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Setting Up a Highline For Safety and Ease of Use “Trust in God, but tie up your horse” |
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Your animals are important! If they wander away you'll have a heavy load on your shoulders! Be sure to familiarize your stock with any containment method you plan to use before you ride into the backcountry.
Highline: A highline is one of the easiest, lightweight ways to keep your stock in camp. It is easier to put up with a Tree Saver Strap. The highline prevents stock from trampling roots and chewing bark. Scroll over the picture above for details.
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What is a Highline?
A highline is just a rope stretched tightly between two trees. You then
tie your stock to the rope. Of course there's a little bit more to it
but, essentially, this is all there is to it.
Instead of wrapping the rope around the trees, use Tree Saver Straps to prevent the trees from being girdled and dying. Tree Savers are required in many wilderness areas.
Setting up a Highline by the Numbers
NOTE - Keep stock from chewing, and damaging, trees by tying them at least 8 feet from any tree.
How Much Lead Rope
When in camp and you can keep an eye on them, give your stock just enough
lead rope to get their heads to the ground. At night, or when you have
to leave them unattended, shorten the leads
enough to prevent them from being able to get a leg over the rope. If
you are feeding grain or hay cubes from a feedbag, you can leave your
stock tied to the horse highline and still fit the feedbag over their
heads.
Highlines are a simple, lightweight solution for containing your stock animals (horses and mules) in the backcountry, or horse camp, and leave very little evidence that you have been there when set up correctly,
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