Six days. Multiple disciplines. Thousands of entries. Everything starts from the ground.
Priefert Manufacturing is a major name in rodeo infrastructure, known for building chutes, panels, and arena systems used across the industry. ABI Attachments has long been part of that ecosystem, supplying ground maintenance and water equipment used in both daily ranch operations and major events like the Priefert Ranch Open.
The Priefert Ranch Open began as a smaller local rodeo effort and has grown into a multi-day, multi-discipline event. It now includes team roping, steer roping, tie-down roping, steer wrestling, and ladies events across a six-day schedule.
The goal from the beginning was simple: give contestants more runs, more chances to compete, and more opportunity in one location. As the event has expanded, so has the need for consistent arena footing management.
Courtney Dyer, Director of Marketing at Priefert, explains the origin and growth of the event:
“we started four years ago when our local rodeo decided to go pro. we held just a little team roping and breakaway helping give contestants two places to enter in town, two chances to make money.”
She continues:
“here we are four years later. i think the plan’s working. we’ve now got six days of events. we’ve got team roping, we’ve got steer roping, we’ve got tie down, we’ve got steer wrestling, and we had ladies day.”
Multi-discipline rodeos place different demands on arena footing. Breakaway roping, steer wrestling, and tie-down roping all require different surface response, moisture balance, and compaction levels.
Instead of maintaining one static surface condition, crews must actively adjust footing between events. That means breaking compaction, redistributing material, and resetting the surface multiple times during a single event schedule.
This is where equipment choice becomes critical. Consistency is not just about grooming the surface. It is about managing depth, compaction layers, and moisture distribution throughout the arena profile.
The ABI TR3 Rodeo Edition is designed for multi-pass arena work where operators need to decompact and finish in a controlled sequence.
Jay Johnson describes the functional advantage:
“the favorite part is you have two implements in one. you can rip and claw bust or you can knock down and rake all at the same time.”
That flexibility matters in a live event environment where time between classes is limited and footing must be reset quickly.
At events like the Priefert Ranch Open, arena footing is continuously managed.
Crews typically work:
Courtney Dyer explains:
“these guys are out here weeks ahead of time prepping the ground. they come early every morning. they stay late every night. so that is a really important part to the quality of our event.”
Water Management And Equipment Integration
Arena footing is only part of the system. Moisture control is also critical.
Culture Buck, horse barn manager at Priefert, explains:
“they actually use abi water wagons to water the horses. we build all the wagons down here, make sure they are the correct setup, and set them in position so they can water the horses.”
Courtney Dyer says:
“priefert really values innovation. that is one of our core company values. you can easily tell that is something that abi values as well.”
She also notes:
“watching the equipment they manufacture grow, change and become even better to really make sure the ground is perfect for whatever discipline is happening is really huge to us.”
Culture Buck adds:
“the quality of their product is head and shoulders above the rest. you can tell by the design that there is a lot of thought that went into it.”
What Actually Matters For Arena Footing Performance
Three key factors:
When these are controlled, performance conditions stay consistent across disciplines.
The Priefert Ranch Open is a multi-day rodeo event held at Priefert Manufacturing facilities. It features multiple disciplines including team roping, steer roping, tie-down roping, steer wrestling, and ladies events, designed to give competitors more runs and more opportunities across the week.
Arena footing directly affects performance, safety, and consistency. Different events place different demands on the ground, so maintaining proper moisture, compaction, and depth ensures horses can move predictably and athletes can perform at a high level throughout the event.
ABI TR3 arena equipment is used for decompaction, leveling, and finishing the surface. ABI water wagons/trailers are also used on-site for water management and horse care during the event.
The arena is typically maintained multiple times per day, including early morning preparation, between event classes, and after competition ends to reset footing conditions for the next day.
Each discipline requires slightly different footing conditions. For example, tie-down roping, steer wrestling, and breakaway roping all impact the ground differently. This requires continuous adjustment of compaction and surface consistency rather than maintaining one fixed setup.
ABI provides arena conditioning equipment and water management solutions that support both performance footing and livestock needs. Their equipment is used throughout preparation and live competition to keep ground conditions consistent across multiple events.
Crews adjust compaction and surface conditions throughout the day using specialized equipment. This includes breaking up compacted areas, redistributing material, and re-leveling the surface so each discipline has the correct footing characteristics.
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