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My barn aisle is dirt, and I want to resurface it. Whats best – concrete or pavement?

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My barn aisle is dirt, and I want to resurface it. Whats best – concrete or pavement?

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A dirt barn floor surface is obviously the most inexpensive flooring for a barn, but is it going to provide you with long term safety, ease of maintenance and usability? Probably not. While the temptation may be high to justify a dirt floor due to budget, suitability of local soil types, time constraints, etc., more often than not it is resurfaced somewhere down the road, after it has been patched up and made tolerable one too many times. A long term solution would be either concrete or asphalt pavement. Concrete is relatively expensive, but it is permanent and easier to apply than asphalt. It can be poured into forms that will seal off the lower portion of stall walls, eliminating any dangerous gaps that a horse may get a leg through. It should be applied to a depth of no less than four inches. The only thing about concrete that is not permanent is its surface texture in high traffic areas. When applied, a stiff broom should be used to rough up the surface before it sets up completely

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