Build a Barn Emergency Kit in 20 Minutes | Draw It Out®

Build a Barn Emergency Kit in 20 Minutes | Draw It Out®

Build a Barn Emergency Kit in 20 Minutes | Draw It Out®

Build a Barn Emergency Kit in 20 Minutes

Emergencies don’t schedule themselves. This is the fast, no-fluff checklist to get your barn staged for cuts, strains, colic flags, and haul-day surprises—without scrambling.

The 20-Minute Plan

  1. Grab a container: Weather-resistant tote with lid (label: “BARN EMERGENCY”).
  2. Print & tape this checklist to the inside lid (inventory monthly).
  3. Stage it at the barn aisle or tack room door (visible, reachable).

What Goes in the Kit (Checklist)

Category Items Why It’s In
Wound & Skin
  • RESTOREaHORSE® (liqui-gel salve)
  • Sterile saline squeeze bottles
  • Non-stick pads, gauze rolls, cohesive wrap
  • Adhesive tape, blunt-tip bandage scissors
  • Disposable gloves
For scrapes, rubs, edges of cuts; keeps product where you place it and protects the wound bed.
Muscle & Lower-Leg Post-work soreness, stocking up, or quick cool-then-wrap protocol.
Hydration & Recovery
  • Hydro-Lyte packets/tub
  • Apple juice packets / loose salt (palatability)
  • Collapsible bucket + thermometer
Replaces what sweat & hauling take; keeps water moving, especially in cool snaps.
Hoof & Poultice
  • Poultice, brown paper/plastic, hoof boot or diaper
  • Farrier’s knife or hoof pick (blunt for kit)
For heat, sole bruises, or after a hard footing day.
Vitals & Comms
  • Digital thermometer, stethoscope, watch with second hand
  • Sharpie + index card set (time, vitals, what you gave)
  • Plastic sleeve with: barn address/coords, owner & vet numbers, trailer plate #
Fast notes + clear directions save minutes when every minute counts.
Clean-Up & Safety
  • Hand sanitizer, extra gloves, small trash bags
  • Headlamp + spare batteries
  • Slip lead & spare halter
Night checks, hands-free light, tidy wrap removal and disposal.

Show-Safe Note: Draw It Out® products are FEI/USEF compliant and sensation-free—smart for competition barns where testing matters.

Staging Tips (So You Actually Use It)

Label & Location

Top shelf kills speed. Keep the tote at chest height by the exit with the label facing outward. Add a glow-in-the-dark sticker for night checks.

Inventory Rhythm

Set a phone reminder for the 1st of each month. Replace used wraps, restock saline, and check your thermometer batteries.

Cross-Link for Fast Learning

FAQs

How big should the kit be?

A 12–18 gal tote covers most barns. Bigger barns may stage one per aisle or trailer.

Can I use liniment under standing wraps in an emergency?

Yes—with Draw It Out® Gel. Cool first if there’s fresh heat, then apply a thin layer and wrap as needed.

What’s the first thing to do after a cut?

Halters on, secure the area, rinse with saline, apply RESTOREaHORSE®, and call your vet if the wound is deep, near a joint, or gaping.

How often should I check the kit?

Monthly. Replace what’s used, confirm batteries work, and scan expiration dates.

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