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What’s at the Bottom of Your Tack Box?


It’s winter. Chances are your horse is hairy and your show clothes are stowed in a garment bag. But you can revisit those lazy, hazy days of riding on a sun-drenched trail or competing on the show circuit by simply delving inside your tack box. Rummage down to the bottom and you’ll probably find mementoes from last summer’s horse show. Or perhaps you’ll come across a halter nameplate that bears the name of a former horse. Then again, in the deep recesses of your tack box you might also discover something remarkable: that long lost missing glove, a mummified carrot or a set of tack room keys that, oddly enough, no longer unlocks the tack room door.



Corinne Dekker of California sneaked a peek into the bottom of her tack box and unearthed, “a can of Diet Coke that was so old I wondered if it was still good.” She also found “two sets of clippers that I’ve never seen before and have no idea how they got there.”



Another West Coast rider, Jill-Marie Jones, revealed “the other half of a doughnut and a spilled bottle of boot polish.”

Georgia resident Denice Klinger searched through her tack box and shares that she counted “about 236 hairnets.” An avid hunt-seat competitor, she explains, “Each one was used exactly once, and then dropped on the top tray of the tack box, where they fell down into some dark abyss, never to be seen again.” Of course, a hunt-seat rider can never have enough hairnets, so the Mystery of the Missing Hairnets forced Denice to buy more. And more. And more.

“The last time I ventured there,” Jennifer Price of Texas says, referring to the bottom of her tack box, “it was occupied by several old, green, fuzzy-with-mold pieces of leather that at some point in time appeared to have been flash nosebands, cheekpieces and headstalls.”

Erin Harty of Maryland reveals that her penchant for never tossing anything out that might potentially be useful may have its drawbacks. Scrounging through her tack box can be scary. “When I get down to the layer of kid and pony-sized stuff, I know I’ve dug too deeply into the tack box and retreat to safety.”

Now it’s your turn. Look inside your tack box, past the nice brushes, the shiny hoof picks and the neatly rolled leg wraps. Then tell us what you discover by clicking on “submit a comment” below. We may feature some of the responses in an upcoming issue of Horse Illustrated magazine. So be brave. Flip open the lid of your tack box and start digging!

Cindy Hale

Cindy Hale’s life with horses has been filled with variety. As a child she rode western and learned to barrel race. Then she worked as a groom for a show barn, and was taught to harness and drive Welsh ponies. But once she’d taken her first lessons aboard American Saddlebreds she was hooked on English riding. Hunters and hunt seat equitation came next, and she spent decades competing in those divisions on the West Coast. Always seeking to improve her horsemanship, she rode in clinics conducted by world-class riders like George Morris, Kathy Kusner and Anne Kursinski. During that time, her family began raising Thoroughbred and warmblood sport horses, and Cindy experienced the thrills and challenges of training and showing the homebred greenies. Now retired from active competition, she’s a popular judge at local and county-rated open and hunter/jumper shows. She rides recreationally both English and western. Her Paint gelding, Wally, lives at home with her and her non-horsey husband, Ron.

View Comments

  • That's funny! I've got 2 lead ropes,a halter,and some papers,and Nuzzle Perfume!!(and the Nuzzle lotion of course:))

  • I found a novel i was supposed to return to school :P some of my homework, an old chocolate bar and my comb :)

  • I found some busted snaps, old blanket leg straps missing one snap, one lonely polo wrap and a empty bottle of hoof black!

  • A silver wishbone. 563 empty water bottles. The aforementioned keys that open nothing but I keep because you never know. A hatchet?!

  • My tack box gets cleaned out every year after show season. We have one homemade cabinet with shelves on each horses stall -or close to it depending on if the box chould be put on their stall or not- with a name plate on it so we know what horse's box it is that holds all their brushes, treats, rags, polos and what ever else you want to put in it. I also have two extra bins though that hold extra polos, horse boots, my gal's sleazy, my show saddle pads and my eventing vest. My other bin holds extra practice saddle pads. All of my gal's blankets are on blanket racks near her stall, and all her extra halters and leads are on a halter hook on the outside of her cabinet. It helps keep things a lot easier to find. Although I must admit during show season we have found a lost pair of keys, extra sets of gloves and lots of hay pieces.

  • well i don't have a box,we keep all our tack in a corner. but because we have a lot of tack, a lot of it gets buried someplace. when i finally started cleaing out our tack corner,i found three OLD decaying halters, a 12 inch cinch from some of our old ponies, and of course rusted bits. not to mention about 15 hoof picks(so thats where they went), a whole bunch of brushes, and a lot of leather ties, latigoes, and old bridle peices

  • I found A leaking bottle of hoof black, a mane comb I haven't seen in a long time, A tooth brush(I had used to clean tack) and some braiding elastics!!!!!

  • I found A leaking bottle of hoof black, a mane comb I haven't seen in a long time, A tooth brush(I had used to clean tack) and some braiding elastics!!!!!

  • I found A leaking bottle of hoof black, a mane comb I haven't seen in a long time, A tooth brush(I had used to clean tack) and some braiding elastics!!!!!

  • this article rings true! nicely done - I have shipping boots my horse destroyed and yet somehow they made it back in there!

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