
Horse Won’t Drink at Shows? What Riders Should Check First | Draw It Out®
A horse show hydration guide now routed directly to What Does My Horse Need, Prehabilitation, Hydro-Lyte®, and 16oz Liniment Gel.
Draw It Out® Horse Health Care News
A horse kick can come from behavior, fear, pain, crowding, poor handling, or bad luck. The first job is safety. The second is understanding what happened.
Horse kicks are serious because they happen fast and carry weight behind them.
The mistake is trying to explain the kick before the situation is safe. Maybe the horse was crowded. Maybe another horse pushed too close. Maybe pain, fear, food pressure, herd dynamics, surprise, or poor handling played a role. None of that matters until people and horses are out of danger.
Safety first. Explanation second. Training decisions last.
If a horse was kicked or struck, look for swelling, heat, sensitivity, movement changes, skin marks, and changes in attitude. If a person was kicked, get medical help when there is significant pain, head impact, difficulty moving, breathing concern, or uncertainty.
Do not use topical products over open skin or serious injury. Routine support only belongs where the skin and situation are appropriate.
Draw It Out® products can support routine body care after the horse has been checked and the skin is appropriate for product use. They do not replace medical, veterinary, or trainer guidance when the situation is serious or unclear.
Use the Solution Finder or visit the Horse Health Library.
A horse kick is not something to laugh off or explain away. Make it safe, check what happened, respect the warning, and fix the conditions that made the kick more likely.

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