Our horse now lives out 24 7 at that club because i feared what that stink was doing to his lungs.
Repair dirt floor horse ruts.
Its the ruts that are giving me fits.
I know concrete is easier to maintain but i worry about the above and the fact that it s so hard on their legs without adequate cushion.
A rut 3 or 4 inches or deeper needs a little more work to loosen the soil and repair the compaction.
Overfill the hole by 1 or 2 inches with a mixture of equal parts soil sand and compost.
Just a short video on a way to use junk tracks to make a floor in a dirt floored storage building.
Someone told us we have to work it all up before we add dirt on top of it and the seed.
Ruts more than 4 inches or more deep require a little more time and patience to repair.
When the trail traverses its easy enough to deal with them there.
Dirt if you plan to have a dirt floor and local soil drains exceptionally well you re done.
I hope this is useful to someone.
How in the world do you loosen it when the machine drove on it so much.
I could do dirt but never being in a barn with dirt floors i don t know how they are with urine smells.
These ruts are found on both level ground and inclines.
We only plan on planting in the ruts and not work up the rest of the lawn.
Many sections are fine to ride with the trail bed in fine shape.
Most soils however drain moderately well at best so you ll probably want to help it along.
Foot rot lives in soil and so once foot rot is in the flock on dirt floors it is almost.
If the grass is still intact you can cut around the patch of sod covering the rut and remove it.
Other sections the rut from use is 4 deep with some spots getting to 8 or more inches.
As far as dirt being more natural.
Then loosen the soil around the rut with a digging fork.
Some of the ruts are 6 8 inches deep if not more.
Using cement blocks to repair a road washout.
I just can t picture a rototiller doing it with it that deep.
You can use machinery without instantly causing ruts and holes in your floor.
The horse and cow are not in natural places they are in a barn.