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Finally, a ‘Stable’ situation in Kensington

The Brooklyn Paper

Kensington Stables rides again!

After initially signaling that it would be cracking down on horse stables, the city ended up saying “neigh” to reform on Tuesday morning.

Walker Blankinship, owner of the beloved stables on Caton Place near Prospect Park, was pleased to hear that the Board of Health had decided to skip some drastic reforms — which would have required costly renovations — but he knows he’s not out of the woods yet.

After all, a law addressing the care of horses is moving through committee in the City Council.

“I’m optimistic,” Blankinship said. “Of course, I’m looking at that [other legislation].”

The reforms that were scotched on Tuesday called for stable owners to expand stalls, give equestrian vacations, and install sprinkler systems.

“It was a one, two, three punch,” Blankinship said. “I was going to lose a lot of operating income.” He added that he would likely have had to close the stables, which he has owned for the last 17 years, if the reform went through.

But Blankinship still has a problem with what he calls the misguided notion that expanded stalls — called box stalls — are more humane than traditional narrow stalls, called straight stalls.

“Straight stalls are better because the horses sleep in a straight line and are closer to other horses,” Blankinship explained. “That way, they feel more like they’re in a herd, which is what you want when we’re taking groups out [in Prospect Park].

“Four out of five NYPD barns use straight stalls,” added Blankinship, whose barn is the only one of its kind not on the fringes of the borough.

Similarly, the notion of equestrian furloughs also undermines the training for the Kensington Stable horses, which are mounted by people with little or no experience, according to Blankinship.

“I don’t think even Olympic trainers give their horses a vacation,” Blankinship said. “You spend so much time training them — time off is a step backwards.”

Area politicians have sided with the stables, echoing Blankinship’s claim that the reforms should be directed solely at the care of carriage horses, not steeds meant for riding.

“We hope that the [Kensington] stables will be exempted [from any pending Council bill]” said Rachel Goodman, a spokesman for Councilman Brad Lander (D–Park Slope).

Reader Feedback

dorene from dyker heights says:
i must say i was appalled at the condition of the barn at kensington stable when i visited there. granted it was 5 years ago, when i first moved to new york from oregon; where our horses have plenty of room to run and graze - natural horse behavior. the stables are not wide enough for a horse to lie down, which horses need to do for a couple hours a day. and as i recall some of the stalls were held together with baling cord. horses kicked out as i passed behind the stalls - the sign of an unhappy horse. i swore i would never go there again, and wondered if a call to the health department would have any affect. i am curious to have another look to see what the health department finds acceptable living conditions for these horses.
March 17, 2010, 4:25 pm
theruth from park slope says:
Vote Brad Lander out for supporting such cruelty
March 18, 2010, 12:45 am
Walker from Kensington says:
Hilarious! I do not know about horses in Oregon but in New York horses sleep in their tie stalls. Oh and that kick would be horses normal social behavior with each other.
Research conducted at many top universities show clearly that tie stalls are a perfectly sound way to house horses. In fact there is evidence that their behavior is most like horses kept in pasture. In fact horses in tie stalls suffer from less vices then those kept in box stalls. (Vices are the real indiction of stressed horses not kicking)
Tie stalls are also used by 4 of the State Certified NYPD mounted unit barns. Cornell University also includes tie stalls in their guidelines for keeping research horses.
I am sure that the working families that enjoy Kensington Stables will give us and Brad Lander all the support they can!
March 19, 2010, 11:09 am
Jaimie from Brooklyn Heights says:
Time to ride the pony!
March 23, 2010, 2:56 am
Tony from brooklyn says:
Last time I was there the roof needed to be fixed... horses are soaking wet day in and day out
April 6, 2010, 12:46 am
Sarah from Upper West Side says:
I hope they don't close, i ride there and its the only place my parents feel safe sending me to ride. if it closes i'll not be happy, since i'm planning to be in the Hampton Classic next year and i need a barn close in order to train!
March 17, 2011, 9:11 pm

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