Winter Stocked-Up Legs: How to Reduce Swelling & Improve Circulation in Horses

Winter Stocked-Up Legs: How to Reduce Swelling & Improve Circulation in Horses

Winter Stocked-Up Legs: How to Reduce Swelling & Improve Circulation in Horses

Reading time: ~5 minutes • Season: Winter stall-time management

Winter creates the perfect storm for stocked-up legs. Less turnout. More stall time. Colder temperatures slowing circulation. Even the most athletic horses can step out of the stall with that telltale puffiness in their lower legs.

The good news? With a simple routine, you can bring swelling down quickly and help your horse stay comfortable, even when the weather keeps them inside.


Why Horses Stock Up More in Winter

Stocking up is primarily a circulation issue—not a soundness issue. Winter simply adds obstacles:

  • Cold weather slows blood flow
  • Reduced turnout decreases natural movement
  • Stall standing limits lymphatic flow
  • Hard ground discourages deep movement

When circulation drops, fluid pools. Legs puff. Tendons stiffen. The solution is movement + targeted care.


Step 1: Start With 10–12 Minutes of Movement

Movement is the #1 way to clear stocked-up legs. Before grooming or saddling, walk your horse:

  • 5–6 minutes in straight lines
  • 3–4 minutes bending lines
  • 2–3 minutes over low walk poles (if safe)

This alone improves circulation significantly—especially in winter-stiff horses.


Step 2: Apply Draw It Out® High Potency Gel

After movement, support the legs with a thin, even layer of Draw It Out® High Potency Gel . The gel absorbs quickly, supports circulation, and can be used under wraps or boots without heat.

This makes it ideal for winter swelling—gentle, effective, and clean.


Step 3: For Deeper Soft-Tissue Tightness, Add MasterMudd™

Some horses stock up because the hamstrings, back, or SI area tighten in cold weather. When those areas stiffen, the legs compensate.

Massage MasterMudd™ EquiBrace into tight regions to help soften deep tissue and support smoother movement.


Step 4: Support Hydration to Protect Leg Health

Horses often drink less when water is cold—causing thicker blood flow and slower lymph movement.

Adding Hydro-Lyte® with GastroCell® encourages steady hydration in winter and supports circulation from the inside out.


Step 5: Wrap Only If Needed

Wrapping can help, but only when the horse will be still for long periods. Use standing wraps overnight after applying Draw It Out® Gel if your horse tends to balloon while stalled during storms or freezes.

If movement is available the next morning—movement should come first.


Winter Stocking-Up Support Kit

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