I gave all of my boarders notice on Sunday that I was going to end boarding. They were shocked but they rallied, and nobody had hard feelings. I said I'd like to by done by January 1. One horse is leaving tomorrow, two are leaving Friday, and the last is leaving on Sunday, along with his owner the apartment renter. They all found good places to go and are happy. I have a potential renter/horse carer who is an experienced horsewoman coming to see the apartment tomorrow and meet me, since I'd still like to rent the apartment and have someone here to tend to my horses when I go on vacation or have work that keeps me away. She is looking for exactly that situation.
I am in shock, lol. My powers scare me and I must remember to use them for good

As of Sunday morning, I will just have my two horses at home. I think this is going to freak them out a little bit, to have all their friends disappear! But I am so looking forward to the simplicity of it.
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I am looking for some ideas before I can the whole "board a few horses" thing. I have 10 stalls but only use 6 max. Currently they are full - my 2 plus 4 boarders. I have had one boarder for several years and it worked ok, but it was always hard to get care covered when I wanted to go away. I decided to try to add a couple more boarders and bring someone on to do some of the chores, which put me at 6. I don't want more; I don't want to do MORE chores on my days, and my pastures won't sustain turnout for more.
I have an small apartment in my barn. A woman moved in along with bringing her horse to board, saying she was happy to help with chores. She's been here a few months and she seems less than enthusiastic about working and is often unavailable when I ask. So, now I'm doing chores for 6 horses most days, and it's winter and the work is much harder than summer. I am not a happy camper about it.
I can't figure out a way to make this work for me. With only 6 horses, I can't hire someone to drive here to work at a price I can afford on a regular basis. Ie, if I pay $12/hr (typical around here), it's one hour in the morning (maybe 1.5 in winter) and .5 hours in the evening. To plan one's day around chore time and drive over here, nobody wants to do it for 12 bucks or 6 bucks (understandably). But, that's the labor factor built into board. I charge $425 full care, which is about average for my county, and I am further out and not as "fancy" as higher priced barns, so I think it's about right.
I thought about moving toward "share boarding" where each boarder is responsible for certain shifts each week, and those rates are credited toward their board. Then they are coming here anyway, and they have a vested interest in their horse's care. The down side - my existing boarders (other than the live in person) aren't interested in that. And often boarders who get that involved get TOO involved and start treating the place like their own, which I do NOT want.
There are a couple of neighbor kids I could hire to clean stalls after school, but that is such a small part, and they couldn't do the am shift, the feeding, the turnout, etc. So I don't feel that helps me in a meaningful way.
I could just bite the bullet and spend more money, and get someone in the apartment who wants to do chores daily, and pay them enough to keep them interested. But that would erode my profit, so why bother? And, the reason I like having my horses at home is taking care of them myself, the way I want to. I never really wanted to own a boarding barn and deal with workers, etc., we bought this place to just have our own place. I've always said, if I'm going to be in a boarding stable I will be in someone else's and let them deal with all the hassles!
And the hassles are endless. Ie, I can fence off a muddy area with a strip of non-hot tape and my horses leave it alone. But one of the boarders horses takes about 5 minutes to plow through it, so I have to find a way to make it hot. Another horse paces continuously and pulverizes his manure and grinds it into my hard-built mud free gravel runs. It takes as long to sift through his run as the whole rest of the stall cleaning, and even then it was left full of manure, plus all that sifting of heavy gravel is hell on my shoulder. I finally told her I was putting a stall guard across the opening to restrict his access to his run, which she is not thrilled about. Another horse cribs on his feed bucket and keeps breaking it, which his owner replaces without question, but I am just waiting for him to tear the waterer off the wall

I do make a small profit on boarding (800-1000/mo) as long as you consider that I would be paying the mortgage, insurance, and property maintenance anyway. It comes nowhere near paying for those things. For the toll it takes on my life I'm really not thinking it's worth it.
For example, if I just had my horses here, I would just leave them outside all summer. With 6, I bring them into stalls for night, so each gets their feed 2x day. And then clean stalls. I would still stall at night in winter, but with my 2, if my day means bringing them in early, or leaving them out until midnight, no big deal.
The thing that keeps my doing it is 1) the small bit of money it brings in, and 2) one of my boarders is a very dear friend, and I would miss her. If we could just board together and ride together, which we did for many years before I bought this place, that would be great lol.
It's my last ditch here before sending everyone away. Does anyone have a way of managing a small barn that gets the work done reliably and preserves the "home barn" feel and privacy?