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What Our Customers Are Saying...
"I am 5'2" tall and weigh 130 lbs. I do have some familiarity with tools and helped my husband construct our cedar paddock fence and 10x10' run in shed. I installed the stall stall skin by my self in one hour this afternoon. It was very easy and uneventful. It took an hour because I was a bit fanatical about getting everything even and straight, and included in the time is the time it took to get 8 bales of shavings into the shed and shook out. When I was done, my horse Phoenix went in, laid down, rolled about."
Judi
SURRY, ME
I love my stall skin. We have a 12 X 24 foot foaling stall that we are using it in. It is holding up very nicely and I love the way the bedding stays so much dryer even with pregnant mares using it frequently!! It is the biggest stall we have, but the easiest to clean. I have recommended stall skins to all my "horse" friends.
Vickie
HUMBOLDT, TN
Before we built our barn and brought our horses home they were boarded at a barn that had cement floors covered with rubber mats in some stalls and dirt floors in other stalls. The horses were comfortable enough on both types of flooring but the urine really pooled in the stalls with rubber mats and the shavings got quite dirty in the stalls with plain dirt floors. (We had a horse in one of each kind of stall there).
I researched all the stall floor options out there when we built our barn last spring. The other stall flooring systems that allowed urine to pass through to the soil beneath were all very costly. At the last minute, I found Stall skins and decided that the price was worth giving them a try. I cannot say enough good things about Stall skins. I am so happy that I found them.
I installed them myself and I’ve waited 9 months before writing my testimonial just to see how they held up. They are still like new. The urine drains nicely into the sandy gravel beneath. The stalls are easy to clean, even with my messy mare, because there just isn’t a lot of urine to stir around when she walks in circles. In the summer there was virtually no urine smell.
I have recommended the Stall skins to everyone I know and I plan to continue to do so. Thank you for a wonderful product with a fair price! You’ve made my horses very happy.
Angela Shaw ~Maine
"The stalls are not as damp and they seem a lot cozier even though it's raining heavily."
Ana Mathers, St. Helen, OR
"...helps keep the dust down and keeps stalls drier."
Joy Lowe, Punta Gorda, FL
Stall Skin still seems too good to be true. Why would any horse owner not have a Stall Skin?
Gayla Cady -- Blodgett, OR
When we first started Madrone Ranch Stables in 2002, we were looking for a quality stall mat that would reflect the same high-level of standards that our 32-stall barn has.
Stall Skins achieve all they promise—they offer great drainage, the shavings stay dry and clean, and the stalls are easy to clean without losing any base underneath.
Three years later we are still as satisfied with Stall Skins as we were the day we installed them. I'd recommend Stall Skins to any barn operation.
Rachel Farris - Manager,
Madrone Ranch Stables -- Austin, TX
We ordered a stall skin for one stall. In preparation, we dug out the dirt.
David dug a pit in the center, along with shallow trenches running from the pit. It looked like a drawing of the sun with the sunrays. We put gravel in the pit and trenches. Covered all of that with a layer of sand. (Poor Misty. When she stepped into her stall at that stage of construction, her hind-end would tremble and hunker when she felt the gravel because the ground felt unsteady.) Last step after the sand -- Hurray! -- the actual skin. Put the coving around to hold the skin, trimmed the skin, attached with screws with washers. We completed the stall with fresh clean shavings.
The first time Misty was in her new stall, she did not want to leave.
Normally she is turned out first because she gets antsy being left. (I have begun leaving the horses out due to the time of year,) Well, when the stall door was opened for her to exit, she would not budge. The evening feeding was the same. The next morning it took putting a lead rope around her neck to get her out of her new stall! Tell me our animals do not appreciate having plush homes! She must finally realize that she can return to her nice stall again because she is now back in the routine of exiting when asked. Misty has pooped & peed in her stall. It is easy to scoop out the manure, although a bit like finding Easter eggs (I put too much bedding in
(I won't do that again). LOL. And the stall is very dry. And most of
all, no dust!!!
Debbie Williams-Farmerville, AL