Learning some basic fist aid for lameness – like wound care – will help make a meaningful difference to your horse’s recovery. Whether you’re cooling a swollen limb, or applying a poultice, these simple first‑aid skills help to ease your horse’s discomfort and help you gather the information your vet needs to make the best decisions.
Wound care
Wounds are stressful because they look dramatic and because horse’s legs are not forgiving places to heal. The good news is that first aid is mostly about three things: safety, cleanliness and knowing when you need a vet now.
First rule: decide if it’s an emergency
Call your vet urgently if:
- Bleeding will not stop
- The wound is deep, gaping, or near a joint or tendon
- Your horse is very lame, distressed or non weight bearing
- There is a puncture wound, especially to the foot
- You can see something that looks like tendon, bone or synovial fluid
If you’re at all unsure, err on the side of caution!
Step 1: make it safe
Catch your horse, keep them still and protect yourself. If you can, move to a clean, well-lit area. Put gloves on if you have them. (This is also why a basic first aid kit, with essentials like bandages, antiseptics, wound dressings and scissors, matters.)
Step 2: control bleeding
If there’s active bleeding, apply firm pressure with a clean dressing or cloth. Don’t keep lifting it to peek. If blood is soaking through, add more layers on top rather than removing the original pad. If bleeding continues, contact your vet.
Step 3: clean gently, do not scrub
Rinse the wound with clean water or saline if you have it. The goal is to remove dirt and let your vet see what they’re dealing with. Avoid harsh scrubbing, powders or random creams. Keeping things simple is usually safer.
Step 4: cover it if it needs protecting
Some cuts are best left open, but if the wound is in a place that will get dirty, or if your vet has advised covering, dress it properly.
Place a dressing pad over the wound, hold it with a soft bandage, add padding like cotton wool or clean gamgee, then secure with an outer bandage. Incorrect dressing can make things worse, so ask your vet to show you if you’re not confident.
Step 5: keep an eye on swelling & lameness
Heat, swelling and increasing lameness after a wound are signals to take seriously. Cold hosing can help with swelling as a first step, but it should sit alongside veterinary advice, not instead of it.
Step 6: think about tetanus & timing
Wounds are one of the moments when vaccination status really matters. If you don’t know when your horse last had a tetanus booster, tell your vet.
A calm owner check list
Before you call your vet – or whilst you’re waiting – it’s useful to gather:
- A quick photo and a short video clip
- Where it is and roughly how big it is
- Whether bleeding is controlled
- Your horse’s temperature if you know how to take it
- Tetanus vaccination date if you have it
Understandably you’re worried and that’s normal. But, if you can make notes and take photos and videos, it means your your vet can triage properly and also helps you to feel less helpless.
If there’s one message to hold onto, it’s this: first aid is not about fixing the problem on the yard. It’s about protecting your horse, preventing contamination and giving your vet the clearest possible starting point.




