Real Rider Resource · Spring skin care
Spring Rain Rot Prevention Routine for Horses
Wet spring weather can set the stage for rain rot. Prevention is not glamorous. It is clean brushes, dry coats, smart blanket habits, and a simple skin-care routine you repeat before small trouble spots become bigger barn problems.
Short answer: keep your horse from staying damp for long periods, clean and dry grooming tools, avoid sharing brushes during skin flare-ups, manage blankets, and support small rub-prone areas with a clean, stay-put skin-care routine.
Spring rain rot prevention starts with moisture control, clean tools, dry coats, smart blanket management, and early attention to small skin changes.
The prevention routine
- Check wet zones first: topline, rump, shoulders, girth area, and lower legs.
- Separate tools: do not share brushes, towels, pads, or girths when one horse has active skin issues.
- Clean gently: do not scrape scabs or rip crusts away.
- Dry completely: do not blanket over damp hair.
- Support targeted spots: use a thin layer of Rapid Relief Restorative Cream on clean, dry areas when appropriate.
Where to go next
For product direction by situation, use What Does My Horse Need?. For the bigger prevention-first routine, read Horse Prehabilitation. For skin support, shop the Rapid Relief Collection.
FAQ
Can rain rot happen even if my horse looks clean?
Yes. A horse can look clean from the outside while moisture stays trapped near the skin.
Should I pick rain rot scabs off?
No. Avoid ripping or scraping crusts. Gentle grooming and careful cleaning are better than forcing irritated skin open.
When should I call the vet?
Call your veterinarian if the area is painful, spreading, bleeding, swollen, hot, draining, or not improving with better hygiene and drying.


