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Types of Travelers

Types of Travelers

Ella Davidoff |

In the world of trail riding, rodeos, and horse camping, we’ve noticed there are really only two types of people.

The first type is the traveler who hasn't discovered Camp Corrals yet.

They’re the ones we see fighting with the terrain. We recently heard from a mom at a rodeo who was in this exact spot. She used those standard step-in stakes, but when one horse got "buddy sour," the whole thing went south fast.

"I hate those stakes, I set those up at my daughter’s last little rodeo We went to, she got one of her horses out of our little makeshift corral, the other one slightly buddy sour went right through it, wrapped it up around his legs ripped all of the sticks out, when sprinting across the pasture, stakes and fence strips in tow, scared the hell out of the horses at the trailer, my mare not to be left behind, jerked her lead rope out of my kid’s hand, took off after her best friend, spooked a Horse on the way across the field,  who jerked himself off of his trailer and decided to jump onto the parade, my daughter chasing after three horses, her friend trying to help chasing after her… All I needed was a small dog in my circus.🤷🏼♀️

Long story short I’m buying these panels this year😂"

Then, there’s the second type of traveler who has already made the switch.

They don't worry about whether the ground is too hard to pound a stake into or whether the wind will sag their tape. One of our long-time customers put it perfectly:

"I camp ALOT with my horses. Sometimes the ground is so hard you can't get the stakes in... I have been using these panels for about 5 years now, they are by far the best, safest way to contain your horse."

The difference between these two travelers isn't luck—it's stability.

One is managing a "circus" and hoping the stakes hold; the other is relaxing by the trailer because they know their horses see, respect, and are safely contained by a solid visual barrier.

Which traveler do you want to be this season?

Whether you're at a weekend rodeo or a week-long backcountry camp, give yourself the peace of mind that comes with a system built for the real world.

 

See For Yourself: Camp Corrals vs Tape Fencing