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Get Organized! Tips for Keeping the Barn and Tack Room Tidy

Get Organized! Tips for Keeping the Barn and Tack Room Tidy

By Karen Elizabeth Baril · Barns

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Get Organized! Tips for Keeping the Barn and Tack Room Tidy Article by Karen Elizabeth Baril

Get Organized! Tips for Keeping the Barn and Tack Room Tidy

A recent study showed that clutter triggers a stress response in humans.

Scientists compare clutter to white noise. You know that annoying, but barely discernable buzz of your refrigerator or the endless drone of your neighbor’s lawn mower? That’s white noise. When it stops, your body relaxes. You might even breathe a sigh of relief. That’s because white noise triggers the autonomic nervous system (responsible for the fight or flight response)—when the noise stops, the nervous system relaxes again.

Perhaps not so surprising is that our autonomic nervous system is triggered by too much clutter as well. But, here’s the kicker —it’s triggered even in those individuals who claim that clutter doesn’t bother them all that much. Research shows that when our environment is well-organized, we’re happier even if all that untidiness never hits our conscious radar. Now, if you’re like most horse owners, you tend to collect stuff. Who knows where it all comes from, but there never seems to be enough space. No sooner do you find a place to store all your horse’s leg wraps than you have a sudden explosion of cotton saddle pads to sort through. And what to do with all those whips and sticks? It’s overwhelming, but this month, we offer tips to keep your barn space tidy.

Tack Room

Put things away to reduce clutter in Tack Rooms

A place for everything and everything in its place. That’s a maxim that’s worth following in the tack room. Not only will organization make it easier to find things, but it also helps to protect your valuable tack. Let’s take a look: Plan what you want to store in your tack room. Of course, you want to store tack, but perhaps you also want to store miscellaneous items like saddle pads, polo wraps, cleaning supplies, shampoos and grooming items. In general, it’s not a good idea to store feed (which can be moist) in the same room as tack.

If you have boarders you might want to give each horse his own space, complete with saddle rack, bridle rack, and storage bin. Wall units work well for this purpose. If you choose to store helmets in your tack room, the area will need to be

Provide space for boarders.

temperature controlled. If it is not, store your helmet at home as variations in heat and cold can destroy the integrity of your helmet construction.

Be creative when it comes to investing money. Bead board (which can then be painted to suit your style) or storage panels like the pegboard styles used in garages are great alternatives to drywall. Salvage cast-off kitchen cabinets for wall mounts from Habitat for Humanity, estate sales, or your local junk shop. You can install a beam or pole from one end of the tack room to the other to serve as an inexpensive saddle rack that will hold multiple saddles. PVC poles cut to size and bracketed to walls make for great whip and crop storage. Another idea is to mount several strips of industrial strength Velcro™ to the wall to hold protective leg boots. Milk crates serve as useful ‘see-through’ shelving for leg wraps and other smaller items.

Lighting is important to staying organized. Never use non-agricultural lighting in your barn or tack room. Incandescent bulbs are not only expensive, they are a fire hazard in the moist and often dusty barn environment. Choose UL approved agricultural lighting fixtures that produce daylight quality light. Bulbs should be cool burning even when outside temperatures fall below freezing. They should be gasketed even in stalls, of course, flame and rust proof, and, of course, energy efficient. Finally, put the finishing touches on your tack room with a coat of paint, your favorite framed horse posters, or an inspirational quote. Hang your old ribbons from a parti-colored clothes line.

Barn Aisle

keep Barn Isles free of Clutter.

Perhaps the biggest challenge to keeping the barn aisle neat is storing all those manure rakes, brooms, and shovels. If you have the space off the aisle, (the feed room is a good place), mount two pieces of 2x4 plank wood; one at the floor and one about waist -high, parallel to the floor. Then mount 3- inch PVC couplings top and bottom at appropriate intervals. Just slip the rakes into the two PVC holders top and bottom and you have an instant rake holder. This system works even better than wall racks in barns; the rakes won’t come tumbling down if a horse bumps into them.

Keep your hose neatly coiled with a hose mount or simply turn a plastic bucket on its side and attach it to the wall. You get an instant hose holder that doubles as a small shelf. Many items we use to organize our bathrooms (wire baskets and shelves) work equally well as storage units for the front of stalls, keeping individual brushes and hoof picks handy. Every season toss out rakes or other barn tools that are damaged or that you no longer use. Consider investing in a small tool or garden shed for storing seasonal items not in use like winter blankets, heated buckets, fly sheets, and other items not in season.

Lighting in the barn aisle is critical to safety and emergency care. Think of the last time your horse had a wound that needed veterinary attention. Wouldn’t it be nice to have adequate lighting both for you and your veterinarian? The barn is our ‘go to’ place to get away from the stress of everyday life. Don’t let clutter take that away.

Key Article Takeaways
  • Per Karen Elizabeth Baril: clutter triggers a fight-or-flight response even in people who don't notice it.
  • Tack room: a place for everything and everything in its place—saves time and protects gear.
  • Sort by category—saddle pads, leg wraps, whips, supplements—and label aggressively.
  • Hooks, bins, shelves, and rolling carts beat horizontal piles every time.
  • Twenty minutes of tidy after each ride keeps the barn in shape forever.
Questions readers commonly ask:
Does barn clutter really stress me out if I don't notice it?

Per Karen Elizabeth Baril: research suggests yes. Clutter functions like white noise—the autonomic nervous system registers it whether your conscious mind does or not. Owners report feeling lighter and calmer in a tidy barn even when they previously thought clutter didn't bother them.

Where do I start in a chaotic tack room?

Per Karen Elizabeth Baril: pick one category at a time—saddle pads, then leg wraps, then bridles, then supplements. Sort, throw away the broken and outdated, label storage, and don't move to the next category until the current one is done. Trying to organize everything at once usually ends with the room looking worse.

What's the best storage strategy for sticks, whips, and lunge lines?

Per Karen Elizabeth Baril: vertical hooks and racks. Whips lean and tangle in horizontal piles; hung individually on a wall they stay straight, visible, and easy to grab. Lunge lines coiled on hooks last far longer than tangled in a tub.

How do I keep supplements organized?

Per Karen Elizabeth Baril: a labeled bin per horse, a feeding schedule posted on the wall, and a rotation system that tracks open dates. Supplements lose potency once opened—six-month-old containers should be discarded, not poured.

How often should I declutter the barn?

Per Karen Elizabeth Baril: monthly quick passes, seasonal deeper sorts, and an annual full re-organize. Twenty minutes after each ride to put tack and grooming gear back in place keeps the daily mess from compounding into a weekend project.

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