Re: harness and cart

1999-07-13 Thread Marsha Jo Hannah
This message is from: Marsha Jo Hannah [EMAIL PROTECTED]

 Don  Jane Brackett [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

 anyone want to throw in a few words on brakes or no brakes, bicycle
 tires or wooden with rubber, leather or synthetic harness???   There are
 a fair number of hills where I'll be driving,  I thought that brakes
 would be helpful to help hold the cart going down but there do not seem
 to be alot of carts available with brakes, at least at a reasonalble
 cost.  The roads are gravel and there are some great woods roads as
 well.  Would the bicycle tires be more stable and sturdy to bounce over
 rocks and stones??  

Most of those questions have proponents on both sides.  For deeper
research, go to the web site for the Carriage Driving List, and poke
thru their archives.  It's http://www.trot-on.com/cd-l/ , then look
for a button for archives, and enter keywords (e.g. brakes) in the
appropriate slots.

Personally, I like having brakes---but then my driving animal was a
400-lb donkey, who had trouble stopping me and the cart on the steep
hills around here.  (With a heavier animal, like a Fjord, it'd be less
of an issue.)  I had brakes retrofitted to my pipe cart for less than
$100.

Carts with traditional bicycle wheels (wire spokes, with pneumatic
tires) are intended for arena or road use.  IMHO, in the woods, those
wheels are an accident looking for an opportunity to happen.  Tires
blow out, or pick up stickers and go flat.  Anything that puts
side-pressure on the wheels (traversing side-slopes, hitting a rock or
pothole wrong, etc) can pretzel the wheel.  If you're going to use
such wheels on rough drives, wear your hiking boots, so you can walk
home!  I replaced the wheels on the donkey's pipe cart with BMX
wheels---graphite composite, with solid, sturdy spokes---then had them
rubbered by a carriage wheelsmith.  There's also a carriage builder
who sells steel carriage wheels made to retrofit onto bicycle axles or
forks.  Folks on CD-L swear by his wheels!  Except that the give in
bicycle wheels is a major part of the suspension of a pipe cart,
i.e. putting on sturdier wheels makes the cart ride terribly!

In general, traditional carriage type carts will give you a nicer
ride than pipe carts.  Their bigger wheels bridge over bumps
better, and the elliptical springs on most carts can soak up jolts
better than the wimpy little coils under the seat on a pipe cart.  The
advantage of pipe carts lies in their maneuverability---easier to get
thru narrow spots in the woods, and light enough to unhitch and lift
over a cable or gate, which many trails use to keep 4-wheel-drivers
out.  (With my donkey, I didn't have a choice---not enough
horsepower to pull a wooden cart.)

Leather harness is very traditional, but can be labor-intensive to
keep it in good condition.  Also, you get what you pay for---there's a
lot of crappy leather harness out there!  Synthetic harness,
particularly Zilco (trade name) and some of the newer biothanes, looks
good, lasts forever, and cleans up with just a quick hosing.  If I had
it to do over, I'd go synthetic!

Marsha Jo HannahMurphy must have been a horseman--
[EMAIL PROTECTED]   anything that can go wrong, will!
30 mi SSE of San Francisco, Calif.
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Re: harness and cart

1999-07-13 Thread Heyvaert
This message is from: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Laurie,

Thanks for telling me about the 2 strap now offered.  I'm going to check into 
it to see if I can get mine switched or order that new piece.

Susan



Re: harness and cart

1999-07-13 Thread Laurie Pittman
This message is from: Laurie Pittman [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Hi Susan,

 The only thing I don't like about the Zilco is that it only
 has one strap over the back to hold the breeching (I hope I get the names
 right).  I think it would lie nicer on the hip with the two Y ing out
like
 I've seen on most leather harnesses.

  I must have a newer Zilco than yours. Mine has the 2 straps in a Y
going down to the breeching. I love mine too.  I use for everyday use and
show in it as well. Been told I have a nice turnout.

Laurie