Mavis
Well-Known Member
My 6 yr old gelding has become increasingly 'stallion like' in his behaviour lately, when being turned out/brought in. He is turned out alone, and to get to his field he has to be led up a walkway past a field of mares, who are invariably in season and flirting. He grows a couple of hands and passages up the walkway like a stallion, snorting, squealing, whinnying; neck arched, striking out, whipping round and half-rearing, all with half an eye on the girls. I don't think he is a rig - he certainly never displays any other stallion behaviour and when turned out with others behaves like a bottom-of-the-pecking order gelding.
It doesn't particularly bother me, aside from being irritating; but today I just discovered that his next door neighbour is a stallion (I know - it should have been obvious but the stallion is turned out in a field of icelandics who all look the same, belong to a different yard and who never cause any bother).
I wondered - could the stallion be the cause of my horses desire to assert his masculinity (or lack of) or is it just incidental that the stallion is there at all, and the mares at my yard are just too much to resist? There is nothing I can do about the presence of the stallion - I was just curious.
It doesn't particularly bother me, aside from being irritating; but today I just discovered that his next door neighbour is a stallion (I know - it should have been obvious but the stallion is turned out in a field of icelandics who all look the same, belong to a different yard and who never cause any bother).
I wondered - could the stallion be the cause of my horses desire to assert his masculinity (or lack of) or is it just incidental that the stallion is there at all, and the mares at my yard are just too much to resist? There is nothing I can do about the presence of the stallion - I was just curious.