Creekside Stable

Creekside Stable *Horse boarding facilities with 3 barns offering full stall care, field board and self care options. Dry lots for mini horse boarding.

We offer 40 acres of serene, quite country setting with an11 stall barn, daily stall cleaning and Purina feed product for custom feed programs, several separate mare and gelding daily turnout pastures including pastures with automatic drinking water post for same temperature water year-round, high usage dry lots in the winter, turnout sheds in all pastures, 24/7 hay all winter. Newly installed san

d footing in a small Dressage arena and round pen with lighting. Separate schooling paddock, hot/cold water wash stall, electric in each stall for fans in summer and heated water buckets in winter. Heated, climate-controlled tack room (no more moldy tack), with additional storage available if needed. Pony's / Minis, Geldings and Mares are separated. Many trails available to explore on and off the property. Horseshoe trial is not far from the farm along with the State game lands that are a joined around part of the property. You can ride small trails on the farm or catch the trail into game lands or ride nearby farmland. Trainers, farriers and your vet are welcome. We do have a resident English/Western riding instructor available.
* Full stall horse care is $460.00
* Full Field board hay and grain is $335.
* Self-care with a stall $225
* Mini horse with grain if needed, hay always $200.00

Friendly reminder our vaccine clinic is being held with Dr Frederickson from Still Meadows Equine and  takes place tomor...
09/14/2025

Friendly reminder our vaccine clinic is being held with Dr Frederickson from Still Meadows Equine and takes place tomorrow starting at 9:30. You do not need to be present as we are waiving the hold fees as a courtesy from Creeksides management. Any last minute questions or requests must be expressed by 8 pm tonight.

I wouldn't be the person I am today without them. We all find a safe place in their presence.
09/14/2025

I wouldn't be the person I am today without them. We all find a safe place in their presence.

Something to keep in mind when you are out trail riding this fall.
09/13/2025

Something to keep in mind when you are out trail riding this fall.

09/08/2025

Getting close to that time of year - State Game Land Regulations:
(c) Additional prohibitions. In addition to the prohibitions contained in the act pertaining to State game lands and § 135.2, except with the written permission of the Director, it is unlawful to:
(4) Ride a nonmotorized vehicle, conveyance or animal, except on roads normally open to public travel, or designated routes as posted, or while lawfully engaged in hunting, trapping or fishing.
(5) Ride a nonmotorized vehicle, conveyance or animal from the last Saturday in September until the third Saturday in January, and before 1 p.m. from the second Saturday in April through the last Saturday in May inclusive, except on Sundays or while lawfully engaged in hunting, trapping or fishing.
(6) Ride a nonmotorized vehicle, conveyance or animal on roads open to foot travel only.
(21) Be present on State game lands from November 15 through December 15 inclusive when not engaged in lawful hunting or trapping and fail to wear a minimum of 250 square inches of daylight fluorescent orange-colored material on the head, chest and back combined or, in lieu thereof, a hat of the same colored material. The material shall be worn so it is visible in a 360° arc. Persons using shooting ranges are exempted from this requirement.

09/07/2025
09/05/2025
09/05/2025

In case you missed it, we now have Community Friend Raw Milk!! Packaged by Farmstead Creamery, this milk comes from a local Lancaster County farm that is chemical-free, GMO-fee, uses organic farming practices, and maintains a primarily grass-fed diet! Find gallons and 1/2 gallons in our dairy section!

🤣👍🏼
09/05/2025

🤣👍🏼

08/21/2025

Yellow Jackets (ground wasps)
Yellow Jackets
Known for their bright black and yellow stripes, yellow jackets love to terrorize backyards and summer picnics. With a yellow and black head and a striped abdomen, yellow jackets resemble bees in color, size and sting, but these buggers are more vibrant in color, with thinner, more defined waists and hairless hind legs.
Are Yellow Jackets Bees or Wasps?
Yellow jackets are a social wasp species. They nest in the ground or in cavernous areas like eaves and attics. They feed on sweets and proteins and are known to invade outdoor human activities.

Do Yellow Jackets Build Nests in the Ground?
Many species of yellow jackets construct nests both above and below ground. Sometimes they will even use abandoned rodent burrows for nests — expanding the cavity as the colony develops.
For signs of an underground yellow jacket nest, look for small stones and dirt piling up around the opening of a burrow. They will also use materials on the ground with available openings, such as railroad ties or concrete blocks.

Why Do Yellow Jackets Swarm?
Yellow jacket swarms can occur when a person unwittingly steps on an underground nest. Ground vibrations like mowing a lawn can also provoke a dangerous swarm attack.

How to Get Rid of Yellow Jackets
Though yellow jackets can be an important predator of pest insects, if you want to get rid of a yellow jacket nest, you can spray their nests with soap and water or pour soapy water into an underground nest to kill the whole colony. You can also get a non-toxic wasp trap or build your own trap out of an inverted soda bottle filled with jam.
Powdered insecticide can also neutralize nests, and aerial nests can be destroyed by placing a cloth bag over the nest at night and submerging it in water.
Scout for nests during the day when you can see workers entering and exiting, but treat nests only at night when yellow jackets are drowsy and don’t see very well.
If a nest is underground, you can seal off the entry and exit points and fill the nest with pyrethrum gas. But when it comes to serious nests, removal should be left to the professionals.

Where Do Yellow Jackets Live?
Yellow jackets can be found any place where humans live. They often build their nests underground or in hollow logs, tree stumps, attics, between walls, under eaves and inside recycling bins where sugars are common.
Constructing their nests from wood fiber chewed into a fine, paper-like pulp, yellow jacket nests can be hard to spot, but their entrances are typically the size of a nickel. More common in hot and arid climates, yellow jackets tend to forage for food no more than 1,000 feet from their nests — the size of three football fields.
Yellow jacket nests flourish in the spring and summer before dying off in the winter.
German yellow jackets, western yellow jackets and eastern yellow jackets are the dominant species in the U.S. Bold and aggressive, yellow jackets will pursue anyone or anything they perceive as a threat. Yellow jackets can also become more aggressive in the fall, as the colony starts to die out.
After hiding out during the winter in hollow logs, stumps or tree bark, fertilized queens emerge in spring to select a nesting site and build a paper-like nest to lay her eggs. Once some workers are born, they begin caring for other larvae by feeding them chewed meat or fruit, expanding the nest, foraging for food, caring for the queen and providing colony defense.
Until her death in the fall, the founding queen remains inside the nest, laying eggs and expanding her brood of up to 10,000 workers and 15,000 nesting cells.
Adult yellow jackets feed off of carbs and sugars like fruits, flower nectar and tree sap. Larvae benefit from proteins like insects, meats and fish. Since many of the meat sources yellow jackets feed on are pest species, yellow jackets are considered beneficial to agriculture. Though in late summer, foraging workers pursue meats, ripe fruits, human garbage, sodas and picnics to foster a new generation of queens.

Why Do Yellow Jackets Sting?
As with most stinging insects, yellow jackets will attack if their nest is disturbed or they feel threatened. The basic instinct to protect their colonies and themselves is the primary motivator for why a yellow jacket will sting and attack. Unlike bees, they don’t lose their stinger during the act, allowing them to sting numerous times once they decide to attack.
All female yellow jackets can sting. And they tend to be more aggressive than other stinging insects. Yellow jackets can even bite before they sting — grabbing hold of the skin just to get a better grip with their stinger.
To prevent a stinging incident, do not wear bright colors or sweet perfumes unless you want a yellow jacket to mistake you for a flower. And don’t swat at yellow jackets because they will release a pheromone that sends other wasps into attack mode.

Are Yellow Jackets Dangerous?
Yellow jackets are a danger to humans because they can sting repeatedly and trigger dangerous allergic reactions. Stinging insects send over 500,000 people to the emergency room each year, and yellow jackets can be deadly to people who are allergic

How Big Are Yellow Jacket Nests?
Started by a single queen, new nests can reach the size of a basketball by summer’s end — with over 1,000 to 3,000 workers. In some parts of the coastal United States, winters are mild enough for nests to last multiple seasons, often with several egg-laying queens. These nests can reach an excess of 100,000 adult wasps.

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08/08/2025

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Conserving Natural Resources for Our Future The Berks County Conservation District has a vision for a future where the public is educated and actively involved, ... Read more

Address

5180 Diehl Road
Mohnton, PA
19540

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 9pm
Tuesday 8am - 9pm
Wednesday 8am - 9pm
Thursday 8am - 9pm
Friday 8am - 9pm
Saturday 8am - 9pm
Sunday 8am - 9pm

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