Showing posts with label riding equipment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label riding equipment. Show all posts

Monday

It's tack sale season: Need pricing pointers?

 

Whoa! It’s tack sale season again already.

 Like lots of horse lovers, I’ve been cleaning out closets. I’ve dug through my garden shed (where I’ve perennially stored lots of horse stuff).

That’s right. I’m vending again. This time it’s a tack sale organized by the local 4-H group. This event tends to be extremely well-attended, year after year.

 My table is reserved. My saddle pads are laundered. The boots are polished. The saddle is clean and sparkling. The show shirts are washed and ironed. You get the picture.

 


Now it’s time to price all that stuff.

 As I pack my jumbo totes for the trip, I am hoping not to have to repack them after the sale. It was hard enough weed through my long-time collection of equestrian-related accumulation. I really don’t want to bring stuff home and try to find places to store it again.

 

So I am pricing my items to move.

 Sure, a couple of things may command higher prices. My faithful big-name dressage saddle, for instance, may draw real money. My quilted saddle pads are (You guessed it!) $5 apiece. So are a handful of halters that suddenly materialized in my shed. (Just when I thought I had sold, donated, or given away all of them.)

 


Deep discounts draw shoppers!

 A few years ago, my table was quite popular at a local tack sale. Folks started calling it “The Five-Dollar Table,” because I offered tons of items for that price. Old bridles, saddle pads, bits, brushes, halters – you name it. Almost everything was $5.

 I went home with two filled totes and three empty ones. And a pocket full of $5 bills. On the way, I stopped for lunch with a friend and lightened my pocket a bit as well. All in all, I counted that day as a win.

 

Boots must be clean to sell.

 

Tack sale vending is largely about pricing things right – as in, small prices.

 For costly items (such as fine condition saddles, fancy leather chaps, sparkly show shirts, and leather full-seat riding breeches), many sellers start pricing at 50% below retail. That stuff has to be pristine, even at half-off.

 Basic items like grooming brushes, bits, halters, buckets, are usually priced much lower. Shoppers can find those on every table at the sale.

 Used boots may go cheap too, unless they are genuine leather, pricey brands, and super condition. I’ve seen Ariats, Dublins, and even Hermes for $10-$20. (I’m selling a lovely pair of Frye cowboy boots for $30.)

 Safety helmets usually don’t sell well. It’s hard to tell if they’ve been compromised by a tumble. So people steer away from them, unless they are practically give-aways. There may be someone gearing up for kiddy rides, pony camps, or birthday parties that’s willing to pick up a few extra helmets for a song.

 

The big question about tack sale pricing is simple.

 Are you willing to haul all that stuff home with you after the sale?

 If you really want to lighten your load, then your prices have to be low enough to draw the bargain-hunting browsers.

 

Negotiations are part of the game.

 Tack sale shoppers expect to haggle over prices. Everyone does it!

 “You’re asking $25 for this turnout blanket? I only have $12. Is that OK?”

 “Your tall field boots are $40. I’ll give you $18.”

 “These riding crops are marked $10 apiece. Can I have three for $20?”

 “If I buy the bridle, will you toss in a bit to go with it?”

 This stuff happens. And most sellers are willing to play along with the give-and-take. Some will make counter-offers, encouraging some back-and-forth with buyers.

 In fact, as the sale progresses, many begin dropping their prices, just to empty their tables. The best bargains can always be found in the final hour of the sale, as the crowd begins to thin. Sure, the pickings may be thinner then, but shoppers can scoop up some super deals from eager sellers. It’s not uncommon for a buyer to return to a seller with a repeated offer (or even a lower one), right before the sale closes.

 

Donations are always an option.

 Last fall, I set up a table at a local tack sale. When it was over, I made two piles: KEEP and DONATE. I packed accordingly.  I drove to my chosen donation site and dropped off that pile. Then I went home and stashed the other pile in preparation for this next sale.

 This time, I have resolved not to bring anything home (except maybe that saddle, if it doesn’t sell). I’ve already inquired, and the hosting 4-H group will accept donations on-site. That will definitely lighten my load for the trip home!

 

 

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Image/s: Public domain photo/s

Thursday

50 primo dollar store finds for horse lovers


Horse ownership can be quite expensive. Horse care, horse feed and supplements, horse tack, and horse supply expenditures add up fast. Toss in some everyday riding and show apparel for the human, and the bottom-line grows.

Fortunately, thrifty-minded horse owners learn quickly how to cut costs.

An equestrian who might spend plenty of a quality saddle, a beautiful bridle, or a smashing show outfit may still seek savings on other purchases.

Equestrians and horsey gift shoppers can save plenty on gifts and supplies by picking up plenty of practical items at dollar stores and discount centers. Check out these 50 fine bargains for horse lovers at any local dollar store or discount center. 

Graphic created by this user. All rights reserved.

Listed alphabetically, these items may often be found for just a buck or two at a local dollar store.

50 dollar and discount items for horse lovers and their horses:

  1. Artificial flowers (for horse jumps and horse show decorating)
  2. Baby wipes (for quick cleanups of horses, humans, and tack)
  3. Bandages (including adhesive bandaids, first aid tape, and gauzes)
  4. Batteries (for flashlights, cameras and other devices)
  5. Bicycle hooks (for hanging bridles and other tack room items)
  6. Brooms (for barn and horse trailer cleanups)
  7. Buckets (for grain, water, and tack cleaning)
  8. Bungee cords (for hanging stall fans
  9. Candy canes (for favorite horse treats, even after Christmas)
  10. Car wash mitts (for horse bathing)
  11. Christmas stockings (for horse friends)
  12. Combs (for horses and humans)
  13. Dry erase markers (for barn boards and stall front messages)
  14. Duct tape (for quick repairs and horse poultices)
  15. Dust pans (for swift cleanups)
  16. First aid supplies (antibacterial creams or ointments, wound cleansers, tweezers, and more)
  17. Flashlights (outdoor-quality)
  18. Furniture polish wipes (for wooden tack trunks)
  19. Garbage bags (for trash pickup, emergency rain wear, and perhaps horse bombproofing exercises)
  20. Gift bags (for holiday horse presents)
  21. Ginger snaps (for horses and humans)
  22. Gloves (for warmth, work, schooling or showing)
  23. Hair clips (for humans and for horse mane and tail braiding)
  24. Hairbrushes (for manes and tails)
  25. Hammers (for barn tool kit)
  26. Hand sanitizer gel (or baby wipes)
  27. Ibuprofen (for human aches and pains)
  28. Laundry baskets (for barn clothes, polo wraps, saddle pads, and tack towels)
  29. Leather wipes (for cleaning tack)
  30. Pantiliners (for dressing horse wounds)
  31. Paper towels (for innumerable uses)
  32. Peppermints (for horse treats)
  33. Picture frames (for the horse gallery)
  34. Plastic bags (for storage and supplements)
  35. Plastic baskets (for organizing tack closets and trunks)
  36. Plastic storage containers (for storing feed supplement portions)
  37. Plastic gloves (for messy or medical tasks)
  38. Plastic wrap (for poultices and wound wrapping)
  39. Pliers (for barn tool kit)
  40. Reusable shopping bags (for toting stuff back and forth from barn to home)
  41. Scissors (for horse grooming)
  42. Screwdrivers (for barn tool kit)
  43. Shampoo (for horse bathing)
  44. Socks (for tack wiping)
  45. Sponges (for horse bathing and tack cleaning)
  46. Stain removal sticks (for stable stains)
  47. Super glue (for quick repairs)
  48. Tape measures (for barn tool kit)
  49. Towels (for horse bathing and tack cleaning)
  50. Whisk brooms (for tack room and trailer cleanups)

Copyrighted material. Unauthorized reproduction or publication is not allowed.

Dollar store product inventories vary greatly, especially with holidays and changing seasons. Even so, a well-stocked bargain store is likely to offer plenty of low-priced picks for horse lovers.

Image/s:
Public domain photo

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Tuesday

Stepping up with simple do-it-yourself cavalettis




I just love easy solutions, and this one fit the bill nicely. Our Morgan mare is a sweetheart, and I wanted to use cavalettis to encourage her to step things up a little. We’d done plenty of trot poles, so we were ready for a slightly more upbeat exercise.

Plastic Cavaletti Jump Blocks are available in tack shops and online. These are quite handy, but they are a little pricey. I found a pair on Amazon for about $60 (plus shipping).

So I started thinking. (I know. Alert the media.) I poked around in my garden shed and my basement and came up with something that actually worked quite well.



Back in the Dark Ages, when my kids were little, I picked up a couple of those Little Tikes blue and white molded plastic step stools. We used them all over the house. The kids climbed up on these little benches to cut out Christmas cookies. We set them in chairs as booster seats. And we placed them in the bathrooms when the kids were ready to use the big potties.

Then we sort of tucked the step stools away and forgot about them.

So I pulled the pair of plastic step stools out, dusted them off, and carted them off to the horse barn. I flipped them over in the riding arena, and placed a jump pole across them.

Voila! Instant cavaletti.

By the way, that Morgan mare almost immediately picked up the pace and added some elevation to her gait.

Where can you find these handy molded plastic step stools?

The Little Tikes step stools used to cost about $10 apiece. I think they’ve been discontinued, but there seem to be plenty on eBay. Here are a few similar products:




The secret is to look for sturdy and solid step stools that have arched bases, as these hold jump poles nicely. Folding step stools tend to be flimsier and not work as well. And who cares if the stools sport cartoon characters or bright colors?

Little step stools tend to cost lot less than shelling out $60+ at the tack shop. OK, sure. The plastic cavaletti blocks can be flipped to make jumps of varying heights. But for simple low cavalettis, the step stools are the bomb.

Image:
Photo by Linda Ann Nickerson for The Mane Point.
All rights reserved

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