Monday, June 5, 2017

Custom Portable Drying Rack: Another SB Blog Non-Crafty DIY

I dunno about the rest of y'all, but I read these awesome crafty write ups and am like damn ladies. You so fine. I'm just over here being average.
you too can do a craft

Because they're like Step One: get some shit (ok yes tracking so far i can do stores) and then it's like Step Two: use this other shit you have sitting around (hard pass i don't have those things and NOPE not going back to the store) and I sometimes keep nodding along like oh yeah that makes so much sense even I could do that.

Funny joke no. I could not.

I am the best at ordering things on the internet. Like pizza. If that was a craft, I would be the craft queen.

But it is not.
now all i can think about is pizza

So if you're more like me than you normally admit out loud and/or if you super need a drying rack for your shit, you're in the right place. I promise you simple step-by-step instructions and BEST PART you don't even need any supplies. Best. Craft. Ever.

1) Get a beverage. Dehydration is a real thing and so is pacing yourself and not trying too hard. You can choose an appropriate beverage for your lifestyle choices and situation. I went with the biggest iced coffee I could find to get me jazzed up for crafts.
pro tip: if you bring your corgi to the coffee drive thru, the annoying barista will talk to him instead of you
#winning
2) It kind of goes without saying that you need wet stuff to put on your drying rack and that if you're building it outside, the weather should be amenable to drying. On my particular test day it was 90f+ with no humidity and I had just scrubbed all the boots I keep in my tack trunk but didn't want to be THAT BOARDER who clogs up the wash rack with their shit.
pictured: not the rack you will be building
3) Get some twine. Now this is where it gets tricky. I'm going to throw in some safety warnings here:

3a) Do not take twine off of bales still in the hay stack, particularly not ones which might create a booby trap for you BO. That is dangerous and mean. 

3b) If taking twine out of the garbage, make sure to check for various critters before just jamming your hand into a dark hole you can't see. I take no responsibility for said hand getting bitten by snakes or rats or cats or whatever varmints are around your place. 
pictured: not a varmint

My particular twine came from the trash because my barn is fab about not leaving loose twine on bales.

3c) There are different colors of twine. You can use any color.

3d) If your barn does not have twine, you should probably give up now. Otherwise you have to buy string and that's a downer.

4) Find an out of the way place that is reasonably close to your stall where no one has an excuse to tamper with your shit that you are ok with having water drip all over. This step might be harder in a super fancy barn that's like "indoors" when you're inside it. My barn aisle is dirt so I can drip away.
pictured: drunk horse in barn aisle

5) Tie the twine to a fixed point. If you have scissors, you can hard tie it. If you do not have access to blades, do a quick release.

6) Tie the other end of the twine to a different fixed point. You end result should look like a loop of twine hanging between two fixed points.
yeah that's impossible to see. it's a feature.

7) Hang wet shit on drying rack.

8) PARTAY GIRLFRIEND YOU DID IT. Pat yourself on the back and enjoy your beverage.

9) I mentioned this rack is fully custom and portable. If you want to level up, you can braid several pieces of twine together in your colors or hang multiple loops. If you need to move it, you can just take it wherever. If your BO complains, you can even wear it like a necklace and just prance around with your wet boots dripping on you as kind of a "statement piece".

WHOA FASHION ADVICE.

You didn't see that coming.
And there you go. I know there's kind of a lot of steps but I wanted to cover my bases and over-prepare you guys rather than let you get to the middle of the project and realize that you needed more information to proceed. And hey! If you successfully complete this project, take a picture and send it to me!

Or just have a sip of your beverage and don't. 

32 comments:

  1. Unfortunately my current barn doesn't have anywhere I could do something like that. Otherwise I would make one.

    Baling twine is super useful. So is ribbon. Made full cheek keepers out of ribbon a couple days ago.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Girl, you are my kind of classy.

      Delete
    2. Boy.

      What else are you supposed to do when your tack store only sells brown full cheek keepers and your bridle is black?

      Delete
    3. Well yeah it's ribbon or dye project and we can rule that second one out right away.

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    4. Clearly I should have just gone and bought another brown bridle since my only reason for putting it on the black bridle was that I didn't want to take apart my jump bridle.

      Delete
    5. Good point. Is your saddle black? Matching matters.

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    6. This particular day I made the very poor choice to use a black bridle with a brown saddle. My dressage bridle is more convenient for switching bits around and I didn't have a clean dressage pad.

      Delete
  2. Hah, I love it! I'm so lazy, I just use saddle racks in the tack room.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It's a small tack room and I'm already using three. :D

      Delete
  3. So crafty! We have a *very fancy* permanent drying rack that is a piece of rope tied between two trees. Tres chic.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. The rustic vibe is strong with this one.

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    2. just watch it if you have a few too many wine coolers or something and you walk into that said rope (No me do that? Never?>?? #totallyhavedonethis) HA but great ideas guys...for sure!

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  4. Good thing that Rustic is sooooo in right now !

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh yeah. I'm basically the trendiest person you know.

      Delete
  5. That's may kind of DIY! Holla!

    ReplyDelete
  6. This is on my par with my level of craftiness.

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  7. fucking genius. also. looks suspiciously similar to the "rack" upon which my hooks are hung inside my trailer.... curious indeed.

    ReplyDelete
  8. Also you're being environmentally friendly by repurposing the twine which is not recyclable. Win win win in my book

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. YOU GET TO WIN AND YOU GET TO WIN EVERYBODY GETS TO WIN

      Delete
  9. Replies
    1. And that means you are making the rack but are not sending me a photo? I'm so confused.

      Delete
  10. I might actually be able to do that!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I mean. Let's not get ahead of ourselves.

      But I have no particular skill with knots and I did it.

      Delete

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