Deltaire Arabians


Welcome to Deltaire Arabians, located in the deserts of Arabia. Through careful choice of our location, and irrigation we have grown one hundred acres of good pasture. We have one big barn, all connected together. There is the grand entrance, with four stalls, each with walls like pasture fence. The back of each stall is (of course) tall, for it is the exterior of the barn. But the other three 'walls' are four and a half feet tall, solid oak wood. The gates are iron, so that the horses have open, airy stalls. In between the stalls there is a space large enough so that stallions cannot get to eachother, to prevent harm to them. They are grand stalls, for grand stallions. On each gate there is a gold nameplate, Prince Jet, Inteq, Spiritual Zafar, Prince Kalmar. There is enough room on the outside of this grand entrance that, if necessary about ten more stalls could be built without it looking awkward or overloaded. It connects into a grand feed and tack room, designed to keep mice out and to keep all tack and feed safe and sound. It also connects into the other two sections of the barn. One section is of fifty stalls, each large and seperate from eachother. The walls that seperate broodmare from broodmare are solid to eight feet tall. The 'wall' in the front is four and a half feet of solid oak, then it is iron bars the rest of the eight feet. The doors are five feet, with a slope cut out so that mares can get their heads out and look around, but not touch one another. They are for broodmares, or (mainly) outside mares. The other section has 30 stalls, just like the broodmare stalls, except for the young showhorses, fillies not yet ready to be in the broodmare section and colts/stallions not yet ready (or worthy) to go to the stallion section. This will also hold the geldings, and sale horses. There is one other section, the breeding place. It is where all breedings occur. The mare is tied up, and the stallion led in to service her. Then they are seperated and put back into their stalls, or pastures. The stallions are turned out in seperate pastures every day, and the younger colts are also turned out in seperate paddocks, smaller ones designed for their saftey.


Disclaimer
This is a fake horse stable used to portray
real horses but is in no way real. If any
picture on this site is yours, contact me
and on request I will immediately take
the picture(s) down or give you credit.
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