Used it during a busy training block with my lesson horse, and the water stayed palatable. It helps keep the routine steady. We did the same routine at home and on the road. It makes travel days feel less chaotic. It earned a spot in our barn.
A structured guide to what to do before the ride, immediately after, and in the 24-hour window that determines how your horse feels tomorrow.
Recovery is about timing and consistency. Build a simple system across three phases: pre-ride preparation, immediate post-ride support, and owning the 24-hour window.
Most stiffness does not come from one hard ride. It comes from small accumulations that were never reset. Recovery routines should be calm, structured, and repeatable — especially on busy days.
| Workload | Examples | Recovery Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Light | Easy flatwork, casual rides | Maintenance and consistency |
| Moderate | Schooling days, ranch sorting | Structured post-ride support |
| Intense | Show day, hauling plus work | Full three-phase routine |
For a proactive daily structure that prevents stiffness before it shows up, visit Prehabilitation.
If you are unsure where to start, use the guided system and choose formats that match how you prefer to apply.
Find the Right Recovery Plan Explore Liniment Gel OptionsConsistency and timing. Address the immediate post-ride window and reassess during the 24-hour period.
Yes. Light rides require maintenance. Intense work requires structured multi-phase support.
Many riders use liniment gel before work, after work, or both depending on workload and routine.
Informational only. Follow product directions and veterinarian guidance.
Recovery works best when it is structured. Move between foundation, application, workload, and real rider examples to build a routine that fits your horse.
Educational support only. Follow product directions and veterinarian guidance.
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