Use for pre-workout warmup or post-workout cooldown
Help your horse through temporary muscle soreness, stiffness, or swelling caused by exposure, overwork, or exertion. Topical Antiseptic is the world's number one selling horse liniment. The soothing antiseptic blend of natural herbs and oils contains menthol and a blend of herbal extracts including calendula, echinacea, and wormwood. This effective liniment has many uses: use as a rub for tendinitis, dilute with water for a soothing body wash, smooth on as a leg tightener, or dab onto minor cuts, abrasions, and insect bites. For horses.
Please click on "More Information" for uses, ingredients, and storage.
Veterinary Liniment
Uses:
Excellent antiseptic for minor cuts, abrasions, and insect bites
Post workout set up
Tendonitis reliever
Pre-workout warm up
Bucked shin relief
Use full strength or with water and vinegar as a body wash
Ingredients: Menthol 1.27%, Chloroxylenol 0.50%. Also contains Plant Extracts of Calendula, Echinacea and Wormwood; Acetone, FD&C Blue No. 1, FD&C Yellow No. 6, Iodine, Potassium Iodide, Thymol, Wormwood Oil, and Water.
Storage: Store in cool, dry area. Keep out of reach of children and pets.
We're sorry!
No testimonials have been submitted for this product.
A well-stocked equine first aid kit is essential for any stall, barn, stable and travel trailer. This article details the wound ointments, bandages, buckets, and more you'll need if your horse is injured.
Horses sometimes require emergency equine first aid. This article discusses illnesses, injuries, and wounds that require immediate veterinary care from an equine veterinarian.
Certain plants are poisonous to horses. This article discusses which plants are toxic to equines and what steps to take should your horse consume a yew, hemlock, or poisonous fern.
Equine ice bandages and cold therapy can help reduce inflammation and injury severity on any horse leg. This article defines cold therapy and discusses how it is used to help your horse.