What Riders Get Wrong About Horse Soreness (And the Best Fix) | Draw It Out

What Riders Get Wrong About Horse Soreness (And the Best Fix) | Draw It Out

What Riders Get Wrong About Horse Soreness (And the Best Fix) | Draw It Out
Soreness Insight

What Riders Get Wrong About Horse Soreness

Draw It Out Horse Health Care Solutions Reading time 4 minutes

Most riders assume soreness comes from overwork. In reality, most soreness comes from under-recovery — incomplete cool-downs, tight backs, tired soft tissue, or skipped routines.

This guide breaks down the biggest mistakes riders make and how a simple, quiet recovery routine fixes them.

Most riders misread soreness. They think, “I must have pushed too hard yesterday.” In reality, nine out of ten cases of next-day soreness trace back to something far simpler: the horse didn’t recover fully after the last ride.

Your horse isn’t weak. They aren’t aging out. They aren’t “just a little stiff.” They’re waiting on you to close the loop.

Myth 1: “My horse is sore because the work was too hard.”

In truth, soreness rarely comes from workload alone. It comes from how **the ride ended** — the cool-down, the tension left in the muscles, the abrupt stop instead of a gradual exit from effort.

Harder work doesn’t cause soreness. **Poor recovery after hard work does.**

Myth 2: “Menthol cooling means it’s working.”

Menthol creates a strong surface sensation — a cooling illusion — that can distract you from what deeper tissues are feeling. It doesn’t support long-term softness or mobility.

Quiet, sensation-free liniments let you read your horse honestly and support recovery without masking anything.

Myth 3: “My horse gets tight overnight because they worked too hard.”

Stall time is the enemy of soft tissue. After work, the body wants to stiffen. The solution is movement — even five minutes of walking later in the day — and a clean recovery routine.

The Real Causes of Soreness

Across thousands of horses, the same patterns repeat:

  • Incomplete cool-downs
  • Tension left in the topline or SI region
  • Sore feet that change the horse’s posture
  • Stall time without a movement reset
  • Inconsistent recovery routines

Most soreness isn’t injury. It’s maintenance — missed.

The Fix: A Simple, Repeatable Recovery Routine

1. Five-minute post-ride walk

This lets tissues cool evenly and clears metabolic waste that causes soreness.

2. Sensation-free liniment

A quiet liniment supports circulation and soft tissue comfort without the burn or smell that tense horses react to.

3. Quick body scan

A ten-second glide of your hand over the back, shoulders, and hindquarters catches issues while they’re small.

4. Light movement later

Ten minutes of turnout or hand-walking prevents overnight stiffness.

Quiet Recovery Tools From Draw It Out

These naturally derived, sensation-free formulas fit perfectly into a daily recovery routine that keeps soreness from settling in.

The Bottom Line

Soreness is not a mystery. It is a message. When you finish the ride with recovery instead of rushing to the next task, your horse stays soft, sound, and ready for tomorrow.

Prevent soreness — don’t chase it.

Soreness FAQ

Why does my horse get sore after riding?
Most soreness comes from incomplete recovery — tight muscles, skipped cool-downs, or lack of movement afterward. Rarely is it the workload alone.
What is the best liniment for horse soreness?
A sensation-free, odorless liniment works best for daily use because it supports recovery without overwhelming sensitive tissues or masking discomfort.
How do I keep my horse from getting sore?
Use a consistent recovery routine: a long cool-down, quiet liniment application, a quick body scan, and a few minutes of movement later in the day.

Further Reading