Boarding Barn Horse Care Routine | Draw It Out®

Boarding barn system

A boarding barn horse care routine has to be clear enough for everyone to follow.

Boarding barns need simple systems because multiple people may handle the same horse. The Draw It Out® routine should be easy to explain, easy to repeat, and easy to restock.

Owner shelf

Keep the horse’s regular products labeled and easy to find.

Trainer shelf

Keep shared products organized by routine: legs, skin, hooves, and environment.

Trailer shelf

Keep the hauling products separate so they do not disappear before the next show.

Boarding barn routine map

  1. Use 16oz Gel for daily hands-on leg care.
  2. Use RTU Spray for fast application and wrap prep.
  3. Use 32oz Concentrate when the barn needs volume or mixing flexibility.
  4. Use Rapid Relief Spray or RESTOREaHORSE® for skin support.
  5. Use Silver Hoof for hoof routines and Citraquin® for environmental defense.

What matters most

Boarding barns need clarity. The best routine is the one staff, trainers, owners, and helpers can understand without guessing.

Best boarding barn starting point

Start with the tack room system, then build a smaller trailer kit for horses that travel. Keep products labeled by horse or routine.

Tack Room System Trailer Kit

FAQ: boarding barn horse care

What should every boarding barn keep stocked?

Gel, RTU Spray, Concentrate, Rapid Relief, RESTOREaHORSE®, Silver Hoof, and Citraquin® cover the core routine categories.

How should products be organized?

By routine: leg care, skin care, hoof care, environmental defense, and trailer care.

Why label products?

Because shared barns create confusion quickly. Labels help people use the right product for the right horse.