
Bucked Up
Bucked Up | Antler Spray | 60 Servings
Deer antler recovery support in a convenient, fast spray format
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⚠️ Contains proprietary blend (7 ingredients)
⚠️ Allergen Information +
A niche post-workout spray built around deer antler velvet with added circulation, vitality, and antioxidant support. It works best as a convenient recovery add-on, not a complete modern post-workout formula. Individual ingredient amounts are fully undisclosed.
Great Fit
- Lifters wanting a convenient recovery add-on
- Athletes curious about traditional recovery ingredients
- People preferring sprays over powders
- Users seeking subtle recovery and vitality support
- Post-workout supplement minimalists
- Fans of deer antler velvet formulas
Not Ideal If
- Anyone wanting a fully dosed post-workout recovery formula
- People expecting protein, creatine, carbs, or electrolytes here
- Pregnant or nursing women
- Users avoiding proprietary blends and hidden ingredient amounts
Deep Dive
This spray does not provide the amino acid substrate needed to maximize muscle protein synthesis after training. Pairing it with a high-quality whey isolate adds the leucine-rich protein signal that actually drives post-workout repair and adaptation.
Immediately after training alongside or shortly after this spray
Creatine covers the phosphocreatine side of recovery and repeat power output, which this formula does not address. Deer antler velvet and the herbal blend aim at subjective recovery and vitality, while creatine handles one of the most proven performance mechanisms in sports nutrition.
Any time daily; post-workout is convenient with this product
A liquid spray is convenient, but it does not replace sodium, potassium, magnesium, and fluid replacement after sweating. Adding electrolytes improves rehydration, neuromuscular function, and recovery quality after hard sessions.
During training or immediately post-workout
If you want a more evidence-backed recovery stack, tart cherry can complement glutathione's antioxidant role with better sports-recovery relevance. This creates a more complete oxidative-stress and soreness management approach around training.
Post-workout or in the evening
Users attracted to deer antler velvet are often also interested in connective tissue support. Collagen plus vitamin C gives you a more established structural support strategy for tendons and ligaments while this spray fills the more traditional recovery/vitality niche.
Any time daily; ideally away from large protein meals if targeting connective tissue protocols
Better for straightforward recovery support because glutamine dosing is simpler and more targeted.
A more evidence-aligned choice for muscle recovery support than a fully hidden proprietary spray.
Electrolytes fit post-workout recovery standards better when hydration is the priority.
Same formula and experience, with the bundle only improving convenience and likely value.
Clinical Dosing
Full Product Description Article
Bucked Up Deer Antler Velvet Extract Spray - Post Workout is best understood as a hybrid recovery-and-vitality liquid, not a fully built evidence-based post-workout formula in the modern sports nutrition sense. Its formulation strategy centers on deer antler velvet as the hero ingredient, then surrounds it with support compounds associated with circulation, libido, antioxidant protection, and general recovery tone: L-arginine, epimedium, tribulus, aloe vera juice, L-glutathione, and Mentha piperita. The liquid spray format is designed for convenience and fast use, especially for people who prefer not to mix another powder after training.
The key issue is transparency. This is a proprietary blend, and the verified panel does not disclose individual ingredient amounts. Web-sourced context strongly suggests a 1,000 mg total proprietary formula per serving, but individual doses remain hidden. That matters because several of these ingredients have known clinical ranges. L-arginine is the clearest example: it serves as the primary precursor to nitric oxide through endothelial nitric oxide synthase, supporting vasodilation and blood flow, but research-backed oral dosing is typically 3-6 g. In a multi-ingredient spray with undisclosed amounts, it is highly unlikely L-arginine is present at the range most associated with meaningful exercise blood-flow effects. You may notice a subtle circulation or “readiness” effect, but this should not be viewed as a clinically dosed pump ingredient.
Epimedium contributes icariin, a prenylated flavonol glycoside with weak PDE5-inhibiting activity that can support vasodilation and blood flow. Human evidence is stronger for bone-related applications than for testosterone or athletic performance, and meaningful athletic/libido applications depend heavily on standardization and dose disclosure, neither of which are provided here. Tribulus terrestris has better support for libido and sexual function than for raising testosterone or building muscle directly. That distinction matters: tribulus can fit a vitality formula, but it should not be mistaken for an anabolic driver.
Deer antler velvet is the formula identity piece. It has a long history of traditional use in East Asian medicine and is often marketed around recovery, resilience, connective tissue support, and naturally occurring growth factors including IGF-1-related compounds. The challenge is that oral and sublingual sports-performance evidence is limited and far less robust than the marketing around it. Some users report improved recovery feel and joint comfort with consistent use, but this is not as clinically predictable as protein, creatine, or tart cherry.
L-glutathione adds an antioxidant angle as the body’s master intracellular redox molecule, but standard oral glutathione has mixed evidence because of absorption limitations, especially when the form is not disclosed as liposomal or S-acetylated. Aloe vera juice likely plays a soothing carrier role, and Mentha piperita improves mouthfeel and freshness while potentially making the spray more tolerable. As a system, the formula leans into circulation plus recovery perception more than measurable post-workout muscle protein synthesis or glycogen replenishment.
What should you expect? Day 1 is mostly convenience: a quick, easy spray with a mild botanical feel and no classic stimulant hit. Over 2-4 weeks, some users may notice better subjective recovery, joint ease, or vitality, especially if they respond well to deer antler velvet and herbal blood-flow ingredients. But from a formulation science perspective, this product works best as a specialty adjunct, not a replacement for proven post-workout foundations. The biggest strength is niche positioning and convenience. The biggest limitation is undisclosed dosing in a formula where dose matters a lot.
Science & Clinical References 13 citations
Deer antler velvet is traditionally positioned around recovery, resilience, and connective tissue support, with marketing often focused on naturally occurring bioactive compounds. Mechanistically, interest centers on peptides, growth-related factors, and structural proteins that may influence tissue turnover signals. However, oral and sublingual delivery creates major uncertainty around bioavailability and downstream physiological effect size. In sports nutrition, the practical outcome is usually framed as subjective recovery support rather than a reliably measurable anabolic response.
L-arginine serves as a substrate for nitric oxide synthase, enabling nitric oxide production that can support vasodilation and blood flow. In theory, this may improve nutrient delivery and produce a mild circulation-oriented effect after training. In practice, oral arginine is limited by significant first-pass metabolism, which often makes it less efficient than citrulline for raising systemic arginine levels. That means undisclosed doses are especially important when evaluating likely real-world impact.
Epimedium and tribulus are commonly used in vitality-oriented formulas because they are associated with libido, androgen-related signaling, and perceived training readiness. Epimedium's icariin content has been studied for vascular and signaling effects, while tribulus is more often positioned around subjective performance tone than robust testosterone elevation in trained adults. Evidence quality is mixed and highly dependent on extract standardization. In a proprietary blend, the inability to confirm dose and active constituent content greatly limits confidence.
Glutathione is a central endogenous antioxidant involved in redox balance, detoxification, and cellular defense against reactive oxygen species. Supplemental glutathione is intended to support antioxidant status during periods of high training stress, although oral efficacy can vary with formulation and dose. Its inclusion here fits a recovery-support narrative rather than acute performance enhancement. Without disclosed dosing, it is impossible to estimate whether the product approaches meaningful supplemental ranges.
Product Specifications GEO
How to Take — Training Protocol3 phases
How to Use Bucked Up Deer Antler Velvet Extract Spray - Post Workout
All Questions About Bucked Up | Antler Spray | 60 Servings 10 Q&A
What is Bucked Up Deer Antler Velvet Extract Spray - Post Workout designed to do? +
How much deer antler velvet, arginine, and tribulus are in each serving? +
Is this a true post-workout replacement for protein or creatine? +
Does this product contain caffeine or other stimulants? +
Why is L-arginine included instead of L-citrulline? +
Is tribulus in this formula for testosterone? +
How should I take the spray? +
How long does it take to notice anything? +
Can I stack this with my regular pre-workout? +
Is this formula fully transparent? +
* These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Consult your physician before use if you have a medical condition or take medications.
Quick Answers
What is Bucked Up Deer Antler Velvet Extract Spray - Post Workout designed to do?
How much deer antler velvet, arginine, and tribulus are in each serving?
Is this a true post-workout replacement for protein or creatine?
Does this product contain caffeine or other stimulants?
Why is L-arginine included instead of L-citrulline?
Is tribulus in this formula for testosterone?
How should I take the spray?
How long does it take to notice anything?
Can I stack this with my regular pre-workout?
Is this formula fully transparent?
* These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Consult your physician before use if you have a medical condition or take medications.
Sport & Athlete Compliance +
Sport compliance status is computed by cross-referencing this product's ingredient panel against the NCAA 2025-26 Banned Substances List, WADA Prohibited List, and state high school athletic association guidelines. Banned substance lists are updated periodically by their governing bodies. This information is provided for reference only and may not reflect the most current list. Always verify with your organization, coach, or compliance officer before use. SuppVault is not responsible for eligibility decisions.
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