Horse Bags And Carryalls

Horse Bags And Carryalls
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It’s all too easy for riding supplies and clothes to get covered in dirt, mud, and rips while traveling? Help protect your gear and tack from dust, dirt, scratches, and other forms of possible damage with reliable, durable Western saddle covers, cases, and carry-alls. Our Western saddle carriers can not only help protect your accessories, but also make traveling with them easier.

It’s all too easy for riding supplies and clothes to get covered in dirt, mud, and rips while traveling? Help protect your gear and tack from dust, dirt, scratches, and other forms of possible damage with reliable, durable Western saddle covers, cases, and carry-alls. Our Western saddle carriers can not only help protect your accessories, but also make traveling with them easier.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the actual difference between a saddle cover and a saddle carrier bag?

A saddle cover and a saddle carrier solve two different problems, and mixing them up is the most common mistake people make when shopping this category. A cover is meant for storage: it's a fitted shell, usually elastic-edged nylon in the 200D to 600D range, that drapes over a saddle sitting on a rack to keep dust and sunlight off it. It has no structural padding and isn't built to be dragged around a trailer. A carrier is built for movement. It has a full-length zipper, a padded or reinforced shell (often 600D to 1200D), a shoulder strap, and sometimes internal padding to absorb bumps during hauling. If the saddle spends most of its life on a rack in the tack room, a cover is enough. If it's going in and out of a trailer every weekend, a carrier earns its keep.

What does the "denier" number on a nylon bag actually tell me?

Denier measures the thickness and weight of the individual fibers used to weave the nylon, and it's a reasonable proxy for abrasion resistance, though not the only factor (weave tightness and coating matter too). Here's how the common ratings on Western tack bags break down in practical terms:

Denier ratingTypical useWhat to expect
200D to 210DFold-away stow coversLightweight, packs small, meant for occasional dust protection rather than daily wear
420DWater-repellent trail coversA step up in durability while staying compact enough to fold into a drawstring pouch
600DStandard bags, horn bags, most carriersThe workhorse rating: durable enough for regular hauling and rough tack room handling
1200DPremium carriers, harness bagsBuilt for daily use, heavier loads, and long-term wear, often paired with a waterproof coating
If you're hauling a saddle to shows every week or storing it in a barn with fluctuating humidity, spend the extra money on 1200D. For a saddle that lives indoors and only needs dust protection, 200D to 420D is not underbuilt, it's appropriately matched to the job.

How do I pick the right horn bag size for trail riding versus a short arena ride?

Horn bag sizing comes down to how long you're actually out and what you need accessible without dismounting. A few things to check before buying:

  • Insulated pockets matter for anything over an hour, since an uninsulated pocket won't keep a bottle cold through a summer ride
  • Check whether the bag fits a hornless saddle if you ride one; several curved designs are built to work around a bare pommel
  • Look at pocket depth versus width; a bag with two 8" or 9" vertical bottle pockets rides differently against your leg than one with a single large zip compartment
  • Reinforced horn holes hold up better to repeated mounting and dismounting than a simple cutout
For a two-hour trail loop, a medium horn bag with one insulated side and a small zip pocket for a phone or keys covers most riders. For all-day or multi-day trail use, a bag with dual insulated pockets and an outer mesh pocket for wet gear is worth the added bulk.

What's the best way to store show pads and blankets so they don't pick up mildew or odor?

Airflow is the deciding factor here, more than the storage bag's price point. A sealed nylon bag with no ventilation will trap moisture from a pad that wasn't fully dry going in, and that's how mildew and odor start. Look for a carrier with mesh paneling, ideally on the top or sides, so air moves through the bag even when it's zipped shut in a trailer or tack room. Before storing a pad long-term, make sure it's genuinely dry, not just cool to the touch. A bag with a top hand strap and a separate adjustable shoulder strap is also worth prioritizing if you're moving pads in and out of a truck bed regularly, since it saves wear on the zipper from being the only handling point.

Can the same saddle bag work for both English and Western saddles?

Some can, but not most. A handful of gear bags, particularly ones with attachment straps that adjust or cinch rather than fixed horn loops, are built to cross over between English and Western use, since their mounting system doesn't depend on a horn shape. That crossover ability is worth checking for explicitly in a product's spec list, it won't be true by default. Anything built around a horn cutout, elastic pommel straps, or a fender-shaped body is Western-specific by design and won't sit correctly on an English saddle. If you ride both disciplines and want one bag, look specifically for straps that attach to a D-ring or billet rather than a horn.

What's a practical system for keeping tack organized when hauling to shows?

Most riders end up with three separate problem areas: strap goods (halters, bridles, headstalls), boots, and the saddle itself, and treating each with a dedicated bag beats trying to consolidate everything into one oversized duffel. Strap goods do best in a bag with multiple interior hooks, since tangled bridles and halters cost more time at a show than almost anything else in the trailer. Boots hold their shape longer in a padded bag with a center divider that keeps the pair from rubbing together in transit. The saddle itself is worth its own carrier with a full-length zipper rather than being wrapped loose, both for protection and so it's not absorbing dust from everything else stacked around it. Keeping these as separate, purpose-built bags also makes it faster to grab exactly what's needed for a quick lesson versus a full weekend show.