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Dufinkle Equestrian clothing, riding wear and much more

Choosing the right stirrup leathers can make a bigger difference to comfort and control than most people think. In the l...
30/05/2026

Choosing the right stirrup leathers can make a bigger difference to comfort and control than most people think. In the latest guide, we break down exactly what size stirrup leathers you need, so you can stop guessing and get your fit right the first time. It’s practical, straightforward advice for UK riders and horse owners who want safe, reliable tack without the hassle. Save yourself time at the yard and get the measurements sorted properly.

https://www.dufinkle.co.uk/blogs/news/what-size-stirrup-leathers-do-i-need

Ever wondered when a fly mask is actually worth using (and when it isn’t)? In our latest guide, we break down the real-w...
29/05/2026

Ever wondered when a fly mask is actually worth using (and when it isn’t)? In our latest guide, we break down the real-world reasons horses may need one—covering timing, conditions and the factors that keep things comfortable and practical in the UK. It’s a straightforward way to make sure you’re not overdoing it, while still helping protect your horse when it matters. If you want a dependable answer for day-to-day yard decisions, this one’s for you.

https://www.dufinkle.co.uk/blogs/news/when-should-horses-wear-fly-masks

Trying to get the right fly mask for your horse doesn’t have to be a gamble. This buying guide walks you through the key...
28/05/2026

Trying to get the right fly mask for your horse doesn’t have to be a gamble. This buying guide walks you through the key things that actually matter—fit, coverage, comfort and durability—so you can choose a mask that protects without rubbing or slipping. It’s written for real UK turnout and yard conditions, with practical pointers to help you avoid common mistakes. If you want a safer, more effective fly defence, this is the guide to use.

https://www.dufinkle.co.uk/blogs/news/fly-mask-buying-guide-for-horses

If you’ve ever worried about safe, controlled grazing, a grass muzzle can be a smart, practical solution—and getting it ...
27/05/2026

If you’ve ever worried about safe, controlled grazing, a grass muzzle can be a smart, practical solution—and getting it right matters. This guide walks you through choosing the right fit and type, what to look for in day-to-day use, and how to keep your horse comfortable while still managing intake. It’s the kind of no-nonsense advice that helps you make safer turnout decisions without the guesswork. Pick up the real-world know-how so you can use a grass muzzle with confidence, every time.

https://www.dufinkle.co.uk/blogs/news/grass-muzzle-guide-safer-grazing

Getting your horse’s girth measurement right makes all the difference to comfort, fit and performance. In our guide, we ...
26/05/2026

Getting your horse’s girth measurement right makes all the difference to comfort, fit and performance. In our guide, we walk you through how to measure girth correctly, when to do it, and what to watch for so you don’t end up with anything too tight or too slack. It’s a small job that saves you time and money—and helps keep tack working properly in real yard conditions.

https://www.dufinkle.co.uk/blogs/news/how-to-measure-horse-girth

Buying horse supplements shouldn’t feel like guesswork—there’s a right time, a right product, and a right way to fit it ...
25/05/2026

Buying horse supplements shouldn’t feel like guesswork—there’s a right time, a right product, and a right way to fit it into your routine. This handy guide walks you through what to look for, how to match supplements to your horse’s needs, and what to prioritise for safety and practicality. If you’re trying to get value without sacrificing quality, it breaks it down in a way you can use straight away. Take the uncertainty out of your next purchase with a checklist you can trust.

https://www.dufinkle.co.uk/blogs/news/horse-supplement-buying-guide

Choosing the right rug can feel harder than it should—especially when you’re comparing a Turnout Rug with a Stable Rug. ...
24/05/2026

Choosing the right rug can feel harder than it should—especially when you’re comparing a Turnout Rug with a Stable Rug. The real difference comes down to everyday protection: weather exposure outdoors versus comfort and practicality in the stable, plus how each rug fits into your routine and your horse’s needs. In our latest guide, we break down what to look for so you can buy with confidence (and without overpaying). It’s a straightforward comparison you’ll appreciate every time the forecast or the yard plan changes.

https://www.dufinkle.co.uk/blogs/news/turnout-rug-vs-stable-rug

Ever wonder what all those bridle parts actually do—bit, browband, reins, noseband, the lot? This guide breaks down the ...
23/05/2026

Ever wonder what all those bridle parts actually do—bit, browband, reins, noseband, the lot? This guide breaks down the key components for everyday riders, so you can check fit and function with confidence instead of guessing. You’ll pick up practical, real-yard insight into how small differences can affect comfort, control and safety. If you ride regularly and want your tack to make sense, this one’s worth your time.

https://www.dufinkle.co.uk/blogs/news/bridle-parts-explained

A riding helmet only works properly if it fits properly, and that’s where a lot of people get tripped up. In our latest ...
22/05/2026

A riding helmet only works properly if it fits properly, and that’s where a lot of people get tripped up. In our latest guide, we walk you through the simple checks for comfort, position and security—so you’re not relying on guesswork when it comes to safety in the saddle. It’s practical, yard-friendly advice you can use for both new helmets and quick re-fits before you ride. If you want a dependable way to get the right fit without the fuss, this one’s worth your time.

https://www.dufinkle.co.uk/blogs/news/how-to-fit-riding-helmet-properly

21/05/2026

Horse Supplement Buying Guide for Owners

One horse thrives on fresh air, forage and a plain feed balancer. Another seems to need help with joints, hooves or digestion the minute the routine changes. That is exactly why a good horse supplement buying guide matters - not because every horse needs a shelf full of tubs, but because buying the right product starts with knowing what problem you are actually trying to solve.

Supplements can be useful, but they are also easy to overbuy. Smart packaging and long ingredient lists can make one product look far more impressive than another, even when the practical difference is small. For most owners, the best approach is simple: start with your horse’s daily diet, look at the specific need, and buy for function rather than marketing.

Horse supplement buying guide: start with the basics

Before adding anything, look at what your horse already gets every day. If forage quality is good, the horse is holding weight, coat condition is decent and workload is sensible, you may not need much beyond a balanced ration. Supplements are there to fill a gap or support a clear need. They are not a substitute for poor feeding, inconsistent turnout, lack of hydration or overdue dental checks.

It also helps to separate a feed balancer from a targeted supplement. A balancer is designed to provide key vitamins, minerals and amino acids in a concentrated form. A targeted supplement is more specific, such as support for joints, digestion, hooves, skin or calm behaviour. Owners often buy both without checking whether ingredients overlap, which can be wasteful and sometimes unhelpful.

If your horse is on compound feed, a balancer and two or three supplements, pause and total up what is being fed. More is not automatically better. In some cases, simplifying the feeding routine gives clearer results and is easier to manage day to day.

Choose the supplement by need, not by trend

The most sensible way to shop is by the issue in front of you. That sounds obvious, but it is where many buying mistakes happen.

Joint support

Joint supplements are common for older horses, competition horses and those in harder work. Ingredients often include glucosamine, MSM, chondroitin or hyaluronic acid. The key question is not whether the tub mentions all the right buzzwords. It is whether the serving size gives a meaningful amount and whether the horse’s workload or age justifies the spend.

If you have a veteran horse who is a little stiff when first moving off, joint support may be worth trying. If you have a young horse in light work with no signs of discomfort, it may be money better spent elsewhere.

Hoof support

For brittle, slow-growing or poor-quality feet, hoof supplements can help, particularly where the diet is lacking in biotin, methionine, zinc or copper. Hooves grow slowly, so this is not a quick fix. If you start a hoof supplement, expect to assess it over months rather than weeks.

It is also worth being honest about outside factors. Wet conditions, farriery intervals and general diet all affect hoof quality. A supplement can support improvement, but it cannot fully compensate for management problems.

Digestive support

Digestive supplements are often bought for horses prone to loose droppings, stress, travel upset or changes in routine. Depending on the product, you may see yeast, prebiotics, probiotics or ingredients aimed at gastric comfort. These can be helpful, especially for horses that struggle when stabling increases or turnout drops.

That said, digestive support makes most sense alongside good forage access and consistent feeding. If a horse is going long periods without forage, no digestive supplement is likely to solve the root issue.

Calming support

Calmers are popular, especially around competitions, travelling and seasonal changes. Some horses genuinely benefit, while others show very little difference. Temperament, workload, turnout and routine have a major impact, so a calmer should be viewed as support rather than a cure.

Check competition rules if relevant, and be wary of expecting too much from a calmer when the horse may simply need more suitable management or training.

Skin, coat and general condition

For horses needing help with coat bloom, skin health or overall condition, supplements containing oils, omega fatty acids and selected vitamins may be useful. These tend to be most helpful in winter, during coat changes or when the horse looks a bit flat despite otherwise sensible feeding.

Again, match the product to the real issue. A horse lacking calories may need feed adjustment more than a specialist coat supplement.

Read the label properly

A horse supplement buying guide would be incomplete without one basic point: labels matter. Front-of-pack claims are only half the story. The detail you want is the active ingredients per daily serving, not just a long list of ingredients in tiny amounts.

Two tubs can look similar on the shelf, but one may provide a much stronger daily level of the ingredients you are actually buying it for. That affects value for money. A cheaper tub is not always the bargain if you need to feed double the amount to get a comparable level of support.

It is also worth checking how long a tub lasts at the recommended feeding rate. Large packaging can be misleading. Work out the cost per day, not just the tub price.

Powder, liquid or pellets?

Form matters more than many owners expect. Powders are common and often cost-effective, but some fussy horses leave them at the bottom of the bucket. Liquids can be easier to mix into feed, though they may cost more per day. Pellets or nuggets are often more convenient if the horse objects to powders, and they can be easier to handle in a busy yard routine.

The best form is the one your horse will actually eat consistently. There is little point buying a highly rated supplement if every feed ends with a battle at the stable door.

Consider your horse’s age, workload and management

A pony in light hacking work has different needs from a veteran on restricted grazing or a competition horse travelling every weekend. This is where context matters.

Young, healthy horses on a suitable diet may need very little. Veterans may benefit more from support aimed at joints, digestion or condition. Horses in hard work may need extra support for recovery, muscles or electrolyte balance, especially in warm weather. Good doers on limited rations can miss out on vitamins and minerals if the base diet is not balanced. Poor doers may need calorie support first and supplements second.

If your horse lives out most of the time, seasonal changes can alter what is useful. If your horse is stabled more, competition schedules change or winter forage quality drops, that can also shift priorities.

Avoid doubling up without realising

This is one of the most common buying mistakes. Owners add a hoof supplement, a joint supplement and a calmer, then keep feeding a balancer and fortified mix on top. The result can be overlapping vitamins and minerals, extra cost and no clear way to judge what is helping.

If you are trying a new supplement, keep the rest of the routine as stable as possible. That gives you a fairer idea of whether it is doing anything. Changing feed, workload and turnout at the same time makes results hard to read.

Give it enough time, but not forever

Some supplements need time. Hoof support and coat-related products usually require patience. Digestive products may show a difference more quickly. Joint support often sits somewhere in between.

The key is to set a realistic review point before you buy. If you plan to assess after six to eight weeks, or longer for hoof support, you are less likely to keep buying out of habit. If there is no noticeable improvement after a fair trial, it may be time to stop or rethink.

Buy with practicality in mind

For most horse owners, buying decisions come down to a mix of usefulness, price and convenience. A product may look ideal, but if it is expensive to maintain long term or constantly out of stock, it becomes frustrating. Reliable supply matters when you are feeding something daily.

That is why it helps to buy from a retailer that understands how equestrian households actually shop - often for supplements alongside feed room essentials, yard basics, riding kit and seasonal horse care. Dufinkle Saddlery is built around that kind of practical buying, with recognisable brands, everyday value and dependable stock that makes repeat purchasing simpler.

The best supplement is rarely the fanciest one. It is the one that suits your horse’s real needs, fits your budget and can be fed consistently without turning every mealtime into a negotiation. Buy with a clear reason, keep the routine sensible, and you will usually make a far better choice than chasing whatever happens to be popular this month.

Body protectors aren’t just another piece of kit—they’re what stands between everyday riding and the worst-case scenario...
21/05/2026

Body protectors aren’t just another piece of kit—they’re what stands between everyday riding and the worst-case scenario. In our latest guide, we break down how to choose the right one for your needs, covering fit, comfort, and the practical details that riders and parents actually notice in the real world. Whether you’re buying for yourself, a growing rider, or gearing up for competition, getting it right matters. Save yourself guesswork and pick smarter with advice grounded in day-to-day equestrian safety.

https://www.dufinkle.co.uk/blogs/news/body-protectors-how-to-choose-well

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