Marydoll
Well-Known Member
Sallyf totally agree with what you said. IMO vet hospitals are not necessarily the best equipped at foaling, apart from when it is going wrong even then it better to try to treat the mare at home where she is happy and relaxed. This year we had a vet at a normal foaling which was occurring during a colic for another mare in the other main foaling box, said vet (a partner from a very large Equine Hospital) was very interested as he had not seen a normal foaling in a long time :O, I just looked at the mare said, 'she's about to foal', she was not sweating or pacing but I just had this feeling, next thing she lay down and broke waters.
As for the foal being taken away, seriously, horses cope with grief in a different way to humans. I have seen two dead foals in the last four years of foaling on a TB stud (I sit up 6 nights a week), one was PTS as it had an abnormal heart and at 10 days was just struggling too much. The mare was allowed to have the foal for half an hour as it had stood and nursed before the vets took it away for a PM, she lost interest very quickly. The other mare struggled during foaling and her foal died during birth, she too lost interest very quickly, pawed the foal a bit, then we had to take it away for testing (as is standard), she was then placed in a box away from the other foals for a day and sadly we had another mare that died during birth. So we decided to foster that mare onto the orphan foal, she took to it with great success. This mare had lost foals before and seemed unfazed by the whole experience. In the wild, the mare would not hang around a dead foal for long and from what I have seen even in the highly bred TB, they too lose interest very quickly.
I disagree with you, horses have been known to grieve , the fact that the mares you saw with their dead foals got to paw and sniff them, they knew they were dead which is why they left them, but it lesssens the stress when theyve seen them, so while they may not grieve the same as humans they do still grieve and part of dealing with it is to see that their foal is dead