Vet Guide: Warming Up Your Horse to Prevent Injuries 🐎🔥 | Safe Athletic Prep for 2025
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🐎🔥 Vet Guide: Warming Up Your Horse to Prevent Injuries | 2025 Performance Prep
By Dr Duncan Houston, BVSc
Warming up your horse before training or competition isn’t optional—it’s essential. A structured warm-up increases temperature, flexibility, neuromuscular efficiency, and blood flow, all of which reduce injury risk and enhance athletic performance .
Why Warm Up? Science-Backed Benefits
- Increased tissue flexibility: Warmer muscles, tendons, and ligaments demand greater force to injure and improve range of motion .
- Enhanced nerve signaling: Faster nerve conduction enhances coordination and performance.
- Boosted circulation: Higher heart and respiratory rates, splenic red cell release, and vasodilation deliver more oxygen and fuel.
- Improved energy delivery: Short, intense bursts at end of warm-up prime the muscles for upcoming exertion.
Warm-Up Structure: 3 Key Phases
- Phase 1 – Easy movement (5–10 min): Begin with walking and transitions across gaits to slowly elevate temperature.
- Phase 2 – Sport-specific work (10–20 min): Tailor this to your discipline—walking/trotting for dressage, grid work and low fences for jumpers, with gradual build-up in intensity.
- Phase 3 – Brief intensity (2–5 min): End with short, more intense movements—canter, flying change, or elevated fences—to activate oxygen delivery systems without depleting energy.
Against the Clock: Tailoring Warm-Up Time
- ✅ **Minimum duration:** ~10 minutes in warm weather.
- ❄️ **Longer sessions:** Up to 40 minutes in cold weather.
- 🏆 **Competition standard:** ~20 minutes for high-level jumping .
Re-Warm-Up Strategy
- If there's a break between events, include a mini warm-up—light activity mixed with key gait transitions—and, if needed, a short intense burst.
- Time and consistency matter: colder weather requires longer rewarm-up intervals; in hot conditions, keep intensity low and focus on warm-up duration.
Tips for a Safe and Effective Warm-Up
- 🧘 Move with intention: each phase must serve purpose—don’t just trot laps."
- 🧥 Watch environment: colder climates always demand more time; hot weather may need shorter warm-ups with focused intensity.
- 🎯 Discipline-specific focus: replicate key movement patterns—circles, lead changes, jumping exercises—as part of warm-up.
- 🌿 Consistency wins: build warm-up habit into your daily routine—even on non-show days—so it becomes second nature.
Wrap-Up: Safety Through Preparation
Remember—unless your horse is physically ready, you’re asking it to perform underprepared tissues. A structured warm-up lowers injury risk, improves performance, and allows your animal to perform with confidence. For 2025 and beyond, integrate all three warm-up phases, pay close attention to weather, and tailor intensity to your discipline. Your horse—and your scores—will thank you.
📲 Want vet-backed training guidance?
Download the Ask A Vet app to get step-by-step warm-up routines customized for your horse and your discipline, plus expert reminders and best-practice tracking—right at your fingertips. Stay safe, prepared, and ahead of the competition. 🐴✨