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Regular
Posts: 52
  Location: East Aurora, NY | Looking to you all for your experience. I have a Sundowner 2 horse gooseneck with walk through door. 7'6" Height. I RARELY haul a horse in the first stall, and use my trailer for camping. When setting up camp, I like to open the stud divider and use the 1st stall as alittle extra space for cowboy shower, and my 100lb. German shepherd to sleep at night! Lol :)What have you all used as wall storage in the first stall that can safely be permanently mounted, yet disassembled when hauling a second horse? I'm thinking some sort of peg board. I don't want any tails getting stuck :(Ideas? Thanks so much! |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 658
    Location: Rayne, LA | Try doing a search on this site. Click on "search" on top left. Check trailer forum, type storage in subject box, extend time to 180 days and press sumbit. Hope this helps. Good Luck and use your immagination and I am sure you will come up with many ideas and hopefully share them with us. |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 322
   Location: Fort Madison, Iowa | I had the same questions recently and when I looked, it was on the bottom of page 2 right now so when you look, check page 3 if you don't see it on 2. |
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Expert
Posts: 5870
       Location: western PA | http://www.horsetrailerworld.com/forum/thread-view.asp?threadid=17612&posts=12 |
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New User
Posts: 2
| ood Luck and use your immagination and I am sure you will come up with many ideas and hopefully share them with us.Buy dvd movies online directly from our websites instead of going outside! |
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Member
Posts: 13
Location: Chimacum, WA | I'm new to this forum, but, I have seen some great ideas. One friend has a system in her 4 horse head to head. It is diamond shaped plastic things that attach to the wall, and are removeable. I am sorry I don't know what they are called. She said they are removeable for when she wants to haul horses in that area. Things can be attached to these "things". She used them to run bungie cords across plastic "dressers" that stack, to hold them in place. Another idea I saw a couple days ago is the steel shelving that is heavy duty (high poundage per shelf) formed with indented rings around the corner posts that make the shelving very easily adjustable, and, you have 1" options on how far apart the shelves are. They come in multiple widths, heights, and depths. I'll try to attach a photo of this setup. This gal had one hooked to the wall securely but removeable. I only saw a photo... but probably with the smaller D ring type tiedown hooks that many use in the floors of trailers to secure stuff. She had those heavy plastic crates like the milk man used to use to deliver milk with her stuff in them, and bungie cords holding those to the shelving unit. I really liked this setup. Driving your horse(s) makes you have to haul a lot of stuff that riders never would use. We really have to think "outside the box". Bonnie |
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Regular
Posts: 82
   Location: Massachusetts | Take a look at the show stall shelves that scheiders has. sstack.com maybe there is something there you can use.Its things that you would set up in a stall at a show for a portable tack room.. |
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 Regular
Posts: 84
   Location: Crestwood, KY | I usually haul hay and firewood in the front stall, but like to set up camp with that area being the "mud room" and stay organized. I have one of these hung up high on the front slant wall (on the back end, and high enough that I could still haul a horse in the front stall safely): http://www.horse.com/item/4-hook-tack-rack/SLT310066/ and a blanket bar for the ceiling to hang things to dry, etc: http://www.sstack.com/horse-blanket-and-cooler-racks/Easy-Up-Blanke... and a swinging blanket rack in the corner for rain sheets, coolers, saddle pads, etc.It looks similar to this one: http://www.bigdweb.com/SWINGING-BLANKET-5-BAR/productinfo/667T/
Edited by TheOtherHorse 2013-02-16 7:10 AM
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