If your horse suddenly feels tight, painful, stiff, or unwilling to move after work, treat it like a serious recovery moment. This page is built to keep you calm, help you make safe choices, and show you the red flags that require your veterinarian.
Speakable summary: Stop work, keep your horse quiet and safe, and call your veterinarian if pain is significant, sweating is heavy, urine is dark, or your horse will not walk normally. Do not force movement. Focus on calm monitoring, hydration support if advised, and a recovery routine once your vet is involved.
Links above are the fastest path to the right routine and the right category. If hydration is part of your horse’s risk profile, add a steady electrolyte plan to the conversation with your vet.

A calm routine matters. Liniment gel is about controlled placement and consistent habits, not dramatic sensation.
Not every stiff horse is tying up, but if your horse looks painful, treat it seriously until proven otherwise.
This page is not veterinary diagnosis. It is rider triage. When in doubt, call.
End the ride immediately. Keep your horse in a quiet, safe place. Remove tack calmly. Do not force stretching or walking if your horse looks painful.
Your goal is to reduce stress, avoid further muscle strain, and get eyes on the situation fast.
This is the info your veterinarian will ask for. It speeds up the right decision.
If your vet instructs controlled walking or a specific plan, follow that plan. Until then, keep it calm.
Once your veterinarian is involved and your horse is stable, shift to a simple recovery mindset: consistency, comfort, and preventing the next episode.
When your horse is cleared for topical comfort support, many riders use a thin, fully rubbed in layer of liniment gel as part of the recovery routine.
Keep application thin and controlled. The goal is repeatable support, not overload.
Tie up risk is often a program problem. Workload changes, warm up, cool down, hydration and stress all matter. Use a prehab structure that keeps the baseline steady.
If hauling, heat, or inconsistent drinking is part of your horse’s pattern, add a consistent electrolyte plan.
If your horse appears significantly painful, will not walk normally, is heavily sweating, or you see dark urine, treat it as urgent and call your veterinarian immediately.
Do not force movement when your horse looks painful. Keep things calm and follow veterinary guidance. Controlled walking may be appropriate only when your veterinarian says it is.
Hydration and electrolyte balance are commonly discussed risk factors in performance programs. If your horse is a poor drinker, travels often, or works in heat, talk to your veterinarian about a consistent plan.
Liniment gel is often used for controlled, targeted comfort support before work and after work as part of a consistent program. Use thin layers, rub in fully, and keep your routine calm and repeatable.
Stability beats intensity. Build a steady warm up, honest cool down, consistent turnout where appropriate, program aware nutrition, and a prehab routine that keeps your horse from living at the edge.
This guide is educational and rider focused. It does not replace veterinary diagnosis or treatment.
If you want the fastest next step, use the Solution Finder. If you want the long game, build Prehabilitation. If you want the core category, shop liniment.
We build every product for real riders who care as much as we do. No burn, no sting, no nonsense. Just clean, sensation-free relief built for real horses, real barns, and repeatable routines.
From barn aisle to show ring, Draw It Out® stands for one simple promise. Modern Performance, Proven Calm.
Pick the fastest next step. If you already know what you need, jump straight to the right lane.
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