SubscribeGift a Sub
Enable cache 100

HI Spy: Give Us Your Best Barn Organization Tips

If you want to organize your home or office, there are multitudes of books, magazines and reality TV shows to tell you how to do it. Home organization is a growing industry in the United States as Americans attempt to simplify their lives. Is it possible to translate that mentality to the barn?



We’ve all seen immaculate tack rooms and grain rooms in big show barns and commercial boarding stables. Matching tack trunks line the walls. Bridles hang straight and orderly across from saddles tucked away safely in their covers. Of course, those barns have teams of grooms and assistants to keep things in order. Step into the average backyard barn or busy lesson stable, and chances are you’ll find saddles put away backwards, brushes tucked away in random spots, piles of spilled grain and half an inch of dust on forgotten headstalls in the corner of the tack room.



Let’s face it, most horse owners simply don’t have the time to keep a magazine-ready stable. Keeping the stalls and water buckets clean, the fences and shelters in good repair and the horses fed and cared for is a full-time job on its own. But an organized barn is more than just aesthetically pleasing. Keeping tack and brushes organized and separated can help prevent the spread of skin problems between horses. Cleaning up grain spills and removing piles of rags or old grain bags makes your barn less inviting to bugs and rodents. Sweeping away cobwebs and collected hay and straw reduces the risk of a fast-spreading barn fire.

Whether your goal is a safe and healthy barn, an efficient setup for completing daily chores, or making your stable fit for the pages of Good Horsekeeping, chances are you’ve picked up some tricks along the way. Click “Submit a Comment” below to share your hints for an organized farm and barn with other readers. Some of the responses will be published in a future issue of Horse Illustrated.

New: Top HI Spy answers may be eligible for a prize! If you’d like your response to be considered for the top answer, please include your email address in the email field of the comment form (your email address will not be publicly displayed.)

See more HI Spy Questions >>

Horse Illustrated

Horse Illustrated is the magazine for people who are passionate about horses. Each issue offers advice on horse health and care, plus user-friendly training tips for both English and western riders and engaging lifestyle features for horse lovers.

View Comments

  • When it comes to managing the barn, I make good use of the plastic, sliding-drawer containers that can be found at Wal-Mart or similar stores. I use the smaller containers to hold a set of grooming tools for each horse, with their name labeled on it. Everything has a place to be put away, and there's no confusion on whose brush is who's for the boarders at the barn too.

  • For each horse at the barn, we made a grooming bucket out of a plastic ice cream container (with the plastic handle). We spray painted and decorated the outside, put the horses name on it with sponge letters and filled it with that horse's brushes, hoof pick, comb, rubber bands for braiding and a small spay bottle filled with Show Sheen. It is cheap, easy to carry and keeps the brushes from being used on other horses. We enjoyed decorating the containers.

  • I have alot of good tips! But Im only going to share a few! I noticed alot of brushes go missing, so I keep mine in a peppermint container. Put tags on your tack to let people know its yours. Make sections in your tack box, (hoof, grooming tools, tropical aids, etc...)To keep track of emercency aids create a first aid kit with Bandages, wonder dust, your vet's number etc... I hope you like my tips! Put them to good use!

  • COLOR-CODE!!! I board my horse, and all my stuff is purple so everyone else recognizes it's my stuff. Also I use my helmet as another bucket (it's not just a brain bucket anymore) When it's cold I put my gloves, hat, and any other things in there as well.

  • I use The bright colors of Duct tape to label all of my stuff, especially brushes and whips and crops. I also use the sliding drawer storage bins for polowraps and stuff that I don't use daily.

  • For me, everything has to have a place. If I use certain things every day, then I put them in a place that is easy to reach, and easy to put away. Things that I just need on special occations, (saddle soap, shedding blades, extra brushes) I put in a couple plastic containers, each marked and store them there. Plastic containers are the key! Have fun!

  • Keep it clean! I think it's critical that every barn be organized in theory. What I mean is that you can easily find things even if to the outsider it is a disorganized mess! I can barely fit into my tack room but I know where everything is and it is all spotless! Hope this helps.

  • We organize our horse's things into colors. All my horse's grooming tools, blanket, halter, etc. is all red. Hope that helps! :)

  • All the people in our ban have "horse colors" or colors specifically for their horse, & all their blankets & supplies are those colors. Like mine are Navy & Silver, another persons is Lime green & Black, another is Red & black, & we all have little "lockers" in the tack room & we keep all our seperate stuff in there. So nothing can ever get mixed up & if it does, we know whos it is because of the colors. :)

Recent Posts

An Overview of White Line Disease

It's often what you can’t see that leads to trouble, and that’s definitely the case with white line disease. Understanding…

21 hours ago

ASPCA Right Horse Adoptable Horse of the Week: My Man Ira

Welcome to Horse Illustrated’s weekly installment of the Right Horse Adoptable Horse of the Week, offered in partnership with the…

2 days ago

Riding Lipizzaners in Hungary

Two hours’ drive from Budapest in the picturesque Bükk National Park lies Szilvásvárad, a beautiful little village that is home…

3 days ago

How Horses Helped Two Boys with ADHD

During the height of the pandemic and racial tension around the U.S., two boys struggling with ADHD found healing through…

4 days ago

Adopting a Companion Horse

When you think of the term “companion horse,” one that is versatile with the ability to fill a variety of…

5 days ago

Emergency and Natural Disaster Preparedness with Horses

Each year, hurricanes, wildfires, and severe storms force thousands across the country to evacuate their homes. When preparing for a…

1 week ago