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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKBritish Eventing Refunds: Ballot Dates And Waitlists10 min read Last updated: January 2026 Stone bruises, surprise ballots, or a washed-out weekend can derail your start and dent your season budget. Learn exactly how to keep more: withdraw before the ballot date for a full refund (premium included); after it, refunds only if your spot is replaced, minus admin + VAT; abandoned events return your entry minus the 14.8% premium. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Calendar Key Dates What To Do: Add the ballot date, entries-closing date and any cert deadline (e.g. 7pm Monday) to your phone with alerts. Review them when you enter. Why It Matters: Hitting these cut-offs protects your refund. Common Mistake: Relying on memory and missing deadlines by hours. Area: Pre-Ballot Withdrawal What To Do: Withdraw in writing before the ballot date via the official email/portal and include all entry details. Act as soon as plans change. Why It Matters: You get a full refund including the abandonment premium. Common Mistake: Delaying and slipping past the ballot date. Area: After Ballot & Waitlist What To Do: If withdrawing post-ballot, ask to remain on the waitlist and request confirmation when your slot is replaced. Follow up politely. Why It Matters: Refunds post-ballot are paid only if your place is filled, minus admin and VAT. Common Mistake: Assuming a refund without a replacement or ignoring final 48-hour rules. Area: Before Entries Close What To Do: If you must pull out, do it before entries close to trigger common 100% refunds; check for any card charge deductions. Why It Matters: Many venues guarantee full refunds pre-close. Common Mistake: Confusing entries close with the ballot date and missing both. Area: Vet/Medical Certificates What To Do: Get a dated cert naming horse/rider and event dates; email it by the organisers deadline (e.g. 7pm Monday) using a prepared template. Why It Matters: Usually secures a refund of the entry less an admin fee. Common Mistake: Sending the cert late or without required details. Area: Abandonment Refunds What To Do: Expect entry back minus the 14.8% abandonment premium when events cancel for insured reasons; allow 2142 days for processing. Why It Matters: Sets clear expectations and reduces chasing. Common Mistake: Demanding the non-refundable abandonment premium. Area: Event-Specific Policies What To Do: Read and screenshot the live schedules refund terms; note admin fees, VAT, 48-hour rules and any FEI differences. Why It Matters: Organisers can offer more generous terms than BE minimums. Common Mistake: Assuming BE minimums apply exactly at every event. Area: Formal Withdrawal Method What To Do: Use the official email/portal only; include rider, horse, class, entry reference and reason if required; request written acknowledgement. Why It Matters: Makes your withdrawal count and starts the refund clock. Common Mistake: Phoning or messaging on WhatsApp and thinking its official. In This Guide What refund can you expect before and after the ballot date? How do vet or medical certificates affect refunds? What happens if the event is abandoned or cancelled? Do policies vary between events? How to withdraw correctly and get paid quickly Budgeting and gear while you wait for refunds Common mistakes to avoid Eventing plans can change in a heartbeat a stone bruise, a weather warning, a ballot you didnt expect. Knowing exactly what refund youre due (and how to claim it fast) can save you real money over a busy UK season.Key takeaway: Withdraw before the ballot date for a full refund including the abandonment premium; after the ballot date youre refunded only if your entry is replaced from the waitlist, minus an admin fee and VAT. If an event is abandoned for insured reasons, youll get your entry back minus the 14.8% abandonment premium.What refund can you expect before and after the ballot date?Withdrawals made before the ballot date receive a full refund including the abandonment premium; after the ballot date, refunds are only paid if your place is replaced from the waitlist and are subject to an admin fee plus VAT. This is the British Eventing (BE) minimum standard, as summarised by the Horse & Hound guide.In practice, that means: Before the ballot date: Full refund of your entry and the abandonment insurance premium if you withdraw correctly and on time. After the ballot date: A refund of your entry (and premium) only if your place is filled from the waitlist; an admin fee applies (often quoted around 13 plus VAT in BE summaries). Organisers can set their own admin fee as long as it meets or improves on the BE minimum.Some organisers publish clearer, often more generous terms on their schedules. For example, the Ely Eventing team state: Entries that are correctly withdrawn prior to ballot date will be refunded in full; entries withdrawn after the ballot date will only be refunded in the event that they are replaced from a waitlist, less a 12 admin fee (Ely Eventing refund policy).Separately to ballot dates, many centres also specify before entries close as a full-refund point. The Scottish National Equestrian Centre confirms 100% of the entry fee is refunded on withdrawals before entries close a useful benchmark that reflects common practice across the UK.Quick tip: Add the ballot date and entries-closing date to your phone calendar the moment you enter. Missing either by a few hours is the number-one reason riders lose refund eligibility.How do vet or medical certificates affect refunds?If your vet or doctors certificate is received by 7pm on the Monday before the competition, you typically receive a refund of the entry fee less an admin charge (often 12); after that cut-off, refunds depend on whether your place is filled from the waitlist. This timing is clearly stated by organisers such as Ely Eventing.Heres how to make it work for you: Act fast: Ask your vet/GP to date the certificate and state the horse/rider name, event dates, and reason for withdrawal. Email it to the organiser by the published deadline (e.g. 7pm Monday before the event). Expect an admin fee: Schedules often quote around 12 for processing, with VAT applied where relevant. Late-stage withdrawals: Many organisers, including Musketeer Events, make no refunds in the final 48 hours before start unless your entry is replaced.Pro tip: Keep a ready-to-send email template with your horses details, entry reference, and contact number. Attach a clear scan/photo of the certificate and send before the stated deadline to avoid debate.While youre managing minor knocks and niggles, smart horsecare helps you get back on track quickly. At Just Horse Riders, our riders reach for supportive horse care supplements and tidy-up essentials from our grooming collection to keep the coat and musculature in top order for your next start.What happens if the event is abandoned or cancelled?When a BE event is abandoned for insured reasons, youre refunded 100% of your entry fee minus the 14.8% abandonment insurance premium included at entry. This is the BE standard described for competitors by the Event Horse Owners Association (EHOA).Abandonment is a reality of UK eventing, especially in wet and windy months. BE requires events to include an abandonment insurance premium in the entry price to protect riders against total cancellation. As the EHOA summary puts it:If an event is forced to abandon for reasons covered under the abandonment insurance, you will be refunded your entry fee minus the abandonment premium.If abandonment happens mid-competition, the BE rule book and event schedule guide whats refunded. The Horse & Hound explainer notes that non-starters are refunded, while starters may still receive points/prizes based on where the competition stopped. Stabling, start fees and late fees may be refunded at the organisers discretion, so always check the specific schedule.Timeframes matter too. Many organisers aim to process abandonment-related refunds quickly, but allow up to 21 days from the intended event date, and up to six weeks in complex cases where third-party recoveries are involved (as per Musketeer Events policy).Weather-washed training weeks are a great time to keep your horse comfortable and progressing. Consider waterproof turnout rugs for wet UK training and a tough branded option from WeatherBeeta to protect your investment while the calendar resets.Do policies vary between events?Yes organisers must at least meet the British Eventing minimum refund policy, but many publish more generous terms on their schedules. Always read the events live schedule to know your exact rights.British Eventings position is clear:Refund policies may vary between events but they must follow at least the terms set out in the British Eventing rule book. Organisers are allowed to offer terms more beneficial to competitors if they wish to do so and each events specific refund policies can be found on their respective schedules.What does that look like in real life? Musketeer Events: Withdrawals before closing entries (or 21 days prior for FEI) get a full refund minus card charges; once entries close, refunds only if replaced from the waitlist, minus a 20 plus VAT admin fee; and no refunds made in the last 48 hours unless replaced (policy PDF). Ely Eventing: Vet/medical certificates accepted until 7pm Monday before the competition for a refund of the entry fee less a 12 admin fee, and full pre-ballot refunds (policy page). Scottish National Equestrian Centre (SNEC): 100% refund before entries close (policy page).Quick tip: Screenshots save stress. Grab the current Withdrawals/Refunds section from the event schedule when you enter so you can quote it back if needed.How to withdraw correctly and get paid quicklyUse the organisers official channel (usually email or the entry platform) and meet the published deadlines; refunds are typically processed within 21 days of the event date or sooner after confirmation. Phone calls or WhatsApp messages often dont count as formal withdrawals.Follow this simple workflow to protect your refund: Withdraw in writing via the official email or entry portal shown on the schedule. Include rider name, horse name, class, entry reference, and reason for withdrawal if required. Beat the clock: Aim to be ahead of the ballot date or entries-closing date. If using a vet/medical certificate, hit the stated deadline (e.g. 7pm Monday before). Watch the waitlist: After the ballot date, your refund depends on a replacement being found. Politely ask the secretary to confirm when your slot is filled. Expect admin fees and VAT: BE minimums allow for reasonable admin deductions. These vary by organiser but are declared on the schedule. Track the timeline: Many organisers commit to making refunds within 21 days of the intended event date; abandonment cases can take longer if insurers are involved.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend using any unexpected free weekend to refresh your kit for the next run. Updating your show wardrobe with durable, practical womens competition clothing helps you roll straight into your replacement start.Budgeting and gear while you wait for refundsPlan for the 14.8% abandonment premium to be non-refundable on insured cancellations and for organiser admin fees on late withdrawals; use any downtime to prep your horse and kit so youre ready to go as soon as a new date opens.Smart planning pays off across a UK season: Weather-proof training: Keep your horse comfortable and in work with well-fitted turnout rugs and trusted options from brands like WeatherBeeta. Condition and shine: A tidy horse is quicker to show-ring ready; stock up on brushes and shampoos from our grooming collection. Travel protection: For rescheduled runs, dont forget travel boots and protection from our horse boots & bandages range. Performance support: Maintain topline and recovery with proven options in our supplements range, including rider favourites from LeMieux for saddle pads and accessories that stand up to event-day demands. Safer hacking while you wait: Keep fitness ticking over with roadwork and use bright, weatherproof hi-vis rider gear to be seen. Stretch your budget: Missed a weekend? Make the most of it with savings in our Secret Tack Room clearance.Pro tip: Ringfence a small season buffer to cover admin fees, non-refundable premiums, and card charges that way a late withdrawal wont disrupt your training or competition plans.Common mistakes to avoidThe biggest refund losses come from missing deadlines, withdrawing informally, and misunderstanding waitlist rules. Avoid these common pitfalls: Missing the ballot or entries-closing date: Put the dates in your calendar the day you enter. Withdrawing by phone or WhatsApp: Most organisers require email or portal submissions; otherwise it may not count. Ignoring the vet/medical cert deadline: Aim for submission by 7pm on the Monday before the event where stated. Confusing BE minimums with the event schedule: Schedules can be more generous or include specific admin fees and VAT you must accept when you enter. Forgetting the 48-hour rule: Some organisers make no refunds in the final 48 hours unless your place is filled. Not tracking the waitlist: After the ballot date, your refund often depends on being replaced. Stay politely proactive. Assuming the premium is refundable: The 14.8% abandonment insurance premium is deducted on insured cancellations.Use downtime to sharpen your routine and prep your kit from tidy tails to well-fitting saddle pads so youre primed for the next green light.FAQsHow long after cancellation do I get my refund?Most organisers process within 21 days of the intended event date. For abandonment claims involving third parties, allow up to six weeks where stated (see Musketeer Events policy).Do I get a full refund if I withdraw with a vet or doctors certificate after the ballot date?You typically receive a refund of the entry fee less an admin fee (e.g. 12) if the certificate is received by the organisers deadline, such as 7pm on the Monday before the competition (Ely Eventing). If your place is filled from the waitlist, you may receive a full entry refund less any stated admin fee per the schedule and BE minimums summarised by Horse & Hound.What if the event is abandoned after some classes or phases have started?Non-starters should be refunded; starters may still receive points/prizes per the BE rule book and event schedule. Stabling or late fees are at the organisers discretion, as explained in the Horse & Hound guide.Can I transfer my entry to a postponed date instead of taking a refund?Where offered by the organiser, yes but you must act within the stated window (often only a few working days) after the postponement notice. Check the event schedule for exact terms.Is the abandonment insurance premium refundable if the event cancels?No. If the event is cancelled for insured reasons, youre refunded your entry fee minus the abandonment premium typically 14.8% as set out by the EHOA summary of BE policy.What if I withdraw before entries close?You should receive a full refund of your entry fee; many venues confirm 100% pre-close, as shown by the SNEC policy. Some organisers deduct small card processing charges check the schedule.How do FEI entries differ?For FEI classes, many organisers require withdrawal before entries close or at least 21 days before the event for a full refund minus card charges; after that, refunds are usually only if replaced, with no refunds in the final 48 hours unless your slot is filled (see Musketeer Events).If you remember just three things: withdraw in writing before the ballot date where possible, send any vet/medical certificates by the published deadline, and always read the events refund schedule. Do that, and youll keep more of your season budget working for you and be ready to roll when the next start time drops. Need a refresh while you wait? Browse weather-ready winter turnout rugs or brighten your training miles with our hi-vis rider gear so you arrive prepared for your very next run. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. 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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKSelenium For UK Horses: Testing, Doses And Limits11 min read Last updated: January 2026 If your horse feels stiff after work or bloods show a CK spike, selenium could be the missing piece. This guide shows how to test, calculate safe doses, and choose UK-ready supplements to protect muscle and avoid toxicityaiming for 0.10.3 mg/kg across the total diet. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Test Se + CK What To Do: Ask your vet for whole-blood or serum selenium with CK/AST and vitamin E. Re-test after ration changes and at end-winter and mid-summer. Why It Matters: Confirms status and muscle impact so you supplement precisely, not by guesswork. Common Mistake: Supplementing before testing or relying on a single off-season result. Area: Pair with vitamin E What To Do: Test vitamin E alongside selenium and, if low, correct both using measured products. Why It Matters: Selenium and vitamin E work together in antioxidant defence and deficiencies often co-exist. Common Mistake: Raising selenium alone while leaving vitamin E low. Area: Set diet target What To Do: Aim for 0.1 mg/kg selenium in the total diet at rest, rising toward 0.3 mg/kg for harder work or broodmares. Why It Matters: Matching intake to workload supports muscle protection and performance. Common Mistake: Using a fixed daily dose regardless of work level or forage result. Area: Avoid toxicity What To Do: Keep dietary selenium well below ~2 mg/kg of any feed, and audit all sources before adding more. Why It Matters: Over-supplementation risks hoof and coat problems and more serious toxicity. Common Mistake: Stacking a balancer, lick and performance supplement that all contain selenium. Area: Choose supplements What To Do: Pick targeted selenium (yeast or sodium selenite), selenium+E, or a balanced multi-mineral based on tests and workload; dose only to fill the gap. Why It Matters: The right format simplifies accurate dosing and avoids duplication. Common Mistake: Buying on price or brand without checking form, strength and overlap with existing feeds. Area: Wintersummer plan What To Do: In winter, analyse hay and run bloods; in summer competition, consider the upper range (0.3 mg/kg) and re-test if stiffness or CK stay high. Why It Matters: UK forage is selenium-poor in winter and oxidative demand rises with summer work. Common Mistake: Keeping the same dose year-round despite big changes in forage and workload. Area: Spot deficiency What To Do: Watch for stiffness, crampy feel, poor recovery, or raised CK; in foals, act fast on weakness/WMD signs and call your vet. Why It Matters: Early action prevents performance dips and reduces risk of nutritional myopathy. Common Mistake: Dismissing recurrent high CK as fitness without checking selenium and vitamin E. Area: Calculate daily dose What To Do: Weigh feeds/forage, convert label selenium (mg/kg) to daily mg by multiplying by actual kg fed, and compare with 23 g/kg BW/day (11.5 mg/day at 500 kg). Why It Matters: Simple maths turns labels into accurate, safe dosing. Common Mistake: Assuming mg/kg equals per-day intake or guessing from unweighed nets and scoops. In This Guide Why selenium matters for UK horses How much selenium your horse needs (and the safe upper limit) Spotting deficiency and when to test Supplement the smart way: forms, doses and label checks Seasonal UK plan: winter yards and summer competition Worked examples for a 500 kg horse When low selenium becomes disease: white muscle disease What to buy (and how to choose) from Just Horse Riders Is your horse stiff after work, or have bloods shown a spike in CK? In the UK, one quiet culprit is often selenium a small but vital trace mineral that our soils simply dont supply in abundance.Key takeaway: UK forages usually contain only around 0.1 mg/kg selenium, so test first, then supplement to achieve 0.10.3 mg/kg across the total diet and never exceed roughly 2 mg/kg of feed to avoid toxicity.Why selenium matters for UK horsesUK soils and forages are typically low in selenium (around 0.1 mg/kg), so many horses need selenium added to the diet to meet requirements. This shortfall is well documented across the UK and Ireland, especially in coastal and northern areas.Selenium is an essential part of the antioxidant enzyme glutathione peroxidase, which helps protect muscle cells from exercise-induced oxidative damage. Low status is closely linked with muscle problems, particularly when vitamin E is also low. As the laboratory team at Liphook Equine Hospital explains: selenium is an essential component of the antioxidant enzyme glutathione peroxidase manifestation of deficiency may be affected by vitamin E status (Liphook Equine Hospital).UK soils, and the plants that grow in them, are generally low in selenium As a result it is often necessary to add selenium to the diet via hard feed or supplements. Horse & Hound feeding expertsIf your horse is on pasture or hay-only rations especially through wet winters when grass growth is limited its sensible to check selenium status before the competition season ramps up. When you do need to top up, choose targeted options from our curated range of selenium and antioxidant supplements.How much selenium your horse needs (and the safe upper limit)Most mature horses need around 23 micrograms of selenium per kg bodyweight daily (11.5 mg/day for a 500 kg horse), rising towards 0.3 mg/kg in the total diet for horses in hard work; intakes above roughly 2 mg/kg of feed risk toxicity.Two ways of expressing requirement are commonly used:By bodyweight: 23 micrograms/kg BW/day for mature horses (11.5 mg/day at 500 kg), per Liphook Equine Hospital.By dietary concentration: 0.1 mg/kg in the total diet for inactive horses, rising to 0.3 mg/kg for exercising horses and broodmares, per Horse & Hound.These figures align well in typical UK feeding scenarios. Remember the safety boundary too: toxicity becomes a risk when the dietary concentration exceeds about 2 mg/kg of feed (Liphook Equine Hospital). Thats why testing first, then supplementing carefully, is non-negotiable.Because selenium and vitamin E work together in antioxidant defence, its often wise to correct both where needed. Youll find combined options in our supplements collection to simplify dosing while you fine-tune your horses ration for training.Spotting deficiency and when to testDeficiency typically shows as muscle stiffness, weakness, poor performance and elevated CK; UK vets confirm status with whole-blood selenium and CK/AST testing, and hair analysis can indicate longer-term exposure.In adults, you may see a horse that feels crampy under saddle, struggles to recover from work, or repeatedly returns elevated CK on routine bloods. In youngsters, deficiency can progress to nutritional myopathy (white muscle disease, WMD). Studies report that low serum selenium is strongly associated with WMD in foals, with 7 of 8 affected foals under 30 days old showing low serum Se (Equine Vet J Suppl via PubMed).For diagnosis of selenium-related myopathies, the Merck Veterinary Manual notes a pattern of moderately to markedly increased CK and AST alongside low whole-blood selenium (<0.07 mcg/mL). Given how often selenium and vitamin E deficiencies co-exist, ask your vet to check both together this is routine in BEVA-aligned UK practice.How to test wisely:Whole-blood selenium or serum selenium reflect current status; pair with CK/AST to assess muscle impact (Liphook Equine Hospital).Hair analysis provides a picture of exposure over time and can complement bloods (Cawood).Re-test after any ration changes or if stiffness persists into the season, particularly if youre targeting the 0.3 mg/kg diet level for competition (Horse & Hound).Quick tip: If your horse is stabled through OctoberMarch and relies on hay, pencil in selenium and vitamin E bloods at the end of winter and again mid-summer to catch seasonal swings.Supplement the smart way: forms, doses and label checksSupplement only after forage or blood analysis confirms low status, aim for 0.10.3 mg/kg of the total diet, and avoid stacking multiple selenium sources that could push intake upwards.In UK conditions, its common to add selenium via compound feed, a standalone selenium product, or a balanced multi-mineral. Typical options and guide prices include:Targeted selenium supplements (often yeast-based/organic or sodium selenite forms): around 1030 for a 13 month supply.Vitamin E supplements to pair with selenium: around 1540 per tub.All-round multi-vitamin/mineral buckets or licks with selenium: around 2050 convenient for yard horses through winter.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend starting with a vet conversation and a feed audit. If you need to top up, browse our trusted NAF range and wider supplements selection for targeted selenium or selenium-with-vitamin-E options that fit your workload and budget.Pro tip: Check every label on your yard compound feed, balancer, lick, and any performance supplement. Add up the selenium from all sources against your target (0.10.3 mg/kg of the total diet) and the safety ceiling (about 2 mg/kg of feed). When in doubt, bring the tags to your vet or nutritionist for a quick double-check.Seasonal UK plan: winter yards and summer competitionHorses stabled on hay through UK winters face higher deficiency risk, while those competing in summer often need the higher end of the range (0.3 mg/kg of the diet) due to increased oxidative stress.Winter (OctoberMarch): Forage-based rations dominate, and UK hays often sit around 0.1 mg/kg selenium sometimes less. Combine routine bloods with a forage analysis, then decide whether to add a measured dose supplement or a balanced mineral bucket. Keep the horse comfortable in cold, wet spells with appropriately weighted stable rugs and, for turnout days, weatherproof winter turnout rugs so you can maintain a steady exercise plan while you address diet.Spring/Summer (competition season): As you build work on varied terrain, oxidative demand rises. Many eventers and show horses target the upper end of the dietary range (0.3 mg/kg) during peak season (Horse & Hound). If stiffness or CK remains high, speak to your vet about re-testing and, where appropriate, adjusting both selenium and vitamin E intake. When hacking out to condition safely, add hi-vis for rider and horse so you can train consistently whatever the light levels.Throughout the year: Keep a simple log of workload, diet changes, and any muscle signs. Small, timely adjustments and proof from bloods beat guesswork every time.Worked examples for a 500 kg horseAt rest, a 500 kg horse typically needs roughly 11.5 mg selenium per day, which UK forage alone may not reliably supply; in moderate-to-hard work, youll usually aim the total diet toward 0.3 mg/kg.Here are practical scenarios to show how the numbers fit together. Always adapt to your horses actual intake and test results.Rest/light work on hay only: If your horse eats 10 kg of hay (as-fed) at 0.1 mg/kg selenium, thats 1.0 mg/day near the lower end of requirement. If analysis shows your hay at 0.05 mg/kg, thats only 0.5 mg/day, so a small top-up (e.g., 0.51.0 mg/day) brings you into the 11.5 mg/day range for a 500 kg horse (Liphook Equine Hospital).Moderate work on forage plus compound feed: Suppose hay provides 0.8 mg/day and your performance feed adds 0.8 mg/day. Total 1.6 mg/day adequate for many. If CK remains elevated or work increases, you might edge closer to the dietary concentration of 0.3 mg/kg of the total diet (which, at a 10 kg total daily intake, equates to 3 mg/day), under vet guidance (Horse & Hound).Safety check: Whatever the daily total, ensure the concentration in any single feed component doesnt exceed roughly 2 mg/kg of feed the toxicity threshold quoted by Liphook Equine Hospital. This is why we avoid layering multiple selenium-rich products without counting them up.Quick tip: Weigh feeds and forages. Labels often state selenium as mg/kg thats per kilogram of that product, not per day. Multiply by how much you actually feed to get the daily mg figure.When low selenium becomes disease: white muscle diseaseWhite muscle disease (WMD) in foals is linked to low selenium and/or vitamin E, with affected foals showing low serum selenium and high CK; adults can show selenium-associated myopathies but severe WMD is rarer.Retrospective data in the UK and internationally show a clear association between selenium/vitamin E deficiency and nutritional myopathy in foals and young horses (Equine Vet J Suppl). One study reported low serum selenium (<1.26 micromol/L) in 7 of 8 affected foals under 30 days old (PubMed), while the Merck Veterinary Manual highlights the diagnostic pairing of markedly increased CK/AST with low whole-blood selenium (<0.07 mcg/mL).Broodmares and youngstock on UK pastures are therefore priority candidates for proactive testing and balanced supplementation. If your vet suspects nutritional myopathy, expect bloods, a full diet review, and a careful plan to correct selenium and vitamin E while managing exercise.What to buy (and how to choose) from Just Horse RidersChoose a targeted selenium or selenium-with-vitamin-E supplement when tests show a shortfall, or a balanced multi-mineral bucket for yard horses that need a steady trickle of trace minerals over winter; always review labels to avoid doubling up.Popular choices with our UK customers include:Targeted selenium (yeast-based or sodium selenite) for precise top-ups 1030/month depending on dose.Vitamin E powders or liquids to pair with selenium for muscle support typically 1540.Multi-vitamin and mineral buckets/licks for stabled herds through winter 2050 for convenient maintenance.Explore proven options in our supplements collection, including trusted formulations from the NAF range. While you refine training loads during rehab or conditioning blocks, supportive lower-limb protection from our horse boots and bandages can help you keep work consistent as diet changes bed in.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend a simple three-step routine: test, top up, and re-test. Its the fastest, safest route to better muscle comfort and performance.Conclusion: test first, supplement precisely, and ride the resultsBecause UK soils are selenium-poor, many horses benefit from careful supplementation but only once you know their baseline. Work with your vet to check selenium, CK/AST and vitamin E, then use measured products to reach 0.10.3 mg/kg in the total diet without breaching safety limits. Keep training consistent with season-appropriate turnout and stabling, and youll feel the difference in way of going and recovery.FAQsCan selenium deficiency cause tying-up or high CK in UK horses?Yes. Selenium deficiency is associated with elevated CK and nutritional myopathy; while severe white muscle disease is more common in foals, adults can show selenium-associated myopathies with raised CK and poor performance (Equine Vet J Suppl via PubMed; Merck Veterinary Manual).How often should I test selenium in the UK?Twice yearly is practical for many yards: at the end of winter (hay-heavy diets) and mid-summer (peak work). Test sooner if you notice stiffness, poor recovery, or persistently high CK/AST. UK vets routinely run whole-blood/serum selenium and CK/AST, with vitamin E alongside (Liphook Equine Hospital).What are the signs of selenium toxicity, and what intake is unsafe?Over-supplementation can cause brittle or cracked hooves and hair loss, among other issues. Toxicity risk rises when dietary concentration exceeds about 2 mg/kg of feed, so count all sources feed, balancer, lick, and supplements before you add more (Liphook Equine Hospital).Is yeast-based (organic) selenium better than inorganic forms?Both organic (yeast-based) and inorganic (e.g., sodium selenite) forms can be effective when used appropriately. Prioritise accurate dosing and proof from bloods; choose the format your vet or nutritionist recommends, and avoid duplicating across products. Browse both options in our selenium supplements.Should I give vitamin E with selenium?Often, yes. Selenium and vitamin E work together in antioxidant defence, and deficiencies frequently co-occur in horses with muscle issues. Many UK vets test and correct both simultaneously (Liphook Equine Hospital). You can find paired products via our NAF and wider supplements ranges.Will a mineral lick be enough through winter?Sometimes, but not always. Intake from licks varies by horse and herd dynamics, so a measured supplement often provides more reliable dosing for stabled horses on hay. If you use a lick, account for its selenium when calculating your total intake to avoid stacking.My horse is on a performance feed can I still add a selenium supplement?Maybe, but only after you do the maths. Check the feeds selenium (mg/kg), multiply by your actual daily feed amount, add forage contribution, then compare with your target (0.10.3 mg/kg of the total diet) and the safety ceiling. If in doubt, ask your vet; if needed, choose a small, precise top-up from our supplements so you dont overdo it. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop SupplementsShop NAF SupplementsShop Stable RugsShop Turnout RugsShop Boots & Bandages0 Comments 0 Shares 87 Views
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WWW.JUSTHORSERIDERS.CO.UKTreeless Saddle Vs Bareback Pad: What To Use For UK Hacks10 min read Last updated: January 2026 Saddle not fitting or your horse changing shape before your next UK hack? Heres a clear, riderfriendly guide to choosing treeless vs barebackwhen to use stirrups (choose treeless with a channelled pad), and key limits (aim under 80 kg; keep bareback to short, nostirrup sessions) so you ride comfortably and safely. Quick Summary Short on time? Here are the key takeaways. Area: Setup Choice What To Do: For hacks with stirrups, use a well-designed treeless saddle with a purpose-made pad. Keep basic bareback pads for short, light, no-stirrup sessions only. Why It Matters: The right setup protects the spine and keeps you secure on varied UK bridleways. Common Mistake: Using a bareback pad with stirrups or for long rides. Area: Rider Weight What To Do: Stay within the maker's weight rating; as a rule, aim under 80 kg for most treeless models. Ride sympathetically and avoid long rising-trot sets or jumping. Why It Matters: Exceeding limits compresses materials and creates pressure over the backbone. Common Mistake: Ignoring ratings and assuming all treeless saddles suit any rider size. Area: Pad & Shims What To Do: Always use a treeless pad with a clear centre channel and firm foam inserts. Add or remove shims to keep the saddle level and the channel free. Why It Matters: Correct padding spreads load and keeps pressure off the spinous processes. Common Mistake: Using a standard numnah or thin foam that collapses under stirrup load. Area: Attachments Check What To Do: Choose saddles with broad stirrup attachment plates and a girth system that spreads pressure laterally. Inspect these areas regularly for wear and placement. Why It Matters: Wide load paths prevent pressure points under your seat bones and girth. Common Mistake: Riding with narrow webbing attachments that concentrate force. Area: Mounting & Stability What To Do: Mount from a block, tighten the girth in stages, and recheck after a few minutes. Use targeted shims to prevent tipping or sliding on round backs. Why It Matters: Minimising lateral torque and fine-tuning balance reduces saddle slip and skin rubs. Common Mistake: Hauling up from the ground and over-tightening once, then never rechecking. Area: Back Checks What To Do: After every ride, palpate along the spine, lift hair to spot rubs, and note heat or tenderness. Log findings and adjust shims, change pads, or stop use if issues appear. Why It Matters: Early detection prevents small irritations becoming soreness or injury. Common Mistake: Relying only on sweat patterns without feeling for heat or flinching. Area: Visibility & Gear What To Do: Wear an approved helmet and hi-viz front and back; pair with supportive riding boots and grippy jodhpurs or breeches. In winter, manage coats and use suitable rugs to keep contact areas clean and dry. Why It Matters: Proper kit improves safety, visibility and pad contact in changeable UK weather. Common Mistake: Skipping hi-viz on roadwork or riding in slippy footwear. Area: Light Bareback What To Do: Limit bareback pads to short, easy sessions without stirrups, such as cool-downs or lead-rein rides for small children. Pick a grippy surface and safe footing. Why It Matters: Bareback pads offer minimal spinal protection and can rub under sustained load. Common Mistake: Adding stirrups to a bareback pad or using it for long hacks. In This Guide Treeless vs bareback: whats the real difference? Who should ride treeless and when to choose bareback Weight limits and safety Pads and fit: how to protect the spine Managing slide and stability on round backs Spotting problems early: checks after every ride Hacking out in the UK: practical kit and prep Ataglance recommendations If your saddle doesnt fit or your horse has changed shape, its tempting to reach for a bareback pad or try treeless for your next hack. The right choice can keep your horse comfortable and your riding secure the wrong one can concentrate pressure over the spine.Bottom line: for hacks with stirrups on UK bridleways, choose a well-designed treeless saddle with the correct pad; keep bareback pads for very light, no-stirrup rides only.Treeless vs bareback: whats the real difference?Treeless saddles are not just glorified bareback pads they add spinal protection, stirrup attachments and rider support, while basic bareback pads do not. High-quality treeless designs are used successfully in demanding disciplines, whereas bareback pads are for short, light, no-stirrup sessions.As Julie from Action Rider Tack puts it:Isnt a treeless saddle just a glorified bareback pad? The simple answer is, No. A treeless saddle is made to protect the horses spine, comes with stirrups, provides rider support, and is used in disciplines like 100-mile endurance rides. Action Rider Tack expert videoThat added protection comes from structure and materials: broad stirrup and girth attachments that spread load, flexible panels and mandatory use of a purpose-designed pad. By contrast, many bareback pads are little more than a grippy cover with minimal foam fine for balance work and young handlers on the lead rein, but not for weight-bearing with stirrups.Its worth acknowledging a different view from master saddler Jochen Schleese, who argues that without a rigid tree you cant fully protect the spine or the riders posture:Without a tree, a bareback pad/treeless saddle cannot protect the horses spine, support the curvature of the riders spine, and be comfortable for both... The result is that all the weight is on the forehand. Schleese SaddleryIn practice, UK riders report good results with carefully chosen treeless setups for hacking particularly on wide, round types where treed options are tricky but its crucial to choose well and pad correctly.Who should ride treeless and when to choose barebackPick a treeless saddle if you need stirrups and better spinal protection for general hacking; reserve a grippy bareback pad for very light riders, no stirrups and short, easy rides.For everyday UK pleasure riding on varied bridleways, a treeless design with proper stirrup bars and a channelled pad gives the horses spine a fighting chance on uneven ground. UK forum users often note freer movement in horses who were previously sore in traditional saddles, especially over rolling, rutted tracks and in stopstart traffic work typical of British hacking.Bareback pads come into their own for very light use for example, five-minute cool-downs, balance sessions in walk, or tiny riders (36 years old) on the lead rein. For youngsters, choose a small, grippy pad without stirrups to avoid the hazard of dangling leathers and hard stirrups around little legs. In wet UK winters, grippy surfaces also help stability when youre nipping round the fields at the livery yard.Quick tip: Whatever you choose for hacking, prioritise visibility. Pair your setup with hiviz riding wear so drivers and cyclists can see you in our changeable British weather.Weight limits and safetyMost treeless saddles cope best with rider weights under 80 kg; heavier riders risk compressing materials and creating pressure over the backbone, especially in rising trot or over fences.Natural Horse World summarises it clearly:The main thing to look for in any treeless design is that the stirrup attachment... is broad enough to spread the weight... Always use a treeless saddle pad that has a channel down the centre... Most treeless saddles can only cope with a rider weight of less than 80kg. Natural Horse WorldThere is more conservative advice out there suggesting as low as around 45 kg (c.100 lb) for some pleasure-riding treeless or bareback setups. The practical takeaway is the same: check the manufacturers stated weight rating, ride sympathetically, and inspect your horses back after every ride. Avoid prolonged rising trot, schooling sessions or jumping in minimal or highly compressible setups thats when materials pack down and pressure peaks.Pro tip: If youre close to the upper weight guidance or doing longer hacks, spread force further with a pad that has high-density foam inserts and a defined spinal channel. Its cheap insurance for your horses back.Pads and fit: how to protect the spineUse a treeless pad with a central channel and firm foam shims, and choose saddles with broad stirrup and girth attachments to distribute load away from the backbone.Treeless protection lives or dies on contact area. Look for:Broad stirrup attachment plates that sit over a wide area of the back, not a narrow webbing point that can dig in under your seat bones.A girth system that spreads pressure laterally, not two tiny billets pulling from a single, central point.A purpose-designed pad with a clearly defined centre channel (no pressure on spinous processes) and high-density foam or similar inserts. Shims let you fine-tune to your horses current musculature.For horses that change shape through the UK seasons we see this constantly when turnout increases in spring or rugs come off after winter those shims are invaluable. Add or remove to keep the saddle level, the channel clear, and the panels bearing evenly. If youre not sure, take a photo before and after your ride and check sweat patterns: symmetrical, even dampness is your friend; random dry spots can flag pressure points.Quick tip: Make back checks part of your grooming routine. A soft brush over the loins and along the longissimus helps you spot heat, swelling or flinching early. Keep a well-stocked kit from our grooming collection in the tack room so its easy to do every time.Managing slide and stability on round backsOn wide or round horses, mount from a block and use correct pad shimming to reduce saddle slip, especially in wet British field conditions.Even well-designed treeless saddles can twist or slide on a very round barrel. Help yourself (and your horses skin) with:Mounting from a block rather than the ground youll reduce lateral torque on the girth and keep the pad centred.Checking girth symmetry and firmness after youve walked a few minutes; treeless materials settle and may need a second tweak.Using shims to stabilise the front or rear if the saddle wants to tip. Tiny changes can make a big difference.Choosing a grippy bareback pad for very light, stirrup-free hacks when a saddle just wont sit still but keep durations short and surfaces safe.Pair your setup with footwear that wont slip on wet mounting blocks or yard surfaces. Our range of horse riding boots offers secure tread and ankle support for safe mounts and dismounts, and well-fitted womens jodhpurs and breeches add grip in the saddle without bulk.Spotting problems early: checks after every rideCheck the back after every ride for heat, tenderness, ruffled hair or dry spots, and adjust or stop use at the first sign of soreness.Both treeless saddles and bareback pads can cause trouble if padding is inadequate or compressed. Make these quick checks standard practice when you hack out:Run flat fingers along the spine and muscles either side. Watch for flinching, heat or raised skin.Lift hair to look for rubs, ruffled patches or bald spots forming under stirrup attachment areas.Observe your horse walking off: short or rushed steps, head-tossing when you touch the back, or reluctance to be girthed again can all signal discomfort.Log what you find. If the same spot is warm or dry after several rides, change shims, swap pads, shorten your rides or stop using that setup.Our customers often tell us that a simple post-hack brush-down catches issues a week earlier than theyd otherwise notice. Keep that brush handy in your grooming kit and youll save a lot of guesswork.Hacking out in the UK: practical kit and prepFor UK bridleways, combine a treeless or bareback setup with hiviz, an approved helmet and grippy clothing and boots for safe, visible riding in variable weather.Visibility matters on twisting lanes and shared tracks. Equip yourself with highvisibility gear front and back, and always wear an uptostandard riding helmet. Choose supportive riding boots with defined heels for stirrup safety, and comfortable, non-slip legwear like our womens jodhpurs and breeches.For little riders on the lead rein using a bareback pad without stirrups, kit them out in well-fitting childrens jodhpurs for extra grip and comfort. Keep hacks short, flat and fun.Seasonal note: When winter rolls in and your horse is living out, backs and girth areas stay healthier when you manage coat and rain scald. A correctly weighted rug from our range of turnout rugs helps keep the back dry and clean, improving pad contact and reducing rub risk on wet days.Ataglance recommendationsChoose treeless for stirrup use, keep rider weight under 80 kg, always use a channelled pad with shims, and mount from a block to protect your horses back.Pick treeless (not a basic bareback pad) for hacking with stirrups; look for broad stirrup/girth attachments that spread load.Stay within weight guidance aim under 80 kg for most treeless designs, ride sympathetically and avoid long risingtrot sets or jumping.Use a treeless pad with a centre channel and firm shims; adjust for seasonal changes in condition.Mount from a block and recheck girth after a few minutes, especially on round types and in wet conditions.Keep rides short and stirrupfree if youre using a bareback pad; check the back every time.Make safety nonnegotiable: wear an approved riding helmet and hiviz on all roadwork.At Just Horse Riders, we recommend building these checks into your grooming routine so nothing gets missed your tack, your pad and your horses back all evolve through the year.FAQsIs a treeless saddle just a bareback pad?No. A treeless saddle adds structure to protect the spine, provides stirrup attachments and rider support, and is used successfully in endurance. See the Action Rider Tack expert explanation.Are treeless saddles safe for heavier riders?Most are designed for riders under 80 kg; above that, materials can compress and create pressure over the backbone, particularly in rising trot or over fences. Follow the makers rating, ride considerately, and check the back after every ride.Can bareback pads cause back issues?Yes without adequate padding they can create pressure points and rubs, especially under your seat bones. Keep bareback pads for short, light, nostirrup sessions and inspect for heat, tenderness or ruffled hair afterwards.What pad should I use under a treeless saddle?Use a purpose-made treeless pad with a central channel and high-density foam inserts or shims to keep pressure off the spine and finetune balance. Natural Horse Worlds guidance on treeless saddle features is a good checklist.Do treeless saddles slide on wide or round horses?They can. Mount from a block, tighten girth in stages, and adjust shims for front/rear balance. In very slippery UK winter conditions, keep rides sensible and recheck girth after a few minutes.Are treeless saddles good for horses with sore backs?Many UK riders report improved freedom of movement when switching to a wellsetup treeless on horses that were sore in traditional saddles. The key is correct pad choice, weight management and diligent back checks.What should I wear for safer hacking with treeless or bareback?Wear an approved riding helmet, bright hiviz, supportive riding boots and comfortable, grippy jodhpurs. For children on leadrein bareback pads, choose wellfitting kids jodhpurs and keep sessions short.With the right setup and routine checks, treeless saddles can be a comfortable, practical option for UK hacking and bareback pads can be a fun, lightuse tool. Equip yourself well, listen to your horse, and enjoy the ride. Shop the Essentials Everything mentioned in this guide, ready to browse. Shop Hi-Vis GearShop Riding HelmetsShop Riding BootsShop Jodhpurs & BreechesShop Grooming Kit0 Comments 0 Shares 82 Views
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