Hoses for horses!
May. 8th, 2005 07:05 pmSpring is officially here. Saw the first oriole and the first hummingbird. Heard the first wood thrush (beautiful, like a panpipe among the trees.) Our barnswallows, who nest in the small horsebarn every year, also appeared this morning, swooping in and out the windows while I was cleaning the boys' stalls and scolding me incessantly.
Most importantly though, we have water in the garden and pastures. It takes over 900 feet of hose (hosepipe to some of you?) to do this.
Our land, like many 5 acre parcels in the midwest, is deep and narrow. It goes back a quarter mile from the road front. The well is near the house, and though we have water hydrants in both barns, the one farthest back is still a long way from the fenced pastures and the garden. We got quotes one year for burying a water line and putting a couple of frost free hydrants back there, and it would cost nearly $3000. Originally we had thought to have a new well put in back there but that would be even more, at least $5000. It's much cheaper to run a lot of hoses, though they're a nuisance. You can't leave them out in winter or they will be ruined. You have to pick sections up in order to mow anywhere. But even with the cost of replacing worn out hoses, we can go the rest of our lives without getting to $3000 I think.
Today the hoses went out. Around the outside of the arena, over the creek, through the woodlot. Lots of poison ivy coming up, and I discovered an old apple tree in there that we have never noticed. It's blooming in spite of being in the deep shade of a grove of oaks and hickories. Out the north end of the woodlot, past the beehives to the garden. Add a Y-connector there so one line goes to the garden, the other continues back to the first pasture gate. A quickconnect and valve there so we can fill one horsetrough at that point, or add on another 150 feet that just lies along the fenceline to get to the second horsetrough in the other field. All done, joints checked, troughs filled. It works. One more not-so-little task completed, and there'll be no thirsty horses which is good.
Oh, and the bluebirds have a nest in one of our boxes back there. They like old pastures. We often see them sitting on top of the fence posts waiting for an unlucky bug to move in the grass. I also spotted treeswallows hunting flies and mosquitoes over the horses' heads as they grazed.
Horses are getting used to the summer routine now. Without Dawn here to cause constant disruptions, they have settled in well. A little hay in the corrals in the morning, and around noon if the weather looks good they get to walk back to the pasture on lead and graze all afternoon. We bring them back into the barn at night unless the weather is excessively hot. They were a bit spooky about the walk through the woods for the first few days, but it's getting to be a ho-hum affair now (just the way we all like it.)
Most importantly though, we have water in the garden and pastures. It takes over 900 feet of hose (hosepipe to some of you?) to do this.
Our land, like many 5 acre parcels in the midwest, is deep and narrow. It goes back a quarter mile from the road front. The well is near the house, and though we have water hydrants in both barns, the one farthest back is still a long way from the fenced pastures and the garden. We got quotes one year for burying a water line and putting a couple of frost free hydrants back there, and it would cost nearly $3000. Originally we had thought to have a new well put in back there but that would be even more, at least $5000. It's much cheaper to run a lot of hoses, though they're a nuisance. You can't leave them out in winter or they will be ruined. You have to pick sections up in order to mow anywhere. But even with the cost of replacing worn out hoses, we can go the rest of our lives without getting to $3000 I think.
Today the hoses went out. Around the outside of the arena, over the creek, through the woodlot. Lots of poison ivy coming up, and I discovered an old apple tree in there that we have never noticed. It's blooming in spite of being in the deep shade of a grove of oaks and hickories. Out the north end of the woodlot, past the beehives to the garden. Add a Y-connector there so one line goes to the garden, the other continues back to the first pasture gate. A quickconnect and valve there so we can fill one horsetrough at that point, or add on another 150 feet that just lies along the fenceline to get to the second horsetrough in the other field. All done, joints checked, troughs filled. It works. One more not-so-little task completed, and there'll be no thirsty horses which is good.
Oh, and the bluebirds have a nest in one of our boxes back there. They like old pastures. We often see them sitting on top of the fence posts waiting for an unlucky bug to move in the grass. I also spotted treeswallows hunting flies and mosquitoes over the horses' heads as they grazed.
Horses are getting used to the summer routine now. Without Dawn here to cause constant disruptions, they have settled in well. A little hay in the corrals in the morning, and around noon if the weather looks good they get to walk back to the pasture on lead and graze all afternoon. We bring them back into the barn at night unless the weather is excessively hot. They were a bit spooky about the walk through the woods for the first few days, but it's getting to be a ho-hum affair now (just the way we all like it.)