Double 9 Stables, LLC

Double 9 Stables, LLC Double 9 Stables is a small private boarding, lesson and training barn. Horse training and lessons in Dublin and Marysville, Ohio area.

We are ready for the All American Youth Show.  Thank you to everyone that has helped sponsor these kids with financial, ...
05/05/2026

We are ready for the All American Youth Show. Thank you to everyone that has helped sponsor these kids with financial, emotional and borrowing equipment support!!! We will be coming home with many great memories. Also thank you to the boarders and lesson students who help at the barn or happy to reschedule lessons. It is amazing to have a family at my barn. Kelly Harvey Hannah May Katie Gordon Patty Nichting Carolyn Hayes Erin Morrison Staci Keeton Alisha Herriott Melanie Gill

I do have amazing people at my barn!
04/30/2026

I do have amazing people at my barn!

Now that I finally own my own barn after years of boarding, there’s SO much I didn’t realize as a boarder that I TOTALLY get now, Jamie Sindell writes.

Dear Barn Owners of My Past:

I would sincerely like to apologize for believing it was appropriate to grab hay whenever I wanted. I had to stuff Precious Pony’s face full. Heaven forbid she stands for an hour deprived of hay. What I didn’t realize is that Precious wasn’t wasting away. Hay is freaking expensive. Every. Single. Flake. Is money.

It was obnoxious to snag hay. If I believed you were truly starving Precious, I owed you a conversation. Sorry!

I also extend an apology for not thanking you regularly. I now comprehend what it takes to haul my butt out of my cozy bed on a frigid morning. I feel the pain of wrestling a frozen hose and slinging manure pucks into the wheelbarrow. I would absolutely prefer to skip chores and arrive in my heated vest to ride Precious Pony. You never had the choice to ditch the horses and sip a latte by the fire. Instead, you were out there caring for the herd.

In the summer, scorching fly-filled days when sweat soaked every fiber of your clothes, you ensured the horses stayed comfortable and healthy. I’m genuinely sorry I didn’t express my gratitude enough or bring you a Strawberry Acai on the regular. What I understand now is that one thank you or kind gesture makes a stressful barn day less painful.

I would be remiss if I didn’t say MY BAD for believing everything in the barn should look like an Instagram reel. Days the stalls weren’t done ASAP, water was lowish, or the ring wasn’t dragged with a pretty pattern…. Well, now I recognize crap happens! You have a life beyond Precious Pony, and gasp, maybe even a family to care for too!

Things come up. I’ve had sick kids upchucking into bowls, a spouse stuck at the airport, and busted-frozen pipes cramping my watering style. Crazy days make it extra hard to get everything looking just so. If the horses are regularly getting good care, blips aren’t a crisis. Precious Pony will survive to trot another day!

Turnout! Ugh. I was a brat. When I believed Precious Pony MUST go out to frolic, but the fields were a mucky mess, that wasn’t my call at your barn. In fact, Precious Pony would not only destroy your sopping fields, but she might pull shoes or come in limping.

Currently, my fields are moats. Every time the horses gallop through the mud, I cringe. Turnout all the time isn’t always feasible or a solution.

I am also sorry if I didn’t respect your barn rules. Your barn is your pride and joy (when you can muster up joy after caring for Precious Ponies all day). I know I now savor my crossties clipped, halters hung on a bias, and aisle neatly swept. At the end of a longggg day, these details matter. Forgive me for the days I left my brushes strewn about or my muddy blanket heaped in a mountain on the floor.

Finally, my biggest regret… I wish I lent you a hand more often. On days you were overwhelmed and rushed, I wish I hadn’t zipped out of the barn. An extra set of hands for turnout or holding Precious Pony for the farrier goes a long way. Presently, those extra free minutes mean I can grab my daughter from preschool on time instead of dashing in late, a hay-covered-mom-failure.

Let’s face it. Most people don’t board because it’s a cash cow. They do it because they love horses, even if down the line they become a little jaded. If I disagreed with some of YOUR decisions at YOUR barn, I hope I was respectful and kind. If I wasn’t, shame on me. No matter how strongly I felt about Precious Pony’s care, hushed whispers among disgruntled boarders wasn’t the way to go.

Now, when I take on a boarder at my farm, it is my choice. Though I will tolerate the owner and love Precious Pony like my own, at the end of the day, I own this joint. I want respect. You deserved the same.

Sincerely,

Jamie Sindell (Exhausted Owner of Wish List Farm est. 2022)

📎 Save and share this article at https://www.theplaidhorse.com/2024/04/17/dear-barn-owners-of-my-past/

HELP!!!  Desperate!! Anyone have an electric scooter I can borrow!!  My replacement batteries got lost in the mail and I...
04/30/2026

HELP!!! Desperate!! Anyone have an electric scooter I can borrow!! My replacement batteries got lost in the mail and I have been given the run around by the company for over a week. I will buy one if it is very inexpensive!! Ideally one with a seat but not picky at this point. It is for ALL American Youth Show May 6-10th!!

Horse shenanigans today.  Butterscotch couldn't figure out how to get the bucket off his ear.  I rescued him.Miki finall...
04/29/2026

Horse shenanigans today.

Butterscotch couldn't figure out how to get the bucket off his ear. I rescued him.

Miki finally has a horse she can push around. Romeo wasnt amused.

Winston had a relaxing spa day.... He sure hates when you mess with his face.

Good information for knowing trail rules for 4H.
04/28/2026

Good information for knowing trail rules for 4H.

I am notoriously bad at taking pictures at horse shows!!  😅I only have a few from the last 2 shows.  The kids and adult ...
04/27/2026

I am notoriously bad at taking pictures at horse shows!! 😅

I only have a few from the last 2 shows. The kids and adult riders have been working so hard over the winter to come out strong and have fun at the shows. Everyone continues to improve. We have such a blast at the horseshows. Staci Keeton Kelly Harvey Alisha Herriott Erin Morrison

Following the recent windy weather, our facilities sustained damage, including destroyed shelters, fallen trees, and sca...
03/21/2026

Following the recent windy weather, our facilities sustained damage, including destroyed shelters, fallen trees, and scattered branches. We commenced cleanup operations today, successfully removing all debris and shelters from the fields. However, fence repairs and shelter reconstruction are still pending.

We kicked off the year with a successful show.  Although the wind was fierce, all riders and their horses handled the co...
03/17/2026

We kicked off the year with a successful show. Although the wind was fierce, all riders and their horses handled the conditions with ease. Couple more shows until the All American Youth Show.

03/06/2026

Shared from another post:

The $300 Horse Boarding Problem

If you own a horse, this post might make you uncomfortable but it needs to be said.

As someone who has spent years feeding horses before sunrise and cleaning stalls long after dark, I’ve watched this pattern happen over and over again.

You see the ads everywhere.

“Full care board $300/month.”
Hay 24/7. Grain included. All the amenities.

And you wonder…

How are they doing it so cheap?

Because the truth is horses aren’t cheap to care for.

Even if someone grows their own hay there are still costs:
fuel, equipment, repairs, labor, land, and time.

So when board is that cheap, something usually gets cut.

Maybe it’s feed.
Maybe it’s stall cleaning.
Maybe turnout quietly disappears.
Maybe water buckets only get filled once a day.

It doesn’t happen overnight.

It happens slowly… until one day someone sees your horse and says:

“Wow… he looks thin.”

You go home, look at old photos, and realize they’re right.

So you move your horse to a higher-end barn.

Now board is $700… $800… sometimes $1,000+ a month.

Your horse looks great again — but now you’re working so many hours just to afford it that you barely get to see them.

And that’s when people start leaving the horse world completely.

But there’s a third option that often gets overlooked.

Small private barns.

Not the mega barns.

Not the ultra-cheap barns.

The quiet, middle of the road places where the owner does the work themselves because they can’t afford employees.

The places where your horse isn’t just a stall number.

Where feed is adjusted individually.
Where someone notices if your horse doesn’t finish dinner.
Where care is personal because the barn is small enough to truly manage.

These barns often sit half empty because they’re not flashy and they’re not the cheapest.

But many of them offer the best balance of care, affordability, and peace of mind in the horse world.

Sometimes the best place for your horse isn’t the cheapest or the fanciest.

Sometimes it’s the place where you can walk out to the pasture after a long day, breathe, and simply watch your horse be a horse.

❤️

And if you’re lucky enough to find one of those small barns that truly cares, hold onto it.

Those places are usually run by people who love horses more than profit, who do the work themselves every day, and who treat every horse like part of their own herd.

Small barns are the heart of the horse world.



Now I’m curious…

Horse owners what matters most to you in a boarding barn?

• Price
• Quality of care
• Amenities
• Quiet environment

Today, Thursday March 5th, make sure to grab some Donatos pizza for lunch or dinner and show this flyer (or use code: 53...
03/05/2026

Today, Thursday March 5th, make sure to grab some Donatos pizza for lunch or dinner and show this flyer (or use code: 539 online) and help support our 4H club, Reining in the Fun! 🐴 🍀

🌟 Support Our Youth at the All American Youth Show! 🌟Are you looking to promote your business while also making a meanin...
01/13/2026

🌟 Support Our Youth at the All American Youth Show! 🌟

Are you looking to promote your business while also making a meaningful impact on young exhibitors? By becoming a sponsor, you’ll help our youth attend the All American Youth Show, and in return your business will receive valuable visibility throughout the event.

Every sponsor receives:

*Promotion on our website
*A banner displayed at our stalls during the show
*Recognition in the All American Youth Show program book

If you’d like to choose a specific sponsorship placement in the program, the following options are available:

Full Page – $375
Half Page – $180
Fourth Page – $95
Eighth Page – $60
Class Sponsor – $65
Cooler Sponsor – $150

Your support helps our youth chase big goals and unforgettable experiences.
Please feel free to reach out with any questions or to secure your sponsorship.

https://gofund.me/6c3827edb

Address

Marysville, OH

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 6pm
Tuesday 8am - 6pm
Wednesday 8am - 6pm
Thursday 8am - 6pm
Friday 8am - 6pm
Saturday 8am - 6pm
Sunday 8am - 6pm

Telephone

+16146682644

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