L&B
Well-Known Member
As the title suggests, but hear me out...
Bought a lovely strapping 8mo colt 3weeks ago. As perfect for me as he is, I’d no intention on breeding and have a mare (own small yard/field setup) so within 3days of him being home and settled in the stable, he was gelded.
After the initial drip-drip bleeding was over (24hrs later) he was turned out as per vets advice.
I also turned my mare out alongside - as although she had shown an interest in him, he was oblivious to her advances and mouthing/clacking at him.
Separated I must add (!) by a solid wooden post and rope-style electric fencing, hooked to a leisure battery.
Safe I thought, until day four of this setup and my neighbour in an adjoining field calling me (I need you to know there have been access problems and disagreements between the two of us and she is notoriously a trouble-causer in the area) to say that my newly gelded lad was in the field with my mare and had her covered.
I’m a key worker so couldn’t get over in any useful amount of time and so other half had seen to them that morning. He says he could have forgotten to turn fencing on after poopicking but sure he hadn’t, and got over to them within the hour.
Upon his arrival, newly gelded lad was on his side and mare was on hers, metres apart. No evidence of any of them having been in one another’s company but the ‘gate’ made by 3x insulated handles had got 2x rungs seemingly knocked off, so I guess one or the other COULD have scooted under and then back again.
Now, I’ve pushed it to the back of my mind as I’m almost certain it’s ms-meddlesomeneighbour next door creating, as she does. And potentially also her who has knocked off the bottom handle for effect (I realise this makes me sound mad, but there truly are bats in the belfry on her part).
However, I am now concerning myself with the worry my mare could have been covered. My other half thinks there’s absolutely no way.
But, as we all know, stranger things have happened and I really DO NOT want my mare in foal, or indeed, a foaling and little to contend with...
Does anyone have any advice? I know very little about breeding/covering and the ins and outs (pardon the pun) of it all.
I’ve heard a vet can give an injection to the mare if it is suspected, but know nothing of that either...?
Bought a lovely strapping 8mo colt 3weeks ago. As perfect for me as he is, I’d no intention on breeding and have a mare (own small yard/field setup) so within 3days of him being home and settled in the stable, he was gelded.
After the initial drip-drip bleeding was over (24hrs later) he was turned out as per vets advice.
I also turned my mare out alongside - as although she had shown an interest in him, he was oblivious to her advances and mouthing/clacking at him.
Separated I must add (!) by a solid wooden post and rope-style electric fencing, hooked to a leisure battery.
Safe I thought, until day four of this setup and my neighbour in an adjoining field calling me (I need you to know there have been access problems and disagreements between the two of us and she is notoriously a trouble-causer in the area) to say that my newly gelded lad was in the field with my mare and had her covered.
I’m a key worker so couldn’t get over in any useful amount of time and so other half had seen to them that morning. He says he could have forgotten to turn fencing on after poopicking but sure he hadn’t, and got over to them within the hour.
Upon his arrival, newly gelded lad was on his side and mare was on hers, metres apart. No evidence of any of them having been in one another’s company but the ‘gate’ made by 3x insulated handles had got 2x rungs seemingly knocked off, so I guess one or the other COULD have scooted under and then back again.
Now, I’ve pushed it to the back of my mind as I’m almost certain it’s ms-meddlesomeneighbour next door creating, as she does. And potentially also her who has knocked off the bottom handle for effect (I realise this makes me sound mad, but there truly are bats in the belfry on her part).
However, I am now concerning myself with the worry my mare could have been covered. My other half thinks there’s absolutely no way.
But, as we all know, stranger things have happened and I really DO NOT want my mare in foal, or indeed, a foaling and little to contend with...
Does anyone have any advice? I know very little about breeding/covering and the ins and outs (pardon the pun) of it all.
I’ve heard a vet can give an injection to the mare if it is suspected, but know nothing of that either...?