shift from timber post-and-board to welded steel pipe, a practical transition that signals the approach of the climate-controlled garage where the estate's mechanical life is stored behind insulated overhead doors and sealed concrete floors that mirror the same poured-in-place quality found along the paddock runs. Inside, the temperature holds steady regardless of season, protecting not just vehicles but the leather tack, the trailer hitches, and the diesel equipment that keeps a working equestrian property operational across four hundred acres of rolling terrain. The space is deeper than most residential garages suggest, dimensioned to accommodate a gooseneck trailer nose-first without negotiating a turnaround, and the ceiling height clears a loaded hay rack with room to spare. Beyond the far bay the gravel apron widens again toward the next stretch of fenced pasture where the land resumes its northward descent and the daily rhythm of turnout and