The Ultimate Horse Blanket Guide: Keep Your Equine Friend Warm and Clean - Draw it Out®
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Horse Blanket Guide: Fit, Weather, Sweat, and Skin Checks

Draw It Out® Horse Health Care News

Horse Blanket Guide: Fit, Weather, Sweat, and Skin Checks

Blanketing is not about proving toughness or babying a horse. It is about matching the horse, the coat, the weather, the shelter, and the workload in front of you.

Start with the horse, not the temperature

Two horses can stand in the same barn on the same night and need different care. Age, body condition, coat length, clipping, turnout, wind, rain, and access to shelter all matter.

A clipped performance horse may need help sooner. A healthy unclipped horse with shelter and forage may need less. Blanket decisions should follow the actual horse in front of you.

Blanket types in plain English

  • Sheet: Light coverage with little or no fill.
  • Stable blanket: Warmth inside a barn or protected space.
  • Turnout blanket: Weather-resistant outer layer for outside use.
  • Cooler: Used after work to wick moisture while the horse dries.

Fit matters more than marketing

A poor-fitting blanket creates rubs, pressure, restricted movement, and unsafe slipping. Check the withers, shoulders, chest, hip points, belly straps, leg straps, and tail flap. The horse should be able to walk, lower the head, lie down, and rise without the blanket grabbing or shifting.

Barn rule: A blanket that looks good from ten feet away can still be wrong under the chest, shoulders, and withers. Put your hands under it.

Sweat is the hidden problem

The fastest way to make a blanket routine go sideways is trapping moisture. If a horse is sweaty, damp, or warm under the blanket, the skin and coat can get irritated fast. Dry the horse before blanketing whenever possible, and check under blankets daily.

Daily blanket checks

  • Slide a hand under the shoulder and wither area.
  • Check for rubs, hair loss, scurf, heat, or swelling.
  • Look at the girth and belly strap area for dirt buildup.
  • Remove and air blankets regularly.
  • Brush the coat so dirt and sweat do not grind under fabric.

Where grooming support fits

Winter coat care is not about over-bathing. It is about keeping the skin clean enough, the coat fluffed enough, and the blanket areas checked often enough. ShowBarn Secret® grooming products fit the winter routine when riders need cleaner hair, better manageability, and less friction under blankets and tack.

When not to blanket

Do not blanket over wet hair, active heat, open skin, heavy sweat, or a horse that is already too warm. Do not use a blanket as a substitute for feed, shelter, turnout judgment, or veterinary care.

Bottom line

The right blanket routine is boring in the best way: correct fit, dry horse, daily checks, clean skin, and honest weather judgment. That is how you protect the horse without creating a new problem under the fabric.

Educational content only. For weight loss, skin breakdown, fever, illness, or abnormal cold intolerance, contact your veterinarian.

Further Reading