Draw It Out 16oz liniment gel for a practical barn recovery kit
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The Real Rider Recovery Kit: What to Keep in the Barn

A real barn kit is not built for looking impressive on a shelf. It is built for the moment after a hard ride, a hot day, a long haul, a muddy week, or a horse that simply needs a little more attention.

Short answer: A practical recovery kit should include 16oz liniment gel for targeted daily care, RTU spray for fast coverage, IceBath™ for hot-weather wash-rack routines, Silver Hoof EQ Therapy® for hoof care, and RESTOREaHORSE® or Rapid Relief Restorative Cream for skin-focused barn needs.

The kit by job

Targeted post-ride care

16oz liniment gel is the first bottle for most riders. Move to 64oz liniment gel when the barn is using it often.

Fast spray coverage

RTU spray fits the days when speed and coverage matter more than targeted gel placement.

Hot-weather cooldown

IceBath™ belongs near the wash rack when summer work starts stacking up.

Hoof and skin care

Silver Hoof EQ Therapy®, RESTOREaHORSE®, and Rapid Relief Restorative Cream round out the barn shelf.

Do not overbuild it

The best kit is simple enough that everyone in the barn understands what each product is for. One product for targeted care. One for spray coverage. One for hot days. One for hooves. One for skin-focused needs.

Start with 16oz Liniment GelUse the Solution FinderRead Prehabilitation Guide

FAQ

What should be in a horse recovery kit?

A practical horse recovery kit should include a liniment gel, a spray format, a hot-weather wash-rack product, a hoof-care product, and skin-focused barn care products.

What is the best first product for a recovery kit?

For most riders, Draw It Out® 16oz Liniment Gel is the best first product because it fits daily targeted care.

Should every barn use the same kit?

No. A one-horse owner, trainer, and multi-horse barn may need different sizes and formats, but the core jobs are similar.

This guide is educational and product-selection focused. For significant lameness, heat, swelling, injury, deep wounds, infection, or a problem that does not improve, work with your veterinarian or farrier.

Further Reading