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Dressage Components

Classic Dressage and Cowboy Dressage

Options:

We have

  • Portable

    • Wellington Cones

  • Permanent

    • Weighted base posts

    • Anchored posts

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  • 20m x 40m Arenas

  • 20m x 60m Arenas

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  • Classic

  • Junior

  • Economy

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  • Complete Arenas (incl. rails)

  • Complete Arenas (excl. rails)

  • Individual Cones

  • Start & Finish Signs

  • Letters & numbers

  • Arena Flower Boxes

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Wellington Dressage Components

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  • Height from the ground to top of pylon: 12"

  • Width at top of pylon: 7.5"

  • Width at bottom (base) of pylon: 15"

  • Height to top of rail: 12.5"

  • PVC rail dimension: 4m x 1.5" x 5.5"

  • Pylon material: polyethylene

Standard Dressage components

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  • Posts: 5" x 5" x 16"

  • Rails: 5.5" x 1.5"

  • Height of Rail: 14"

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A little inspiration ...

Dressage Arena Sizes

Combined Classic English and Specialty Cowboy Dressage™ Arena

Arena sizes

Cowboy Dressage is always ridden in a 20 x 40m arena. 

However, if you want to be able to do it all - to ride classic English dressage, Western Dressage, and Cowboy Dressage, choose this arena!

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Suggested Methods for Laying Out Arenas

Establish the approximate locations of the rings. Stride out approximate distances or use a measuring wheel. Check the footing, determine the location of the judge relative to sun and confirm whether there will be adequate space for the judge’s booth and for a comfortable circle at entry. Relocate as required. It is highly desirable to NOT have the sun in the judge’s eyes.

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Using Measuring Tapes

Metric/English fiberglass measuring tapes in reel-type plastic cases with flush-folding handles are available from contractors’ supply stores, lumber yard supply stores, or surveyors’ supply stores. These measuring tapes are available in 60-meter (200-foot) and 100-meter (300-foot) lengths. In addition, for measuring corners, 100-foot builder’s tapes are available at a nominal cost from hardware stores.

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Materials

  1. At least one 60-meter (200-foot) surveyor’s tape, preferably marked in meters on one side of the tape. Two 60-meter tapes are ideal.

  2. Also, two 100-foot builder’s tapes are used to set corners and short walls.

  3. Six stakes or long nails to establish corners and measuring points.

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Procedure

A 90° corner is established by using the Pythagorean theorem, which states that the sum of the squares of the sides of a right triangle equals the square of the hypotenuse. Tapes are used to establish a right triangle with sides of 40 feet and 30 feet and a hypotenuse of 50 feet.

  1. Drive in one stake or nail to establish the location for the first corner stake. Using the 100-foot builder’s tape, measure 66 feet along the potential short wall.

  2. Take a 60-meter tape and for a small arena measure 40 meters down the long wall (standard ring measure 60 meters) and place a stake with the tape secured to be straight and taut. This will be the second corner.

  3. Use the second 100-foot builder’s tape. Secure it at the 40-foot point on the long wall, unreel 50 feet and then adjust the positions between the 40-foot location on the long wall and a 30-foot location on the short wall so they are exactly 50 feet apart.
    The easiest way to do this is to pivot the short wall while leaving the long wall taut. Mark the final location of end of the short wall with a stake. This is the third corner.

  4. Use the tapes to measure out the other long wall and short wall. The fourth corner is located at their junction. By making these last
    two walls the correct lengths, all corners will be square. Optionally, the diagonal of the ring may be measured as a check,

  5. as shown in the following diagram.

  6. Set the arena fencing.

  7. Determine placement of letters. Refer to the diagrams.

  8. Place letters approximately ½ meter away from the edge of the arena.

  9. On the arena enclosure place a special marker on the fence itself, level with, and in addition to, the letter concerned.

 

CREDIT: Thank you to the United States Pony Club for providing the text from which this description was derived.

Permanent Posts - Base weight versus post anchor...

When arenas are going to be permanent the posts require staking. Both methods have the exact same solution for staking. On the inside of the upright posts there is an extra pvc corner that allows the long rebar stake to anchor the post, a total of 56 sections. This rebar is invisible from the outside.

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In the Post/Anchor system, every post has the internal pvc framing and the rebar.

 

In the Base Weight system, the four corners and some of the side pieces, totaling 12 altogether,  contain the same internal structure as the post anchor. However, the remaining upright posts, the majority, use sand put into the base, i.e. 'base-weight' for stability.

For a permanent configuration, we strongly recommend the post anchor since it is better suited for possible high wind conditions. The base weight is fine but better suited for indoor or low wind conditions.

Permannt posts

Layout & Assembly (click to enlarge)

Assembly
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