I Have Some Big News
But before I tell you, I want to thank everyone for the great response to my last post. I got some truly fabulous advice on dressing for long hours of working outside and in a barn. I went back and labelled the post so others and I can find it. The comments are a wealth of information from some very experienced people. As a matter of fact I think there's a good magazine article there!
Okay, back to my news - remember when I wrote a wish list for 2011 ( I was helped by a glass of red :)? Hmm, written one year and one day ago - am I oddly energized by February? Check off #3 on this list: Develop a business plan that would give me financially sustainable access to an indoor full size dressage arena for winter 2012/13 (remember, it's a wish list). Find close to it for 2011/12.
Well, we won't really know if it's financially sustainable until it's up and running (although we've crunched lots of numbers), but all of the pieces are coming together for a winter / early spring 2013 opening. This list was the first time it made it to the surface of my consciousness and Doug (my husband) and I have been slowly but surely moving ahead with it ever since. Kind of weird eh? This past week we reached a milestone, but before I get to that here's a short chronology with pictures:
- we bought 135 acres of land in April 2011 very close to the Halifax / Truro corridor. It is the central place to be in Nova Scotia, with easy access from New Brunswick and Prince Edward Island too.
Doug got his life time dream (besides his Harley lol) - a John Deere tractor
Here he is driving it across our front lawn just after it came off of the delivery truck. While we're on this picture, check out the cute little horse silhouette on the corner of the trim over the door. Doug made them for several spots on the house.
- I did surveys, newsletters and business planning to figure out user needs, market, costs, budget
You can't make it out, but I think it's interesting. It's some of the results of the on-line survey I did re user and event planner preferences for a competition and clinic facility. If you would like the information just let me know and I'll email it to you.
We settled on a phase one program of: (1) a rental venue for competitions and clinics, (2) a small amount of boarding, particularly in the winter months when there aren't competitions and people need an indoor to train, and (3) a small amount of warmblood breeding (starting next year with one). We'll cater to all disciplines who want to use our facility.
- Doug started clearing land and is making good progress.
This is kind of dark (my phone at dusk), but it's the future location of the arena. Everything else will be designed around that.
- And then everything fell into place this week - Rogo's looking good, we got the financing terms we wanted, the arena supplier gave us a competitive quote, and, ta da - the big news part - we ordered a gorgeous We Cover arena!!! It will be 80 feet wide and 216 feet long, with the riding surface being about 205 feet long (some space at one end will be for offices, feed, etc.). The supplier sent me these pictures of one they just put up.
Ours will have windows in the ends and stabling on the sides. The buildings can have metal or wood siding. We'll probably do wood ends and let them weather grey, and we'll see about the stable siding - grey metal or wood.
This of course led to great excitement on our part and bubbly was in order.
It was fun to sit and talk about the coming year. We have great plans but it will be very hard work.
Now I'm working on a site plan. I was an environmental / park planner for many years and have a design degree in environmental planning, so I can actually do this. Of course an agricultural engineer is doing all of the structural plans. Here is a very rough design program. Keep in mind the plan is to develop the site over a period of years, so I want to include everything in the design so we don't realize down the road that the perfect spot for visitor camping for example has been used for an equipment shed.
Can you make this out? Did I miss anything? Feedback is more than welcome.
So that's the big news. I hope you don't mind me writing about business on my training blog. This blog is definitely staying a personal dressage training journal, but I can't help throwing other stuff in at times, especially when it's life changing. If you are interested in following our facility development progress I have a facebook page for it and a website coming soon. With your indulgence I'll be picking your brains for design ideas and have already gotten some from generous readers.
Comments
My advice is to plan for your indoor with your horses' (and your) respiratory health in mind. I worked at a farm with an indoor for years and at times the dust was choking, especially in the winter when it was more difficult to water the ring. If you can install a sprinkler system, go for it!
You two are on the right track - realizing your dreams. You're making them happen - which generally includes tons of hard work. ;)
Looking forward to following your progress. Congratulations!
Can't wait to see/hear more!
When I saw your post yesterday, I promised to sit down with coffee and read every word slowly, which I did this morning.
I believe in writing down dreams and then working slowly and consistently to realize them. This is exactly what you did! I never had a project as big as yours and you and Doug are doing it!!! How exciting! You really inspire me because I dream big and then get scared and scale down. You dream big and work big and you are doing it!!! Hooray!
So glad Rogo is doing better and LOVE the horse silhouettes that Doug made for around the house and buildings. Very cute.
Congratulations! And thank you for including your blog readers in the process. It is very interesting.
I used to work in a competition yard in Belgium for the summers when I was young. They had a beautiful indoor arena with stables on the long side and a viewing area on the short side. The viewing area was behind glass and had a small bar, with coffee and tea making facilities (and beer on tap, it was Belgium after all).They did great business renting out the arena in quiet times because of the viewing area, it was even used for a vintage car exhibition!
Might be worth considering setting out some space for a viewing area that could be developed at a later stage?
And glad Rogo is doing well.
(On another topic, see my post today regarding some things that helped my foot pain while riding; hope it can help you, too!).
Congratulations on your progress. I did look at your white board and you seem to have it all covered. The only thing I remember about going to away shows for a few days was they always had the water spigots too far from the tents and we had to haul buckets of water for a ways. Don't know what your plans are for that. I'd also recommend looking into Nelson automatic heated waterers or another company. They save a lot of work and a lot of ice busting with picks in the winter. We also have them in the turn out fields. It really is an efficient time saver.
Your arena looks really nice. Lighting is key, check into the cheapest to run and the brightest with the least amount of start up and shut off time. I forgot what we have but they work great.
We didn't put a sprinkler system in because I don't like them for creating mold and puddles. We treated the sand with a salt compound, I could get you the name if you're interested. This stuff keeps the dust down and is safe on the equipment and the horses hooves.
One more word of caution, the Cover All buildings let in lots of light but you might want to ask the company how you clean it and how much of a snow load it can handle. Years ago we were at a show in the summer and they had the sides rolled up, but there was a lot of mold growing on the material and it was really dirty looking. I hope you don't mind me telling you any of this I don't mean to have you second guessing yourself. I just researched so many different things when we were building our arena. In the end everyone makes their own decisions and I hope you have wonderful luck with your new facility.
I don't have time to read the comments, so I really hope I'm not repeating anyone. When you say there will be stabling along the sides of the arena, will the stalls be open to the arena? The reason I ask is because my trainer had her arena built attached to the barn and her biggest complaint is that the arena can get dusty and isn't good for the stalled horses' respiratory health. Of course there are all sorts of variables like will horses be stalled during the day, what kind of footing your using and if you'll have sprinklers. At the time she had sand for footing and no sprinklers so it got pretty bad. Now she has better footing and automatic sprinklers so it's not so bad, but something to think about if sprinklers, dust free footing aren't in the starting budget. :)