Finally, hay lasts all day
Two Quarter horses in a paddock, used to burn through a bale in 8 hours. Now it's a full day and a half. Holes are the right size and the rope hasn't frayed after six months.
Most orders deliver in 2–4 business days. Round bales and bulk mats ship LTL; you'll get a call to book a window.
If you've ever spent a morning wrestling individual stall mats into place — trimming edges, shimming gaps, watching them drift apart within a week — the Ameba Stall Kit is a straight-up better way to do it. These kits come pre-cut to fit the three most common box stall sizes, so you're not starting from scratch every time. The Animat Ameba interlocking system connects each mat edge-to-edge, and once it's down it stays down. No shifting, no gaps, no do-overs.
The rubber itself is 3/4" dense vulcanized construction — the kind that actually cushions a horse through years of standing and lying on it, not just the first season. It protects whatever's underneath too, whether that's concrete, compacted screenings, or packed gravel. Boarding barns and training facilities that run these stalls day in and day out will notice the difference in how long the underlying base holds up.
Stall kits ship by freight given the weight of the rubber, and our team will work with you to coordinate delivery or arrange pickup after checkout. Available in 10×10, 10×12, and 12×12 configurations — if you're not sure which fits your stall or need help planning a multi-stall layout, give us a call or drop us a chat. We're happy to work through it with you.
1. Prepare your stall base — compacted screenings, crushed gravel, or concrete all work well. The base should be level and firm before you start laying mats. 2. Start from one corner of the stall and work outward, connecting each mat using the Ameba interlocking edges as you go. 3. Press each connection firmly until the mats are seated together. No special tools are needed for standard installation. 4. Once the full floor is assembled, add bedding as usual.
If any trimming is needed to fit a non-standard edge or doorframe, a sharp utility knife and straightedge will do the job cleanly. Minor trimming around door frames or walls is common and straightforward.
Measure your stall opening at the widest points — length and width — before ordering. These kits are designed to fit standard box stall dimensions, but it's worth confirming your measurements before you place your order.
If your stall is a non-standard size or you're flooring a wash bay, aisle, or run-in shelter, reach out and we'll help you figure out the right coverage.
Not sure which size is right? Reach out via chat or phone, we are happy to help.
Due to the size and weight of this item, it ships by freight and requires a custom quote. Add it to your cart, complete your details, and our team will be in touch within one business day with your shipping options. Prefer to talk it through first? Reach us by phone or chat, we are happy to help arrange pickup or delivery.
We've laid these floors in our own barn. Here's what actually matters after years of hooves, wheelbarrows, and wash-downs — not marketing points, real ones.
These kits are pre-cut to standard stall dimensions, so there's no measuring, marking, or struggling with a utility knife before you can even start. Pull it out of the pallet, carry it in, and start laying.
The Ameba edge interlock connects each mat to the next and keeps the whole floor tight over time. No more mats creeping apart, leaving gaps that catch hooves or trap bedding moisture underneath.
At 3/4" thick vulcanized rubber, this flooring absorbs the daily impact of a horse standing, lying down, shifting weight, and pawing — without breaking down or compressing flat over years of use.
Rubber deadens impact and vibration in a way concrete and bare wood can't. Horses that move around less restlessly and settle faster sleep better and recover better — that matters whether you're running one stall or twenty.
A solid, interlocked rubber floor keeps bedding from working down into gaps and helps moisture drain instead of pooling. That means cleaner stalls, less bedding waste, and fewer hours with the muck fork.
Two Quarter horses in a paddock, used to burn through a bale in 8 hours. Now it's a full day and a half. Holes are the right size and the rope hasn't frayed after six months.
Ordered on a Tuesday, showed up Friday. Clips haven't rusted through one freeze-thaw yet, which is more than I can say for the last two I bought from a chain feed store.
Uncle Jeeter was right about the 1¾" holes — I started with 1¼" and my mare just walked away. Switched up and she's happy. Would buy again.
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You are currently shipping to Canada and your order will be billed in CAD $.