The Making of a Dressage Ring
I have always wanted a dressage or riding ring that would be big enough to actually ride in and have footing that would stand up to rain, while being flat but not get flooded. I know it seems like I am asking a lot, and I guess I was asking for too much. Years ago, I had an area that was relatively flat, squarish in geometry and the footing was tilled up hay field and covered with bark chips. It never stood up to rain and was very deep in some areas so the horse would panic a bit. So I decided that if I was going all out there I may as well go the whole hog, and try and fix a riding area. You see the area had all grown back over with grass so I've been riding on uneven cut grass.
Well as always it starts with a vision or dream in my head that I plan to get to reality. However, as usual reality and the dream don't talk to each other and that's when I end up with "other"........I can see the ring clearly, had it all prepaved in my mind... lovely sand ring with grass around the outside, neat white little dressage fence with letter markers, and in I would prance on my noble steed at A... the rest would be history as they say....
So here was the plan to get to the vision:
- get the grass tilled up
- get bulldozer in to push off the grass and level the ground
- get a dump truck to come in and tail-spread lovely sand onto the newly exposed base. Sand to be about 2 inches deep all over
The reality went like this:
- grass got tilled up but the wrong section was done so had to be redone in the correct area ( my mistake as I wasn't there to direct initiall) Note: here that the "ring" is 90 angle to the fence line

- bulldozer took off grass Note:the bulldozer is parallel to the fence line
- ground kind of levelled except for what looked like a couple of humps. However, after remeasuring we figured we could get the "humps and hollows" to be outside the actual riding area

 |
Noble steed not entering at A but walking
back after using the ring for a good roll in the sand |
- got a dump truck in-- after one load realized the driver did not understand how or where I wanted the sand to go. Got a big pile at each end ( one of which is several feet away from where the ring was to start) and a heavy track of sand in between the two piles....hmmm ..So up I go to the gravel place and cancel the other loads for now( I needed 3 by a calculator I found on the internet for dressage ring footing)- or 57.6 yds to be precise.
- had to put up temporary fence ( ie read caution tape) to keep the horses from using it as a race track and sand bath
- I now have 20 yds of the sand and not even close to having 1/4 of the ring covered...and its more like 8-9 inches deep in most of it..
- we just had a DELUGE of rain-- I now have a small lake in one section-- hmm and I thought that was the nice and level section.
So new plan:
- will have to either hand rake or see if I can cajole Francis into magically managing to spread the sand that is there to a uniform 2 inches with the tractor ( don't think it will be easy-- the cajoling is easy; the feat another thing all together)
- will have to wait at least two weeks and spend more money to get a different type of truck that can sling the sand where it needs to go
- may have to put tile drainage in in the wet spot
Benefits of the new reality:
- I now know that the ground is in fact not level and needs draining
- I thought the low spot was in the corner nearest the barn when in fact it is along the side nearest the fence- HUH who knew?
- that it is really only one section that is wet~!
- and after all, it really was a HUGE downpour-- last night and then again all morning. To give yo a visual, my pool was low and really needed to be topped up about 4 inches... this morning it is up more than that I have had to drain it...so yes a really large amount of rain
- so maybe if I just get normal rainfalls, the ring won't get flooded and will not need to have drainage put it??? (the optimist in me talking)