head to the ground without any interference
from the lead. If you hang your hang your hay bags from
your line instead of the posts, you might need to retighten
your line. Your rope might have a tendency to stretch.
Also when tying horses on leads long enough to let them
lie down, make sure your lead is 8 ft away from obstructions
(e.g., vehicles, trailers, trees). We also have added
D-loops to the top of our trailer so we can picket from
our trailer and our friends have done the same, so we
literally have a picket line city when we camp. All in
all, we have found the picket line our best choice. It
is the most versatile for all sizes of horses and can
accommodate the ever-changing number of horses that we
haul around. Also, it is by far the safest means of securing
a horse, even though we have had the troubles I shared
with you earlier.
Using a ground tying-type picket:
- A ground tying-picket is a permanent block of concrete
with a ring set into it. The block and ring are sent
into the soil and extend about 4 in. above the ground
surface.
- This is the this is the least expensive restraint method
for the park or campground, but the low cost of each
station is somewhat offset by the need to have many stations
because for only one horse can use each station.
- This restraint method can be the risky for a horse
who is not trained to handle a rope. When ground tying-type
picketing, the horse is restrained by having a picketing
hobble attached to one foot, usually a hind, and a rope
of whatever length the camper chooses attached to the
hobble by one end and the concrete block by the other.
- This restrain method allows the horse to move about,
lie down, etc., but is not widely used in the US today.
Using permanent corrals or box stalls:
- When permanent corrals or stalls are installed properly,
they are the best, but also the most expensive type of
restraint for the following reasons.
-Fences must be at least 5 ft high and should be made
of pipe. Horses will chew anything made of wood and can
break any board that is not at least 2 in. thick oak.
Cattle panels and woven wire and strands of wire can
cause horses to pull their shoes off and can cause severe,
even fatal cuts. Each stall also must have hardware so
that the camper can tie hay bags and water pails.
-Stall walls must be 8 ft. high and solid from the ground
up. The smallest stall size suitable for a horse is 10
ft by 10 ft. The largest practical size is 12 ft. by
12 ft. Each stall also must have hardware so that the
camper can tie hay bags and water pails.
- Permanent corrals and stalls also require the most
maintenance of any restraint type. They are permanent
fixtures, making erosion and issue, especially for the
stalls because horse in dirt-floored stalls paw more,
and the resulting holes and uneven ground must be filled
regularly. This requires huge amounts of dirt fill.
- If the stalls are covered, they will become excellent
breeding grounds for contagious diseases, because rain
and the sun's ultra-violet rays are unable to kill the
germs left by previous occupants.
- Horse campers seem less willing to clean up after their
his horses in a corral situation because they are not
willing to walk all over a corral and clean up manure.
More manure left behind means more flying insects, objectionable
smells, and potential for parasite infestation.
- If the facilities are safe and well constructed, this
is the ultimate restraint method form the campers' viewpoint.
They just come in and put their horses to bed, no setting
up, no worries, and no extra equipment to take along.
- The park or campground will need a lot of room to provide
the number of box stalls and corrals needed to accommodate
the number of horses that a camper could bring.
- The park will also need to schedule weekly maintenance
to replace and repair what the horses have pawed up,
chewed up, and pooped on the previous weekend.
3. Park Obligations
To keep the campground full, the Park must provide the
following:
- Safe and secure accommodations for horse campers
- Ample space for large rigs
- Level camping sites for the rigs
- Ample space for campers who bring large families and
a large number of horses
- An ample water supply (preferably piped-in running
water, not hand pumps)
- A manure compost site (rakes and wheelbarrows are optional)
- Bathroom facilities, including showers
- Trash receptacles
- Picnic tables and fire rings
- Optional electrical hook-ups
- Horse wash station on a pad of concrete near a water
supply (most horse campers bring their own hoses, buckets,
and washing materials).
- Do not be afraid to charge for the amenities you provide.
- If you do not charge enough, you will not get the quality
camper that you would like to have at your facility.
- Offering family and group rates and taking some reservations,
you can provide a financial incentive for the quality
of camper your would like to have using your facility.
Remember that if a facility is welcoming, safe, and allows
the campers some freedom, the facility will stay full.
I sincerely hope that I shed some light on the various
needs of campers with horses and the ways they restrain
their mounts. I know I haven't seen it all, but I have
seen a lot. I respectfully submit this proposal for use
in your debates and planning forums. I would also be available
to speak and provide photos and documentation with additional
information if needed about the various restraint methods
used throughout the country and other parts of the world.
You also can simply visit our web site www.american-flex.com and
click on Hill View Farms "Proven Products for Horse and Rider"
Sincerely,
Cathy Sheets Tauer
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