
Diamond D Boarding Stables
5901 Solomon Rd, Jacksonville, FL 32234
Equine boarding facility owned and operated by Sonny Boy and Jewel Griffin, providing high quality boarding services at an economical price.
Jacksonville is Florida's largest city by land area, a sprawling city in Duval County in northeast Florida on the St. Johns River and the Atlantic coast. The city's sheer size means that agricultural and horse-keeping land does exist within the broader Jacksonville area, particularly in the western and southwestern portions of Duval County and the adjacent rural counties of Nassau, Clay, and St. Johns. The equestrian character of the Jacksonville area is modest relative to north-central Florida's horse country, but the city's large population and year-round warm climate create a stable demand for boarding.
Horse owners in Jacksonville typically keep horses in the rural fringes accessible on the city's edges, using the metro's veterinary specialists and equestrian supply resources that a city of Jacksonville's size can support. The proximity to Ocala—about two hours south—gives ambitious competitive riders access to Florida's preeminent horse country.
Check out the boarding options available across Jacksonville and its surrounding areas below.
Jacksonville is Florida's largest city by land area, a sprawling city in Duval County in northeast Florida on the St. Johns River and the Atlantic coast. The city's sheer size means that agricultural and horse-keeping land does exist within the broader Jacksonville area, particularly in the western and southwestern portions of Duval County and the adjacent rural counties of Nassau, Clay, and St. Johns. The equestrian character of the Jacksonville area is modest relative to north-central Florida's horse country, but the city's large population and year-round warm climate create a stable demand for boarding.
Horse owners in Jacksonville typically keep horses in the rural fringes accessible on the city's edges, using the metro's veterinary specialists and equestrian supply resources that a city of Jacksonville's size can support. The proximity to Ocala—about two hours south—gives ambitious competitive riders access to Florida's preeminent horse country.
Check out the boarding options available across Jacksonville and its surrounding areas below.
Boarding within Jacksonville's dense urban core is not practical, but the city's large land area means rural pockets exist, particularly in western and southwestern Duval County. Adjacent counties—Nassau to the north, Clay to the south, and St. Johns to the east—have more established rural boarding options within 30–45 minutes of downtown Jacksonville.
A city of Jacksonville's size supports equine veterinary specialists, farrier services, tack retailers, and hay dealers that smaller North Florida communities cannot. These professional resources serve horse owners throughout northeast Florida. Competitive riders in the area typically trailer south to Ocala for shows and to access the broader Florida equestrian circuit.
Jacksonville's northeast Florida climate is subtropical with hot, humid summers and mild winters—generally favorable for horse keeping year-round. Hurricane risk is real given the Atlantic coastal location, and horse evacuation planning is important. Summer heat and humidity management—shade, ventilation, and fresh water—are the primary day-to-day welfare considerations.