Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Stall Fronts

After returning from Disneyland and the land of sunshine, I spent a grumpy day at home. I just wanted to see something, ANYTHING, happening with our home updates.
 
So I sat at my computer and did a Craigslist search, STALL FRONTS, in the greater Seattle area and found this:
 
Retiring thoroughbred farm,20 stalls ,stall fronts are 12x8,we will help remove and load call or text for a look, these are locally made, heavy metal ,fabricated in the 80s ,angle iron frame ,instant stall



 
I called and he still have most available but some had already been sold and more people were showing up all the time. Called Karen:
 
Me: Want to go get stall fronts with me?
K: Yes.
Me: Can we use your flatbed?
K: Yes
Me: Can we use your truck to pull your flatbed?
K: Yes.
 
We left home at about 1pm, I had to call in to work that I couldn't make it in, just in case, and headed to Granite Falls.
 
These stall fronts are dang nice. Heavy duty, truly 2" thick, they include the wood and the sliding tracks on top. Each door weighs about 100# and the stall fronts are easily 250. Some of the wood is rotten from having had horses spitting water onto it for 30 years but most is just fine.
 
I'll need to clean them up, maybe sand blast & repaint the metal then purchase bolts to attach these to the barn, replace a few boards and then they are done.
 
I paid $1100 for 5 stall fronts ($220.00 each)
plus $100 for a single and a double window bars that can opened.
The fuel was $40 but I'm going to pay more for that
and I owe Karen my firstborn child.
 
I have search locally for stall fronts and the only ones I could find that were sturdy/strong enough are in Graham and cost $550 for the frames and are a foot shorter, I'd still have to purchase and install the rollers/sliders for each door ($125) and wood.
 
These were a bitch to get out of the barn and onto the trailer but there were 3 big guys to help, they had a welder to get rid of the old rusty bolts holding them in place and they were much stronger than us and had tools.
 
I saved over $500 per stall.
I have a lot of work yet to do on these, the entire barn needs to be built, but to have these makes my heart happy. No shitty shed stalls for my horses.
 


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