Kyla Jansen's farm didn't become
environmentally friendly by design. But when you live in a rural area
where services are limited, adaptability is your best asset.
“There's no hydro—basically going
green was my only option,” laughed Jansen, the owner of Honora Bay Riding Stables on Manitoulin Island. “It wasn't initially
necessarily because that's what I planned. It is now a fairly large
focus because, number one, it's much healthier and if I can do stuff
like that, great. But it wasn't my initial focus; my initial focus
was to find a place for my horses to live.”
When the Islander acquired her property
in 2006, it was with the intention of providing riding lessons and
trail rides. In under a decade, she's transformed the former gravel
pit into an equestrian's playground, with riding trails, a barn,
boarding stalls, an indoor riding arena, and acres of pasture where
she provides trail rides and riding lessons, and hosts clinics in
everything from horsemanship to vaulting.
And she does it all with the health of
her horses and the environment in mind.
Last year, Jansen's farm was recognized
by the Ontario Equestrian Federation as one of the most eco-friendly
in Canada, earning the 2011 Just Add Horses Environmental Award,
which is presented annually to the individual or group “who have
been deemed most dedicated by their equine peers to have helped raise
the environmental bar.”
Her quest to reduce her environmental
hoofprint began about five years ago when she installed a frost-free
nose pump for her horses, a system commonly used with cattle, but
still unique in its use with horses.
The system, which comprises an
insulated culvert drilled 20 feet into the ground, allows the horses
to pump out their own water by pumping a paddle with their noses.
Water travels up the pipe and drains back down when the horse is
finished drinking.
“I never have to worry about water
freezing, I don't have to worry about me missing pumping water for
them and they are not drinking from a pond, which could be
contaminated,” Jansen said. “So they are self-sufficient and I
know my horses are getting water.”
The pump was so successful, she
installed a second one last summer.
Tired of using a smelly, loud generator
to access hydro at her property, Jansen then installed a solar array
that supplies her with about 2,000 watts at full power—equivalent
to that used by an average household—which powers the arena lights,
heaters in the winter, electric fences and any machinery she needs.
“Your initial cost is high, but my
hydro bill will never go up,” she said. “It probably works out to
paying less than $100 a year for the next 20 years.”
This year Jansen upgraded her generator
to a propane model to have on hand for backup, but the solar array
has meant this last year was the first she was self-sufficient
year-round.
Manure, the farm's biggest source of
waste, is handled in two ways. In the summertime, it goes directly
back onto the pastures via a ground-driven manure spreader. Jansen
and her students muck out the stalls into the spreader and drive
directly onto the fields to disseminate it.
This past winter, Jansen had a
cement-based aerated manure pit built on the property to accommodate
the waste. Manure is collected from the horses' stalls and dumped
into the pit where it accumulates until the spring.
“Air comes up from underneath, which
helps break it down, and air's coming in from on top, which helps
break it down,” Jansen said. “It doesn't take as long to break
down to go into the environment and can be used within a year as top
soil.”
A local contractor picks up the waste
in the spring and fall and distributes it to clients who use it for
compost. In exchange, Jansen is provided with any gravel, sand or
other aggregate she needs on the farm.
“It's nice because it's local
businesses supporting each other,” she said.
Her green sense is evident in other
areas of the farm. Her barn was built with skylights to let in lots
of natural light, which is not only healthy for the horses, but also
reduces the need for lighting, and the trained farrier recycles her
used horseshoes into barn hooks for the horses' tack.
This year she'll install a pump house,
powered by her solar array, to provide running water, but otherwise
her green business is just where she wants it.
“We have no waste, we have hydro from
the sun, we have a water system that the horses use themselves,”
she said. “There really isn't anything else that I need. I've got
everything—finally.”
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