Barn-Ready Guide (Educational Only)

Why Do Horses “Stock Up” in Their Stalls?

Puffy legs after stall time are common—and often improve with a simple reset. Here’s why it happens, how to handle it calmly, and the red flags that mean it isn’t simple stocking-up.

Why It Happens (Common Drivers)

Inactivity / Stall Rest

  • Fluid settles in the lower limbs after long standing
  • Even puffiness (often both hinds)

Travel Day

  • Limited movement + trailer heat/humidity
  • Often improves with 15–30 minutes of hand-walking/turnout

Heat / Salt / Water

  • Hot nights and variable intake can influence morning fill
  • Keep water close; discuss electrolytes with your vet

Wrap/Boot & Bedding Factors

  • Uneven tension, slipping boots, damp pads, or dirty bedding
  • Reset with correct technique; recheck at 15–30 minutes

Red flags (heat, pain, asymmetry, strong pulses, wounds, fever, lameness) point away from simple stocking-up—call your veterinarian.

Stall Reset (Step-by-Step)

1) Move First

  1. Hand-walk 10–20 minutes or offer light turnout.
  2. Recheck symmetry & feel for heat along tendons/cannon.

2) Cool if Warm

  1. Hose or sponge cool water; scrape between passes.
  2. Avoid ice directly on skin unless your veterinarian advises.

3) Thin Gel → Absorb

  1. On intact skin, apply a THIN layer of Draw It Out® 16oz Gel.
  2. Allow hair to go dry-to-touch before pads/wraps.
  3. Optional: standing wraps with even tension; recheck at 15–30 minutes.

“Wrap-ready” = thin gel → full absorption → gear on.

Stocking-Up vs. Worry (Quick Compare)

Looks like Stocking-Up

  • Cool, even puffiness both legs
  • No pain, normal behavior
  • Improves after 15–30 minutes of movement

Looks like Swelling (Worry)

  • Heat, tenderness, one-sided enlargement
  • Stronger digital pulse or pitting with pain
  • No improvement after the reset or rapid worsening

Use the Horse Leg Anatomy map to compare the same landmarks every time.

FAQ

Should I wrap overnight?

Program-dependent. Only on intact skin and after full absorption if gel was used. Keep tension even (~50% overlap) and recheck at 15–30 minutes. Confirm with your veterinarian for your horse’s plan.

Will stocking-up harm my horse?

Benign stocking-up often resolves with movement and consistent routines. Heat, pain, lameness, wounds, or repeated one-leg swelling deserve a veterinary workup.

What barn tweaks help?

More turnout/hand-walking, clean dry bedding, correct wrap technique, clean pads, steady hydration, and vet-guided salt/electrolytes. Track a simple photo/measurement weekly.

Where do I learn the full routine?

See the Recovery Loop (daily plan), the Wrap Method (safe wraps), and Horse Leg Anatomy (landmarks).

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