Woolly Hat n Wellies
Well-Known Member
I've posted about my colt before. Briefly, I bought his mum as a companion pony for my ridden gelding. She's a Welsh X, 8 years old, unbroken, and can be quite nervy around strange people (but totally unfazed by unfamiliar noises/objects/pheasants jumping out of bushes/farm machinery/etc - which leads me to some uncomfortable conclusions about her life before I got her). She was sold as not in foal, but produced young Graham in April, for various reasons, which I won't go into here, we ended up keeping him.
I think having Graham, and consequently being left to her own devices for 9 months has done the mare a lot of good. She's a lot more relaxed and confident, and seems to feel at home. I was told by one former owner that she'd been through 8 homes in 6 months, and I also know she has been to a horse sale and not sold, so I think time was just what she needed. She isn't broken, and feeding the monster foal has, surprisingly, not stripped any weight off her at all. She's done them both amazingly well. Because she wasn't struggling, and I wasn't waiting to be able to ride her, I haven't separated them.
They have 6 acres between mare, colt, and my ridden gelding, spread across three paddocks with enormous holly hedges between, and Graham is quite happy to go off out of sight of mum and graze on his own. He can also be led away out of sight of her without fuss. In fact he's often so keen to go for a walk he won't even bother about where she is. He very rarely goes for milk any more, and when he does she usually tells him to bog off. If he does get to have a little bit, it really is a little bit. Mum seems quite capable of telling him where to go. She's had two foals before him, I've been told, and I can well believe it. She's super competent, far more than I am!
So I was quite happy to let them carry on with her weaning him at her own pace, and hoping for his other ball to drop so he can be gelded (soon, ideally!) before I go for any lengthier separations. But the other night I was chatting to a very knowledgeable lady, who asked after him, and when I said he was still taking a little bit of milk now and again, she said "but he's NINE months!" in a rather incredulous voice. Now I'm worried I'm doing something terribly terribly wrong, and he ought to have been whisked away from her 3 months ago. I had been feeling pleased that he was choosing to go away out of mum's sight on his own, and to stay away from her for longer and longer periods, and that he was drinking from her less and less, but now I'm afraid I'm mucking it all up. Maybe I'm making him into a big fat thug by letting him stay with mum so long? (Although my aunt's horse was taken away and weaned and gelded at 6 months - the proper way, she told me - and he was such a thug I refused to go in the field with him).
Any thoughts?
Fluffy monster pic for anyone who gets this far:
I think having Graham, and consequently being left to her own devices for 9 months has done the mare a lot of good. She's a lot more relaxed and confident, and seems to feel at home. I was told by one former owner that she'd been through 8 homes in 6 months, and I also know she has been to a horse sale and not sold, so I think time was just what she needed. She isn't broken, and feeding the monster foal has, surprisingly, not stripped any weight off her at all. She's done them both amazingly well. Because she wasn't struggling, and I wasn't waiting to be able to ride her, I haven't separated them.
They have 6 acres between mare, colt, and my ridden gelding, spread across three paddocks with enormous holly hedges between, and Graham is quite happy to go off out of sight of mum and graze on his own. He can also be led away out of sight of her without fuss. In fact he's often so keen to go for a walk he won't even bother about where she is. He very rarely goes for milk any more, and when he does she usually tells him to bog off. If he does get to have a little bit, it really is a little bit. Mum seems quite capable of telling him where to go. She's had two foals before him, I've been told, and I can well believe it. She's super competent, far more than I am!
So I was quite happy to let them carry on with her weaning him at her own pace, and hoping for his other ball to drop so he can be gelded (soon, ideally!) before I go for any lengthier separations. But the other night I was chatting to a very knowledgeable lady, who asked after him, and when I said he was still taking a little bit of milk now and again, she said "but he's NINE months!" in a rather incredulous voice. Now I'm worried I'm doing something terribly terribly wrong, and he ought to have been whisked away from her 3 months ago. I had been feeling pleased that he was choosing to go away out of mum's sight on his own, and to stay away from her for longer and longer periods, and that he was drinking from her less and less, but now I'm afraid I'm mucking it all up. Maybe I'm making him into a big fat thug by letting him stay with mum so long? (Although my aunt's horse was taken away and weaned and gelded at 6 months - the proper way, she told me - and he was such a thug I refused to go in the field with him).
Any thoughts?
Fluffy monster pic for anyone who gets this far: