Eco-friendly Carbonized Bamboo Board for Horse Stalls Horse Stable Ranching was introduced in the southern part of the peninsula that
constituted Marin County, California, when it was subdivided as
land grants, including that given to William Richardson in 1838.
Richardson called the 19,571 acre holding El Rancho Del Saucelito.
The Bear Flag Revolt of 1846 and the subsequent American
acquisition of California, however, eventually ruined Richardson in
the frenzy of development and investment speculation that followed,
so that following his death in 1856, his attorney Samuel Reading
Throckmorton acquired the rancho. Throckmorton sold the southern
portion of his property to the United States government as a
military reservation and kept the bulk of the former rancho
restricted as a hunting preserve. Following his death in 1883, the
Tamalpais Land and Dairy Company acquired 3,800 acres of
Throckmorton‘s land and developed Mill Valley, which became a
colony of the middle and upper class. Dairy ranching had begun insignificantly in Marin County during the
mission and early rancho period, when cattle raising was intended
for the hide and tallow industry. The Gold Rush of 1849, however,
created an immediate market for dairy products in the boomtown San
Francisco. Marin County, with its cool moist climate, sufficient
fresh water, and long growing season, came to be acknowledged in
that period as the premier dairy region for California. Ranches
developed along Point Reyes and in Olema Valley in the 1850s and
1860s are credited with being instrumental in the development of
California‘s dairy industry. Although the more expansive ranches of
Point Reyes Peninsula are recognized as models for dairying history
in the San Francisco Bay Area, the smaller farms in the southern
Marin peninsula situated closer to San Francisco also were early
producers who predominantly shipped fresh milk to the city. During
the 1880s, small dairy ranches appeared across the Marin landscape. What most distinguishes the southern Marin County dairies is the
history of Portuguese immigrants that owned the majority of these
small ranch properties from the nineteenth century into the 1950s.
Portuguese immigration to the United States extended from the
mid-1800s into the late 1920s and concentrated in two areas
historically: New England and California. In California large
numbers of Portuguese immigrants historically settled on farms,
which, in consideration of the importance of agriculture in
California‘s past, suggests the significance of this relatively
inconspicuous community. Whereas the Portuguese were among several
groups that operated dairies as tenants throughout California,
including the rest of Marin County, in southern Marin they were a
clear majority presence and employed specific financial strategies
and made use of family and ethnic connections to acquire and retain
ranch property for generations. The relatively small scale of the
ranches made them affordable to those with limited capital, and the
Azorean immigrant was particularly adept at subsisting on terrain
that was relatively more rugged and less fertile than the other
dairying areas of Marin County. The product details: Name | Eco-friendly Carbonized Bamboo Board for Horse Stalls Horse Stable | Front Type | Swing, Sliding, Fancy, European, or customized | Size | Length: 8ft, 10ft, 12ft, 14ft (2.5m - 4.0m) Height: 1.5m, 2.0m, 2.2m. Or, any other sizes you like | Material | Frame tube 50*50mm RHS, and 102/114mm Round Post in middle door heavery duty U channel to take T&G boards Top grill tube in OD25mm round tube | Finish | Powder Coated Finish or Hot Dip Galvanized Finish | Infill wood | in bamboo wood, 20mm, 25mm, 28mm, 32mm, 38mm. very strong, durable click, no cracking by water | Fittings | (a.) brass lock latch (b.) heavy duty stainless steel hinge, no rusting warranty. (c.) golden top ball or flat cap by your choice. (d.) swivel feeder system (optional) (e.) swing feeder window (optional) | Advantage | (1.) Full welds will make sure the stalls are strong and durable. (2.) No sharp edges promise the people and horse safe. (3.) Yoke door allows horses place his head outside. (4.) Powder Coated Finish: We can PC any color you like. Say, Black
Color, Blue Color, Hunter Green color, etc. (5.) Assembly easily: use heavy duty bolts or different way
connector to connect together. (6.) More style stable are available, sliding front, and swing
door, open door etc... |
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