Characterization of indoor arenas through an anonymous survey

Author:

McGill Staci1,Hayes Morgan1,Tumlin Kimberly2,Coleman Robert3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biosystems and Agricultural Engineering, University of Kentucky, 128 CE Barnhart Building, 1398 Nicholasville Rd, Lexington, KY40546, USA

2. Department of Epidemiology, University of Kentucky, 720 Sports Center Drive, Lexington, KY 40506, USA

3. Department of Animal and Food Sciences, University of Kentucky, 613 W.P. Garrigus Building, Lexington, KY 40546, USA

Abstract

Abstract Equine farms are building both stables for the horses to live in and additional facilities to train and work horses (Kidd et al., 1997). For many of these farms, an outdoor arena that has an all-weather footing is the first working facility built. During inclement weather the ability to train in the outdoor arenas is inhibited, which in turn means the trainers, riders, and farms lose income as money is only made when horses are working, training, and competing. Indoor arenas allow for horses to continue to be worked no matter the weather conditions. The equine industry contributes a total of $122 billion dollars a year to the United States’ economy. The expenditures to build and maintain these arenas the horses utilize for training and work are a portion of the equine economic contribution (American Horse Council Foundation, 2018). During the summer of 2018, an anonymous online survey was conducted to begin to characterize indoor arenas. Owners, managers, and riders were questioned on a variety of topics including arena construction and design, arena usage, footing type, maintenance practices, environmental concerns, and potential health issues experienced within the facilities. Respondents in the study defined indoor arenas differently depending on geographic region, however most definitions included a roof, some enclosure, and footing in order to work the horses. In addition, of the 335 respondents of the survey, 71% or 239 respondents reported having concerns about the environment within the indoor arena. The three main concerns are dust, moisture, and lack of air movement. Overall, the survey begins to build our understanding regarding these facilities and provides the framework to continue research in the future.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

General Veterinary,Animal Science and Zoology

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