jermajay
Member
Again, not a breeder just curious.
Yep ^^ One stallion though, not multipleWhat do you mean by keeping them together do you mean all living out in the same field all year round?
Did you seperate out the mares when they foaled? If not, how was he when they were newborn? I've heard some domestic stallions will kill young foals.Yes I did, I had a stallion on loan for a couple of years, he lived with four of my mares the first year, then stayed with two of them for another 18 months
He was an absolute diamond and had great manners, was a fantastic dad and when we weaned the first two foals they stayed with him over winter.
Does is generally work better with a larger number of mares? I'd imagine that would more closely imitate the wild herd, rather than just one or two.Plenty people let a stallion run with mares all year around and many don’t. It depends entirely on your set up and how many you want to increase to! Also the stability of the herd. Not good to keep chopping and changing. I prefer to cover in hand, much easier to keep tract of dates that way.
I've heard that in the wild, stallions will kill foals from foreign mares, or maybe foals from other stallions? I can't quite remember, but it does seem counterproductive. Since people mentioned stability, I'd guess that taking out daughters or switching out mares if you breed every other year would probably be too stressful for them?This happens a lot with feral ponies, and the stallions don't kill the foals. I think there's more risk of it happening by accident in a more confined space, though. I doubt many stallions would purposefully kill foals, as that would be a very maladaptive behaviour, but I could see it potentially happening by accident if there was a competition over resources.
Obviously, most breeders don't do this because they don't want to breed indiscriminately!
Longer term, you'd obviously have to separate the stallion from any daughters as well.
I've heard that in the wild, stallions will kill foals from foreign mares, or maybe foals from other stallions? I can't quite remember, but it does seem counterproductive. Since people mentioned stability, I'd guess that taking out daughters or switching out mares if you breed every other year would probably be too stressful for them?
I hadn't heard about the new research on herd dynamics, that's really interesting! Would you know where I can find more info on it?AFIAK that's not common horse behaviour. It's seen in some predatory animals such as lions, but far less in social herbivores anyway.
I know some people have this picture of the "herd" with the stallion, and the alpha mare and then a few other mares with foals at foot, with the colts being pushed out at certain ages etc- but more recent research suggests this isn't necessarily the case. Bands are are lot more flexible, and you can have more than one stallion present, and there can be an element of mare choice involved too. In general, wild/feral stallions aren't actively trying to kill anyone- even other stallions. It's rare for stallions to fight to the death if one of them can get away.
I don't think anyone should be allowing stallions to breed with their own daughters- I think that's highly unethical. You'd need a way to remove colt foals, or allow them to leave, to avoid fights as well.
Most stallions who run with mares seem to cope with mares switching in and out okay.
I hadn't heard about the new research on herd dynamics, that's really interesting! Would you know where I can find more info on it?