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FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS
1. When should I put my mare
under lights and for how many hours? We usually start on
December 1st so they will be under lights for at least 60 days prior to
breeding. We use 8 foot florescent lights over each stall or pen and keep
them on for 16 hours a day. The mare barn is pretty bright in the daytime
so we turn those lights off during the brightest hours of the day, You can
also use a 200 watt clear bulb in a stall. You need to be careful that you
do not have lights brighter or on longer than the breeding farm where you are
sending your mare or she will go backwards once she gets there. The most
important thing is to keep the lights consistent.
2. My mare has not been under
lights. When should I bring her to the ranch? It is not
very scientific, but we have had good luck telling people to wait until your mare
is shedding, really shedding where it gets all over you, to bring her. She
will probably be cycling. Many mares can be bred earlier, but if you want
to minimize the time your mare is at the breeding farm, wait until she is slick
or is really shedding to take her there.
3. Do I need to give her any
shots before she gets there? And how about worming? We
like to have the mares current (that means this year) on their vaccinations and
to be wormed within a month before she arrives. If not, we will vaccinate
her once she gets here and prior to breeding. We vaccinate for tetanus,
sleeping sickness, rabies, West Nile, strangles (strep equi.), EVA, flu and rhino. We want all mares on
the farm to be protected as much as possible.
4. What reproductive work do I
need to do ahead of time? If she is coming to Oasis Ranch, it
is usually easier and cheaper to do all the reproductive work once she gets
here. If you are shipping semen, you need to get in touch with your
veterinarian and give him our shipped semen procedures so he knows how and when
to contact us.
5. How soon should I bring my
mare to foal out? This depends on how your mare hauls and
adjusts to new places. Many show mares exhibit no stress and act like this
is home. They can wait until about a week before their due date to arrive
if the haul is short. More nervous mares need a longer period of time to
settle in - sometimes as long a month. We want the mare to be completely
relaxed in her new surroundings at least a week before foaling. For a mare
with a long haul, she should arrive about a month before she is due.
6. I have heard that live
breeding or pasture breeding is better than artificial insemination. Will
you breed my mare live? No, our stallions are much too busy and
much too valuable to breed live cover. We can monitor the mare's cycles,
the semen quality and amount inseminated, and the mare's cleanliness and
reaction to the semen much more closely in an artificial insemination program.
While some people have better luck breeding live, it is almost always due to
lack of experience with artificial insemination. Pasture bred mares may get bred at the optimum time but
they also get no extra care or antibiotics if needed, and many times get less
semen than with an artificial insemination dose. Poorly managed programs
always have low conception rates whether artificial, live or pasture bred.
7. What is a foal heat?
The foal heat is the first heat after foaling. It averages
about nine days post foaling but can be earlier or later than nine days.
Many mares will not show signs of heat but the foal will have diarrhea of
"scours." We do not like to ship semen of foal heats earlier than 10
days because the live foal rates are decreased. You need to have your
veterinarian check your mare to see if she is a candidate for foal heat
breeding.
8.
I was told not to feed my mare much until after her foal heat. What do you
think? Our standard answer for this is, did you eat after you
had your own child? Were you hungry or did you go on a starvation diet the
first two weeks? Mare need feed to produce milk and we give most mares
grain starting about a month
before foaling, and get all the hay they want. Some
mares can get way too heavy and are not fed as much, but we do not want the
average mare to lose weight after foaling. The older mares get a
senior feed and all the hay they want.
9. What do I do about my foal's
diarrhea during foal heat? Foals rarely have serious problems
with foal heat scours and need only a little pepto bismol, if anything.
They do start nibbling everything in the stall about this time and can pick up
the surrounding bacteria so they do need to be monitored carefully. If
the diarrhea associated with foal heat is very watery or profuse, the foal stops
nursing, or has a fever, this is an emergency situation and you need to
call your veterinarian immediately.
Make sure you always check your mare's udder when checking the foal. He may
stop nursing before you can see something is wrong. It is normal for a
foal to eat the mare's manure but it is not normal for a young foal to drink a
lot of water.
10. When should she come in
again after the foal heat? We like to palpate the mares at day 25
post foaling. Many mares do not show heat well with a foal on their side
and we don't want to miss them. They should come back in heat about 14
days after their foal heat.
11. Can you just give her a shot and
make her come in heat? The shot is prostaglandin
and will make your mare come in heat, if she is in the right phase of her cycle.
We always palpate mares prior to giving prostaglandin to make sure they are not
in foal and to see if the prostaglandin will be effective. It does not
work on mares in winter anestrous.
12. Do I need gloves to give
Regumate? The label on Regumate strongly warns against skin
contact and gloves should be work by anyone administering it. It is also
important to follow the correct dosage of 1cc per hundred pounds and not just automatically give 10cc to
mares that weigh 1300 pounds. And do not try to inject it - it is given
orally.
13. How soon can you pregnancy
check my mare? We ultrasound the mares at 14 to 16 days, and
again at 25 days to check for a heartbeat. It is important to check
the mare to see the progress of the embryo and also to check for twins.
Mares usually go home after this. We will continue to check mares again at
30 - 35 days, 45 days and 60 days. We will keep checking every 30 days
until we no longer will breed the mare. In the fall we will check any
pregnant ranch mare acting like she is in heat or exhibiting any signs to make
us think she is not in foal. We will check all the pregnant ranch mares in
November to see if any have slipped so we can get them under lights by December
1st.
14. My mare was pregnant and
now she is not? I never saw an aborted foal. What happened?
This could be caused by many different things. Most of the
time you will not see anything - no fetus, no afterbirth, no blood. You
have no idea your mare is open until the November check. About 10% of
mares will lose their foals each year and many will get right back in foal and
never have a problem again. Mares that abort a 9 to 10 month fetus need to
be checked to determine the cause, but sometimes it is difficult to tell.
You need to get your veterinarian to check the mare and the fetus if you find
one aborted. There can be mechanical problems, such as an umbilical cord
problem or a twin, a congenital defect, bacterial problems, or it can be a
hormone problem. Some mares will need to be put on Regumate the next time
they are in foal if this is not their first loss or if they are 20 years old or
older.
15. I was told to give my
mare a shot and then order semen six (or however many) days later. Will
this work? This is a big red flag telling us that you are
not getting good advice and that this mare
will probably not get in foal with shipped semen. You cannot predict when
you will need semen using the calendar. You need to have a competent
equine reproduction veterinarian checking your mare regularly for shipped semen to work.
16. My vet said the semen had poor
mobility and it was only 40%. What is wrong with the semen?
This is another big red flag. First, the word is
motility, not mobility. This means that the semen is moving.
Usually the semen is put on a warm (37C) slide on a warmed microscope (again
37C) and evaluated when the semen is warmed up. If the motility is 40%,
and we initially shipped you a dose of 1 billion, have more than enough motile semen to breed your mare. Sometimes it
takes about 5 minutes to get a true idea of the motility. Many stallions
will have little or no motility until the semen is warmed up. You cannot
evaluate it cold. On the other hand, if you warm it for too long, you will
cook it and it will all be dead. You cannot evaluate it when cooked.
Sometimes even a new microscope slide will have something on it that kills the
semen. Try another slide or wash one with distilled water and then dry and
try again.
If the semen does have a problem, we want to know immediately.
Call us when it is under the microscope and we will be happy to listen to your
veterinarian. If the semen is
all dead (no motility) we need to figure out why and we need your veterinarian's
help to determine what went wrong with the shipment. We do not ship semen
if we think it has a problem. Do not wait until the next heat or the
next year to tell us the semen was bad. We will not believe you unless you
call us when you are looking at it or shortly thereafter.
17. How soon should the foal stand
and nurse and how soon should my mare lose her afterbirth?
The best way to remember is 1-2-3. The foal should stand
within an hour, should nurse within two hours and the mare should lose the
placenta within three hours. These are only guidelines but if any of these
events take longer, you need to call your veterinarian and get his advice on
what to do next. Make sure you find all of the placenta. Mares with
retained placentas can founder or even die. If your mare has retained her
placenta for more than six hours, this is an emergency situation and you need to
call your veterinarian immediately. The mare will need some help and some drugs to help her
from developing a serious problem.
18. Do I need to bring you last
year's records for my mare? Yes! It makes our job easier
and saves you a lot of time and money if we do not have to reinvent the wheel.
We are surprised at how many mares show up with no reproductive history at all.
Any reputable breeding farm will be happy to give you your mare's records or
send them to us. It is professional courtesy and most of us respect each
other's work. We need to know either what worked or what didn't work so we
don't repeat it. Sometimes we run out of technology and breeding mares
turns into an art. We need to see if all the available technology has been
used. Sometimes it take a couple of breeding seasons to try all the
different things and it really helps to see what was done last year or the last
several years.
19. When do I need to give rhino
shots? Your pregnant mare needs to be vaccinated at the 3rd, 5th, 7th and
9th month. She should be given Pneumabort K + 1b, which protects her from
EHV 1 infections that can cause abortion. This shot does not give
her rhino and does not cause abortion. This is one of the simplest
things you can do to protect your pregnant mare and the most often overlooked.
Click here to read the product label for Fort Dodge Pneumabort K + 1b:
http://www.americanlivestock.com/showLabelInfo.jsp?productFamilyId=951
20. What is a Caslick?
A Caslick is an operation to prevent aspiration of air into the mare's
reproductive tract (windsucking), which causes irritation and infection.
Mares with poor vulvar conformation need to have this procedure to get and stay
in foal. The area is numbed and then a small strip of tissue is removed
from either side of the vulva. The vulva is then stitched together to
prevent air and/or feces from entering the vulva. It is important to sew
down far enough but also to allow enough room for urination. Once the two
sides are healed together, the stitches can be removed, usually in about 2-3
weeks. The Caslick must
be opened prior to foaling so the mare will have enough room to foal without
tearing. Usually a mare that needs a Caslick will need one every year.
Your veterinarian will recommend this procedure if he or she feels it is needed.
21. If I breed my mare at Oasis Ranch
or have semen shipped can I show to Pete or Marilyn?
We checked
with AQHA and they said that mare owners can show to us but stallion owners
cannot for at least 6 months. A stallion owner can show in a double judged
class but we cannot count them as an entry and they will not be judged on our
card. They can show to the other judge and will be counted as an entry on
that card.
22. What color is my foal?
A roan must have a roan parent; a gray must have a gray parent; a palomino or
buckskin must have a palomino or buckskin parent; and a dun or grullo must have
a dun or grullo parent. Most blue roans are born grullo or "taupe"
colored. Unless they have a dun or grullo parent, the grullo color will
turn either blue roan, brown or black. You should start to see either roan or
black underneath the grullo coat at about two months of age. Sometimes you
can part the hair and see the roan hairs. Bay roans are usually
born bay. Sometimes it is hard to see the white hairs until they are a
month or two old. Red roans (sorrel base coat) are usually born
with a lot of white hair throughout the body are the easiest roan to see.
Palomino roans have a palomino hair coat with white hairs.
Sometimes it is very obvious in a newborn and sometimes you cannot tell until
start to shed and are very white underneath. Buckskin roans and
grulla roans are hard to see at birth, also. They usually start to
shed out at about two months and then you can see the roan hairs.
Sometimes that will be the only time in their life they look roan. Most
roans shed off to be almost white and then turn darker the next time they shed.
They do not get lighter with age but change seasonally. Some get lighter
in the summer and some get lighter in the winter. Grays usually
have white hairs on their eyelids and around their eyes even if there are no
other white hairs. They get lighter each year until they turn white or "fleabitten."
It is hard to tell a roan from a gray before they lighten up and sometimes they
are both. Palominos can come in several different shades.
Some look obviously like a palomino at birth. Some look like a light
sorrel or "apricot color" and their mane hair does not turn white until about
two months of age. Buckskins are pretty easy to tell; they have a
yellow body and black mane and tail. Their legs are usually light and turn
black when they shed. Sometimes buckskins are born almost bay and do not
look buckskin until they shed.
23.
What is plasma and why does my foal need it? All of
the major breeding farms throughout the United States have a
bacteria in the soil called Rhodoccus equi. While there is
some debate about how foals acquire this bacteria, it is thought to
be shed by the mare, both by the dust in her coat and in her manure,
and the foal can pick up the bacteria within a few days of foaling.
This disease can cause gastrointestinal problems but mainly causes
respiratory problems that can be deadly. The bacteria can
cause golf ball size abscesses in the lungs and can cause abscesses
in other parts of the body as well.
Unfortunately, the symptoms
can be difficult to recognize until the foal is extremely ill and it
is too late. Symptoms include coughing, snotty nose, increase
respiratory rate and elevated temperature. The blood work may
not reflect the actual severity of the disease until several weeks
later but the things we look for in an inflammatory panel are an
elevated white count and high fibrinogen. Many, many foals can
have pneumonia and still have normal temperatures and normal
bloodworm. Some veterinarians will use ultrasound and
radiography to diagnose the disease. The bacteria is very
resistant to the usual antibiotics and the antibiotic of choice,
azithromycin, is very expensive. Some foals will require banamine to
reduce the temperature and the inflammation and Ventipulmin to help
the foal breathe. Sometimes another antibiotic, Rifampin, is
added if the foal does not improve with Azithromycin alone.
And foals usually need Gastro Gard while on antibiotics. Once
a foal is 6 months to a year old, they usually develop immunity and
the bacteria is not a danger to them. Since the bacteria
resides in soil, reducing dust is very important.
We feel prevention is cost
effective and definitely better than the heartbreak of a dead foal.
To help the foal's immune system, a liter of R. equip plasma (taken
from an older horse that has developed resistance to the disease) is
administered intravenously when the foal is 24 to 48 hours old.
While the plasma does not reduce the incidence of Rhodoccus 100%, is
does reduce the mortality rate and seems to reduce the severity of
the disease if they do contract it. We administer plasma to
all of our own foals at Oasis Ranch and feel that it gives the
immune system an overall boost in addition to helping prevent
Rhodoccus equi. We also are very diligent about controlling dust.
We hope these answers helped you. These are only our
opinions and are in no way a substitution for veterinary advice. Please
contact your equine veterinarian to help you raise a healthy and valuable foal.
And check back as we add more questions and answers. For
EVA questions please click here.
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