Four horse care topics riders often mix up
Windpuffs, shoe boils, rain rot, and menthol-free liniment keep showing up in the same conversations, but they do not belong in the same bucket. Three are common barn issues. One is a product choice. Sorting that out early saves time, cuts bad assumptions, and helps you make calmer decisions.
Speakable summary
Windpuffs, shoe boils, rain rot, and menthol-free liniment are not the same kind of problem. Windpuffs are usually fluid swellings near the fetlock. Shoe boils are pressure-related swellings on the elbow point. Rain rot is a skin issue that thrives in wet conditions. Menthol-free liniment is a routine choice for riders who want calm, sensation-free support instead of strong hot or cold feel.
Why these get mixed up
Because riders do not search like textbooks. They search when the horse looks off, when something puffs up, when the skin gets ugly, or when the usual product routine feels like too much drama. That means very different things get lumped together under one late-night question.
The useful move is to separate location, feel, and pattern.
Location
Fetlock swelling points you one direction. Elbow-point swelling points you another. Crusty skin on the topline or rump points you somewhere else entirely.
Feel
Soft fluid, firm swelling, crusty scabs, or surface sensitivity are not the same thing. Touch matters, as long as the horse is safe to examine.
Pattern
Symmetrical and long-standing usually means something different than sudden, hot, painful, one-sided, or rapidly worsening.
Category
Not every search is a condition. Menthol-free liniment is about how you support a routine, not what diagnosis the horse has.
Windpuffs
Windpuffs, also called windgalls, are fluid-filled swellings usually seen around the fetlock region. Many horses carry them without obvious pain. The practical question is not whether every windpuff is a disaster. The practical question is whether the swelling is stable or changing.
Older horses and horses in regular work often have a little history here. What deserves more respect is new heat, asymmetry, soreness, or a horse that starts stepping short when the swelling was previously just cosmetic.
For the deeper breakdown, read What Are Windpuffs in Horses? For a more routine-focused version, there is also Managing Wind Puffs in Horses.
Capped elbow and shoe boils
A capped elbow, often called a shoe boil, is a very different picture. This is swelling on the point of the elbow, often from repeated pressure or repeated heel and shoe contact when the horse lies down.
The big mistake riders make here is treating it like a mystery swelling that needs more product before it needs a cause check. Product alone does not fix repeated trauma. If the pressure source stays, the swelling often stays too.
What matters most is whether the area is cool and mostly a blemish, or hot, painful, draining, rapidly enlarging, or paired with lameness. That is where the decision changes fast.
The full guide is here: Capped Elbow in Horses | Shoe Boils What To Do.
Rain rot
Rain rot belongs in a totally different lane from both of the above. This is a skin issue, not a fluid swelling around a joint and not an elbow pressure lump. Riders usually notice scabs, crusting, hair coming away in clumps, and a horse that gets touchy over the affected area.
It tends to show up when moisture, irritation, friction, and barn conditions line up badly. The practical work is usually clean, dry, protect, and stay consistent instead of bouncing between random products.
For the main treatment article, read Rain Rot in Horses: What It Is and How to Treat It. For a broader skin-condition piece, see Rain Rot, Mud Fever and Thrush.
Where menthol-free liniment fits
This one does not belong on the same medical shelf as the others. Menthol-free liniment is not a condition. It is a rider choice about feel, routine, and ingredient profile.
Riders usually start looking for menthol-free options when they are tired of products that feel loud, smell loud, or make it harder to judge how the horse actually feels. A calmer liniment gel routine makes the most sense when the goal is repeatable daily support, targeted placement, and a show-aware mindset.
The deeper article on that is here: Is Menthol-Free Better for Daily Liniment Use?
And for the format itself, the cleanest comparison page is the Veterinary Liniment Gel guide.
One simple way to separate the four
Windpuffs
Where: usually fetlock area
What it feels like: soft fluid swelling
Main question: stable blemish or changing problem?
Shoe boil
Where: point of the elbow
What it feels like: localized swelling or lump
Main question: what pressure source keeps causing it?
Rain rot
Where: skin and coat, often topline or rump
What it feels like: crusts, scabs, sensitivity
Main question: how do I clean, dry, and stop the cycle?
Menthol-free liniment
Where: your routine, not your diagnosis list
What it feels like: calm, sensation-free support
Main question: do I want less drama in daily care?
When to stop reading and get a veterinarian involved
Roundups are helpful until the horse starts throwing clearer red flags. Do not keep trying to self-sort the internet version of this if you are seeing heat, strong pain, drainage, rapid enlargement, fever, obvious lameness, or a horse that looks generally dull or unwell.
That is not the moment for cleverness. That is the moment for a real exam.
Where to go next
Use the page that matches what you are actually seeing, not the one that merely sounds familiar.
Start with the fastest next step
When the horse looks a little off but the right lane is still fuzzy, do not guess harder. Use the guided path, build a steadier routine, and compare the cleanest format for daily support.
For intact skin routines, many riders start with Draw It Out® 16oz High Potency Liniment Gel. For targeted skin-care support, see Rapid Relief Restorative Cream for Horses.
FAQ
Are windpuffs the same as a shoe boil?
Is rain rot a swelling problem like windpuffs?
Is menthol-free liniment a treatment for rain rot or shoe boils?
What is the fastest way to tell these apart?
When should I call my veterinarian?
Educational content only. Not veterinary advice. Always use your veterinarian for diagnosis, treatment decisions, or urgent concerns.


