1. Field of Invention
This invention relates to tack boxes, which are used for the storage and safeguarding of saddles, bridles, grooming implements and other related gear by persons engaged in equestrian activities.
2. Background—Discussion of Prior Art
Currently, commercially available tack boxes, trunks, chests or lockers primarily consist of rectangular, box-like structures each with a single hinged lid or door. These structures are meant to be one-piece and are not capable of being collapsed or broken down into smaller segments, which would facilitate transporting them or storing them when not in use. With rare exception, most tack boxes that are currently marketed, as evidenced by a review of multiple equestrian-related periodicals and catalogs, do not contain saddle racks and, in any event, are not made large enough to comfortably hold even a single standard-sized Western-style saddle, which is larger than its English-style counterpart.
Within the United States, the majority of participants in recreational equestrian activities are women, reportedly as high as 80% of all participants and numbering in the millions. Additionally, a good percentage of these participants own or, in other cases, lease horses and board said horses at public or private stables owned by third parties. It is common, in such circumstances, for the boarder to keep what tack she owns at the stable facility, conveniently near her horse(s). The quality and extent of amenities available for the protection and security of such boarder-owned tack likely varies widely from facility to facility, and many boarders choose to augment that protection by use of lockable tack boxes. In such circumstances, tack boxes keep an owner's gear, including her saddle, protected from airborne dirt and dust, which are always kicked up in and around stable areas; from damage by rodents; and from unauthorized borrowing or theft.
Most commercially available tack boxes fall short in one way or another in terms of the typical boarder's needs or financial capacity. Most are not large enough to hold a full complement of gear and a Western-style saddle, or they don't have a saddle rack to properly support the saddle or, in the rare case where a saddle rack is included, the tack boxes are overbuilt, expensive and targeted toward the equestrian professional. As a result, many boarders make do with homemade wooden fixtures. And because few horse people, to the extent this group reflects the characteristics of the general population, are experienced in, or inclined to do woodworking, many boarders must rely on relatives or friends to help them design and build functional tack boxes.
Another need that warrants consideration in this area is portability. Intuitively, there will be many occasions when a horse boarder will want to relocate her horse(s) and gear from one stable to another. She may become unhappy with a change in circumstances at her existing stable location, or she may find a more attractive place to board, or she herself may relocate and want to find a new stable for her horse(s) nearer her new home. In any event, tack boxes currently on the market that are large enough to comfortably accommodate and protect both saddle and gear will be too heavy and bulky for one person to move, and at least a small truck or trailer would be needed to do the job.
The invention is an improved tack box. The improved tack box is a box-like container for storing objects used by a person engaged in equestrian activities, comprising multiple detachable walls and at least one saddle rack mounted on one of the walls, wherein said container may be broken down into multiple pieces for ease of transporting said container or to facilitate storage of said container when not being used by said persons for its primary purpose of storing objects used in equestrian activities. The improved tack box incorporates in one package several features that the market would likely find highly useful, at least two of which are not available in the construction of any currently marketed tack box. Those two features are (1) the ability to knock down this relatively large tack box into several, easy-to-transport segments, and (2) greater access to the internal storage area, with a front panel that opens completely via two doors and a flip-up top panel, which when used together enable a user to step part way into the tack box to gain leverage in the handling of heavy and awkward gear, such as a Western-style saddle. These features are provided in a structure that can be completely closed up, secured and locked, and which is large enough to hold a typical horse boarder's full complement of gear, including one or even two saddles, each adequately supported by a detachable saddle rack. Moreover, the invention can be constructed in a straightforward, economical manner from readily available materials, in order to provide a reasonably priced and highly functional product to a significant yet, apparently, neglected target market.
Operation:
In operation, one uses the tack box to store and protect saddle(s), bridle(s), various grooming implements and other tack associated with equestrian activities (FIG. 18). Hooks or other holding devices may be mounted on the inner walls in order to provide for storage the various grooming implements. The tack box can be completely closed up (
Two doors at the front of the box and an upward hinging lid can be opened simultaneously to allow maximum access to the interior of the box, which facilitates storage and retrieval of heavy and awkward objects, like a Western-style saddle (FIG. 14). Also, one or both of the doors or the hinged lid can be opened separately (
Finally, the tack box can be broken down, without any need for any tools, into five manageable pieces (FIG. 1), plus the removable saddle rack. Each of the two doors fold flush against the outer side of the side wall to which it is attached (FIG. 1). The five major pieces can be stacked on top or against each other for convenient and compact storage when not in use. And the pieces can be transported individually or together in most standard-sized sport utility vehicles and cars.
Assembly of the box requires no tools, is very simple and straightforward and takes only a few minutes:
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 60/367,541, filed Mar. 26, 2002.
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
234450 | Yaxley | Nov 1880 | A |
2809755 | Martorello | Oct 1957 | A |
3727785 | Lutz | Apr 1973 | A |
3760970 | Lutz | Sep 1973 | A |
3780971 | De Fillips | Dec 1973 | A |
3811574 | O'Brien | May 1974 | A |
4048959 | Steele | Sep 1977 | A |
4432459 | Coldren | Feb 1984 | A |
4542832 | Minick et al. | Sep 1985 | A |
4735331 | Keenan et al. | Apr 1988 | A |
4958594 | Swagerty | Sep 1990 | A |
5139155 | Laxson | Aug 1992 | A |
5191989 | Butler | Mar 1993 | A |
5259521 | Shaffer et al. | Nov 1993 | A |
D343031 | McElhaney | Jan 1994 | S |
5338049 | Goring | Aug 1994 | A |
5362078 | Paton | Nov 1994 | A |
D377548 | O'Shea | Jan 1997 | S |
5615783 | Warnken | Apr 1997 | A |
5791668 | Lenardson | Aug 1998 | A |
6533122 | Plunkett | Mar 2003 | B1 |
20010047970 | McBride | Dec 2001 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20030183600 A1 | Oct 2003 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
60367541 | Mar 2002 | US |