teddyt
Well-Known Member
This is a plea to anyone who is due to sell a foal or anyone thinking of buying one.
Time and again recently i am hearing of foals that are removed from their dams on the day of purchase. To make matters worse they are often unhandled and colt foals are frequently castrated the same week. The stress these horses have to suffer is considerable. The physical and mental damage that is caused by abrupt weaning can potentially affect a horse for the rest of its life.
Ten year olds at pony club learn to make changes to the diet gradually. Yet at this time of year thousands of foals are abruptly removed from their dams with no gradual introduction to a different diet. The negative effects on the digestive system that this can cause include pain, illness and chronic damage.
Think how this foal near me must be thinking and feeling-
Foal happily out in a field with mum, eating grass and drinking milk. Sees a human once a day if its lucky, at a distance. Foal wakes up one day and is man handled into a horsebox. Because it is distressed it is obviously reluctant to be handled so foal is shut in a strange stable 24 hours a day because it wont be caught. No mum, no milk, no equine contact. Just a strange person with a hook on a pole, some hay and a bucket of course mix
. Just because it says foal mix on the bag doesnt mean to say that its ok! So distressed foal with no friends, missing its mum, hungry, painful stomach ulcers due to lack of food and change in diet, has a pole shoved in its face and 'forced' to accept strange person touching it.
Please if you are thinking of buying a foal will you question the breeder as to how much it has been handled and when/how it was/will be weaned. Maybe then a few more people will stop and think about the stress they are causing and more horses will stand half a chance of a better start in life. There is more to welfare than providing food and water.
There is a better way to wean- gradually. It just takes a bit more time and effort from the breeder but the positive effects this has on the foal are immense.
Ok, rant over
Time and again recently i am hearing of foals that are removed from their dams on the day of purchase. To make matters worse they are often unhandled and colt foals are frequently castrated the same week. The stress these horses have to suffer is considerable. The physical and mental damage that is caused by abrupt weaning can potentially affect a horse for the rest of its life.
Ten year olds at pony club learn to make changes to the diet gradually. Yet at this time of year thousands of foals are abruptly removed from their dams with no gradual introduction to a different diet. The negative effects on the digestive system that this can cause include pain, illness and chronic damage.
Think how this foal near me must be thinking and feeling-
Foal happily out in a field with mum, eating grass and drinking milk. Sees a human once a day if its lucky, at a distance. Foal wakes up one day and is man handled into a horsebox. Because it is distressed it is obviously reluctant to be handled so foal is shut in a strange stable 24 hours a day because it wont be caught. No mum, no milk, no equine contact. Just a strange person with a hook on a pole, some hay and a bucket of course mix
Please if you are thinking of buying a foal will you question the breeder as to how much it has been handled and when/how it was/will be weaned. Maybe then a few more people will stop and think about the stress they are causing and more horses will stand half a chance of a better start in life. There is more to welfare than providing food and water.
There is a better way to wean- gradually. It just takes a bit more time and effort from the breeder but the positive effects this has on the foal are immense.
Ok, rant over