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Natural Resources Extension Program
Horse Keeping for Clean Water
By Gene Surber
and Sandy Gagnon
| "Divert
"clean" water around areas with pollutants.
Use berms, grassed waterways, underground pipelines,
or other methods." |
Prevent Erosion
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Keep areas well vegetated and
restore bare areas with vegetation. Plant
roots, especially those of grasses, hold soil in
place and help water infiltrate into the ground
rather than run off. Vegetation also dissipates
the force of rainwater hitting the ground, which
detaches soil particles.
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Avoid concentrating water.
Concentrated runoff can be highly erosive.
Try to disperse runoff by spreading it out in a
thin, shallow "sheet". Areas to watch are
roads, roofs, compacted soil, and other impermeable
surfaces that shed water quickly and increase the
amount and velocity of runoff.
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Control
horse access and human activities in vulnerable
areas such as wetlands, creek banks, meadows and
steep hillsides. Limit access, especially
during wet periods.
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Manage pastures to prevent heavy
grazing. Avoid soil compaction and excessive
removal of vegetation by timing the use of pastures
and controlling the numbers of horses. Rotate
pastures to allow them to rest from grazing, to
allow grasses to regrow and mature so they will
reseed.
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Use filter strips and riparian
buffers near creeks. Maintain a strip of dense
grass downslope of bare areas such as paddocks and
turnouts to help trap sediment. Riparian buffers
provide valuable wildlife habitat and should contain
a variety of plants including sedges, rushes, grasses,
forbs, shrubs and trees, but not all depending on
the site.
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Keep creek banks vegetated to
hold soil in place, trap sediment, and provide valuable
wildlife habitat. Sedges, rushes and grasses
have fibrous roots that hold the soil in place.
A good indicator of root mass in grasses is the
above ground growth generally equals the below ground
root system. Shrubs and trees have deeper
roots that are either fibrous and taproots that
will anchor the soil in place.
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Install kick boards or lay railroad
ties or telephone poles around arena perimeters.
These will help hold footing material in place and
keep it from washing away.
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Properly construct and maintain
roads, trails and parking lots. Protect earthen
surfaces and drainage ditches from erosion by using
properly designed drainage systems including diversions
and culverts. Use appropriate surfacing
materials and techniques.
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Use proper construction techniques.
Revegetate areas disturbed by construction.
During construction install and maintain silt fences
or straw bale sediment barriers to trap sediment
and slow the movement of water.
Keep Clean Water Clean
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Divert "clean" water around areas
with pollutants. Use berms, grassed waterways,
underground pipelines, or other methods. Consider
where water will be diverted to, and make sure you
do not cause new problems.
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Locate buildings and confinement
areas away from creeks, steep slopes and floodplains.
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Minimize disturbance to wetlands,
riparian areas and meadows.
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Limit impacts of grading, runoff
from roofs and other impermeable surfaces.
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Maintain vegetation and replant
bare areas.
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Control potential runoff from
water troughs.
Managed "Polluted"
Water
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Keep the size of intensively
used areas small to help reduce the volume of polluted
water.
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Manage Manure. Remove manure
regularly- daily is best. Direct runoff away
from the manure storage area.
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Use filter strips to trap sediment
and manure that washes off high-use areas.
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Maintain soil moisture during
the dry season by sprinkling with water to enhance
bacterial decomposition of nutrients. When
soil moisture is maintained in arenas, paddocks,
feeding areas and even pastures, the natural breakdown
of urea will occur. If areas are maintained
as absolutely dry, this discourages the natural
process.
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A waste pond can be designed
to store water for safe distribution at a later
time.

*Natural Resources and Equine Specialists,
respectively, Montana State University Extension, Bozeman,
MT. Material adapted in part from Horse Keeping:
A Guide to Land Management for Clean Water, Council
of Bay Resource Conservation Districts, Petaluma, CA.
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