When we got our horse, I insisted on replacing the two-wheeled wheelbarrow that I had hated and loathed for ages (and which has several cracks in the bottom anyways) with a proper one-wheel wheelbarrow. But before the old one could go to the dump, I found myself trying to carry armloads of hay out to the horse, gettting myself covered in it and dropping some along the way. Suddenly the old wheelbarrow was looking good! While two wheels make it terrible for heavy loads, especially on our uneven terrain, a load of hay in it is pretty light and I only take it up and down the driveway. It's all plastic, so I can leave it in the pasture with the horse and she can't get hurt on it. Because it's already cracked, I'm not worried when she kicks it around for fun, lol. And because I only use it for her food, it stays clean (the other wheelbarrow, though, gets used for poop!).
An aluminum trashcan is the first thing we turned to for storing her feed. It just holds 100 pounds of feed and because it's metal, the rodents can't chew through it and get the feed (squirrels especially can chew through PVC). It also keeps the humidity and any other moisture out of it because the lid fits nice and tight. This system is also good for people who buy large bags of dog food or jumbo bags of rice or anything else that needs to be kept dry and rodent-free.
My husband cooked a big feast for 154 people and people who had promised to bring us stoarge containers, oops, forgot. I think I was the person who came up with putting some of the cooked vegetables in a cooler. This kept them hot until it was time to serve them (coolers keep in heat just as well as they keep in cold). My husband came up with using a trashbag to marinate the mushrooms in (like 20 pounds of mushrooms). Turkey fryers became additional stoves. Even before the feast, someone gave us like 50 pounds of chicken thighs in big pacakges frozen solid, and my husband wanted to cook them the next day. He didn't know what to do, since the kitchen sink wouldn't hold so many packages and he wanted to thaw them out in water, so I came up with the idea of sticking them in the bathtub to thaw out overnight.
When our sink was clogged and we couldn't afford to get a plumber out, I washed dishes on the porch in a big cooler. I started out washing them in the bathtub, but I didn't want the food particles going down that drain. The cooler worked better because I only needed to pull the plug to let it drain out into the yard with no worries about clogging up another drain. Have washed some hand-washable clothes in the bathrub. Shower curtain ros make excellent indoor clothes hangers. When our dryer was down, I put a rod up in the laundry hallway and put everything on hangers and hung them up on the rod.