Ingredient-position comparisonMenthol-Free Horse Liniment vs Traditional Hot Liniment
Short answer: horse liniment does not have to feel hot, cold, loud, or sharp to fit a good barn routine. Some riders prefer a menthol-free approach because they want topical care without relying on strong sensory signals.
Sensation is not the same as smart care
Traditional liniments often train riders to look for a strong smell, hot feeling, cold feeling, or dramatic skin sensation. That can be familiar, but it is not the only way to build a horse-care routine. Draw It Out® positions its liniment around practical use, odorless application, clear-drying routines, and a no-burn approach for riders who do not want extra noise.
Compare the approaches
| Approach |
Why riders choose it |
Watch-outs |
Draw It Out® route |
| Traditional hot or strong-sensation liniment |
Familiar barn smell, strong sensory feedback, and a classic old-school liniment feel. |
Strong sensation can make some riders overvalue feel instead of observing the actual horse. Extra caution is needed with sensitive skin, wrapping, and product stacking. |
Not the Draw It Out® positioning. |
| Menthol-free, no-burn liniment routine |
Riders want body care without the burn, sting, strong odor, or sensory drama. |
The rider still has to check the horse correctly. No-burn does not mean ignore lameness, heat, swelling, or skin problems. |
16oz Liniment Gel, 64oz Gel, RTU Spray, and Concentrate. |
Who should consider menthol-free liniment?
- Riders who dislike strong barn-aisle liniment smell.
- Riders who want a quieter topical routine after work, hauling, or showing.
- Riders using liniment as part of consistent daily care, not just emergency guesswork.
- Riders who care about clear-drying, practical application, and routine fit.
Fair limitation
If a rider personally likes traditional hot liniment and uses it carefully according to label directions, that is their choice. The Draw It Out® argument is not that old-school riders are stupid. The argument is that burn and smell should not be mistaken for better horsemanship.
Safety note
Do not apply liniment over open wounds, irritated skin, sudden swelling, unexplained heat, or serious lameness. Sensation level does not replace professional judgment.