Before you toss out these everyday items, check out the many ways you can re-use them.
By Kaylon Sullins Robinson
- Eliminate travel mess. Put your filled hay net into an empty feed sack for transport, keeping hay leaves off your tack-area floor.
- Keep hay out of your clothes. Rather than stuff hay directly into a net, which is messy, first put it into a used feed sack. Place the hay net over the open sack. Turn the whole thing over, pull out the sack, and save for later.
- Make a feed-bucket cover. To prevent grain spills when traveling or to keep critters out of pre-measured rations, cut a square from a feed sack, large enough to cover your feed bucket a few inches down all around the top. Secure with leftover baling twine or a bungee cord.
- Make a water-bucket cover. To keep water from splashing you when hauling it at shows or elsewhere, or to keep the water clean, create a homemade bucket cover (see No. 3, above) with slits for the handle.
- Protect surfaces. To keep hoof-dressing products off the floor or ground, cut medium-sized squares from a used feed sack and place one under each of your horse’s hooves before oiling or blacking.
- Sort and store stable blankets. Store each of your blankets in a feed sack secured with masking tape. Label with the horse’s name, blanket type, and/or size.
- Set up an instant trash can. Simply open bag, insert trash.
- Cover your dog’s mattress. Insert it in a feed sack to keep it clean and fresh.
- Make a saddle cover. Cut a feed sack open and place over your saddle.
- Cover equipment seats. Cut as needed and use baling twine to cover mower, golf cart, and tractor seats.
- Tote dirty boots. Cut a used sack 6 to 12 inches from the sealed bottom and use as a caddy for dirty boots.
- Make recycling bins. Use one sack to collect baling twine, another for scrap metals, one for beverage cans to be recycled, etc
- Waterproof a bandaged hoof. Cut a circle from a used sack, then cut slits as needed to shape it around the hoof. Use duct tape to attach.
- Winterize a drafty stall or tack room. Cover cracks and holes with used sacks, secured with a staple gun.
- Make “compost starters.” Stuff used feed sacks with manure, and share with gardener friends.
- Create a training tool. Use a feed sack to desensitize your horse to sights and sounds, either by using as-is or making a noise-shaker by placing cans inside the sack.
- Make a trail-practice obstacle. Put the sack on the end of a rope and drag it; fill halfway with dirt to make a weighted drag.
- Cover a muddy spot. Keep your boots dry by using an old feed sack or two as a bridge over mud.
- Use to save donation items. If you donate used items to rescues or 4-H groups, collect in a feed sack for ease of transport.
- Improvise a horse toy. Stuff feed sacks in to a ball and secure with duct tape.

- Store tire chains. Keep chains oiled, separated, and protected in used feed sacks.
- Line shelves. Cut a sack open and then trim to the dimensions needed.
- Protect floors when painting or staining. To double the surface area covered beneath your painting/staining project, cut a feed sack open to lie flat.
- Save periodicals to be recycled. Sort newspapers, magazines, and catalogs into respective labeled feed sacks.
- Make a quick table cover. Cut a sack open and use to protect a table from art projects, cooking messes, etc.
- Protect kids’ clothing. Use a feed sack to cut a mini smock for messy play or chores.
- Transport potted plants. Cut off 6 to 12 inches from the sealed bottom and use to carry plants in your vehicle. Or, simply lay a flattened sack on the floor before loading plants
- Share heavy produce. An empty feed sack is perfect for sharing extra sweet corn, potatoes, pumpkins, or other garden goodies.
- Thwart car grime. Keep a spare sack folded in your vehicle for the unexpected, such as a dirty flat tire, or a dog that couldn’t resist a puddle.
- Make a quick sign. Cut a sack open, then use permanent marker to write on the side that has no pre-printing.
- Create a pattern. Cut a sack open and use to make a sewing pattern, stencil, etc
- Make a doormat. Set out an empty feed sack as a place for people to wipe their
feet.
- Protect vehicle floors. Lay feed sacks down as makeshift floor mats for your car or truck.
- Make a doormat. Set out an empty feed sack as a place for people to wipe their feet.
- Make a heavy-duty tote. Use an empty feed sack to bring home a heavy load of something; it’s made to hold 40 to 50 pounds.
- Get crafty. Cut out and then sew holiday stockings for your favorite equines.
- Make a mini-garden. Fill a feed sack with dirt and grow potatoes.
- Protect tender plants. Slide open feed sacks over annuals and perennials to protect them from frost and snow. Cut off the top of each bag to adjust for height.
- Reduce weeds. Put several sacks down in your garden as weed barriers. Just scatter a few inches of mulch on top to hold them down.
- Collect planting dirt. When digging a hole, put the dirt in or on a feed sack for easy filling later.
- Use for pet-area liners. Split open and use feed sacks underneath puppy pads, bird cages, etc., for more protection.
- Wrap gifts. Use as a cheap but creative wrapping paper.
- Make packing material. Crumple up sacks and use as packing material when mailing packages.
- Make a ground protector. Cut a sack open as a ground cover, to keep your clothes clean while you work beneath a truck or trailer. Place an opened-up sack or two under your beach/picnic blankets to keep the fabrics clean.
- Create a sled. Flatten a feed bag as a sled for the kids or something you must haul over snow.
- Keep kindling dry. Place burnable paper, pine cones, and small sticks inside a used sack.
- Make barn-party decorations. For instance, create a Halloween ghost by stuffing several bags in one, painting the exterior white with black eyes, and hanging it.
- Catch oil drips. Place an old feed sack under the catch basin when changing oil on a vehicle, keeping your driveway or garage floor clean.
- Collect pet waste. Designate a feed sack for this purpose to encourage picking up after dogs.
- Protect tires from sun damage. When storing a trailer or other vehicle outdoors, use feed sacks, secured in place, to shield tires from damaging UV rays.
- Make a party-beverage bin. Dump in two bags of ice, then set beverages on top to stay cool.