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1879.1 | Welcome, Ayn | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Wed Apr 20 1994 16:41 | 45 |
| Ayn,
I can't answer all your questions off hand but many of them have been
discussed in various places throughout the conference. To help people
find topics of interest, we moderators maintain an index in note 4.
From your questions, I believe that the following keywords would be
of intesterst for you:
Topic index KEYWORD
note
4.73 FOALS
4.132 NEW_FOAL_INFO
4.133 NEW_OWNER
4.168 SHOWING
4.195 TRAINING
I'll begin an answer to the size question here.
> DAME: Another Time 2nd (16.1 1/4 Hanavarian - 3/4 Thoroughbred)
> SIRE: Hasty's Growth (17.2 Registered Thoroughbred)
>
> DAME's MOTHER: 16.3 Registered Hanavarian
> DAME's FATHER: 16.2 Registered Thoroughbred
>
> SIRE's MOTHER: 16.2 Registered Thoroughbred
> SIRE's FATHER: 17 Registered Thoroughbred
>
> 1) The foal is now 6 days old and he is about 3.5 feet to his back.
> Considering the above information is the any way of knowing approx.
> how tall he will be..I want at least 16.2, but it would be nice
> to have about 17 hh. Can you help me with info. on how to tell
> about how tall he will get ?
I have a book at home which has some reliable ways to estimate
a foal's mature height. I'll look up the info tonight. However,
in order to use those formulas, one must measure the foal's height
at the withers. A guess to the height of his back will will give
you the wrong answer.
Typically, a foal will be closer to the dam's size if she is
smaller than the stallion. However, your foal's pedigree shows
several exceptions to that generalization. For example, his dam
is smaller than both parents and his sire is taller than both parents!
John
|
1879.2 | | ALFA1::COOK | Chips R Us | Wed Apr 20 1994 17:24 | 31 |
| Hi,
Congratulations on your new colt! Your baby is the same height my
gelding was at birth. He is now 15.1. But my horse is an Arabian.
I would guess that your horse will be larger.
I have a suggestion for his name. How about Hizzoner (His Honor).
Here in Bahstun (Boston) that's sort of how it's pronounced.
To answer a couple of other questions about raising your baby...
I would want to handle him as much as possible to teach him to lead
and have some manners right away. I was always, I think, overly
concerned that my horse (who was a stallion for 11 years) never ever
learn any bad behaviors.
It's good for babies to go out and play and have friends too. Will you
geld your colt or keep him whole?
Check with your vet about a feeding program. Some people like high
protein for babies and some don't.
My horse was shown on the line, or at halter, or in hand, as a 3 and
4 year old. I don't really like to show babies...I like them to grow
up a little first. Halter horses need to know how to stand up and
they need to be conditioned. And every breed and discipline does
things a little differently from the others. Go to some shows and
ask around.
And have fun! Take care of that baby and the payback will be worth it.
gwen
|
1879.3 | | CSLALL::LCOBURN | Plan B Farm | Thu Apr 21 1994 09:53 | 8 |
| Congratulations on your new baby! Sounds like your in for a lot
of fun! I have no advise about raising babies as I've never owned
a foal, but I do have to say that I think if I were in your
position I'd name him "Donations Accepted". :-) Good luck, and
keep us posted!
Linda
|
1879.4 | Foals are fun!!!!! | STUDIO::BIGELOW | PAINTS; color your corral | Thu Apr 21 1994 12:16 | 16 |
| Congratualtions on your colt! I've spent several years handling
foals before breeding my own last year. My colt is a yearling
and will be gelded tomorrow.
I've handled him every day, and he does what ever I ask, cross ties,
clips, trailers, leads, lunges (once a week for 5 minutes tops....too
much strain on the growing body. It is primarly for learning W/T/C
commands), ground drives, and I've pony'd him since he was a suckling
all over the place, and like I said he accepts everything I ask of
him.......
.....Well with one exception.....I can't get near him to clean his
sheath....maybe that will be taken care of after tomorrows
operation??!!
Good luck, foals are FUN!!!!
|
1879.5 | Estimating mature height of newborn foals | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Thu Apr 21 1994 16:31 | 53 |
| I looked up Willoughby's chapter on estimating mature height of foals in
his book "Growth and Nutrition in the Horse". The author has two
formulas which are of interest. One says that the foal's height at birth
will be approximately 62.5% of his mature height at age 5.
This is supposed to be an all breed average and works well for large
ponies, light horses and draft horses. For small ponies(e.g. Shetlands)
the author suggests using 65.9% instead.
The formula uses the foal's height at the withers on the day of birth.
Please note that one cannot measure the foal a week or two later and use
this formula. It would give artificially high estimates because the foal
will have grown.
Birth height / 0.625 (i.e. 62.5%) for large ponies and all horses
Birth height / 0.659 for small ponies
If Ayn's colt was in fact 3.5 feet(i.e. 42") on the day of his birth,
the above formula suggests that he should grow to be about 16.3 hands
or 69" or 168 cm.
Willoughby claims that the estimate will usually be within 3% of the
mature height. This is an error margin of 1 3/4" for a 15 hand horse and
about 2" for a 17 hand horse. However, I have used 62.5% to estimate
the mature height of every foal we bred(when we were crazy enough to do
that!). I found that the predictions from the day of foaling were within
1/2" for our horses.
The other formula offered by Willoughby estimates a foal's *expected*
birth height from the mature height of the parent of the same sex. This
formula is:
0.568 x same sex parent's height + 3.6"
Since Ayn's colt is by a 17.2 hand stallion, the above suggests that
the colt would be expected to be a little over 43" (43.36" actually)
which is consistent with her estimate of 3.5'. However, our experience
suggests that there is a wider margin of error here. We had 2 fillies
which were out of the same mare but by different stallions. They were
just under 2" different in birth height and 3" in mature height. This
formula ignores the influence of the other parent!
Anyway, if the colt were closer to 43" at birth, his predicted mature
height would be about 17.1 hands (69" or 172 cm)
The short version is: Yes, Ayn. With proper nutrition, this colt should
mature to be 16.2 hands or taller. Because you don't have an accurate
measurement within 24 hours of foaling, I'd guess he'll mature
between 16.2 and 16.3 because his dam is more than 1 hand smaller than
his sire.
John
|
1879.6 | Estimating mature height of young horses | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Thu Apr 21 1994 16:33 | 26 |
| For those who want to estimate a foal's height from its height at various
ages, I've extracted the following percentages from Willoughby's book.
They can be used in the formula:
current height / Willoughby's fudge factor
Age Willoughby's fudge factor
_______ ________________________
birth 0.6250
1 month 0.6846
3 months 0.7611
6 months 0.8272
1 year 0.8940
18 months 0.9341
2 years 0.9587
3 years 0.9862
4 years 0.9935
5 years 1.0000
We found that growth spurts make estimates made using these percentages at
various ages a less reliable than the estimate made on the day of birth. The
timing of a growth spurt could make the estimate higher or lower than with
a steady growth rate. Note that you should not "guesstimate" a fudge factor
for other ages. It doesn't work.
John
|
1879.7 | THE FOAL-THANK YOU | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Fri Apr 22 1994 16:56 | 32 |
| Thank you John for all of your help. I am really happy with all
of this information !
Thanks to all of you for all of your suggestions.
Last night (Apr. 21), he is now 1 week old - the mare was being
led to pasture and the colt was to follow. I was there (as I am
everyday after work !), I was told to follow him and make sure that
he followed the mare etc. He jumped around and flew all over the
place !! He never stands still, he has a lot of character and a
lot of energy which I am very pleased about. He came to me as I
tried to steer him properly towards his mother...he stood on his
back legs rearing all over and coming towards me. I laughed when
he did this, he was just trying to play...then I just tried to direct
him in the right direction. He is very playful !
I still don't have a name that I can decide upon, I have a lot of
names to choose from although nothing seems to "click". I will
just wait until the right name comes along. Thank you for the
suggestion of "Donations Accepted"...I added to my list and a lot
of my friends think its great ! I still need time to decide.
I am looking forward to this weekend to spend time with him and
turn him out. I brushed him lightly with a body brush, he just
stood there in the stall beside pulling at my jeans and jacket camly.
His halter gets put on and off daily so that he gets used to it.
I pick up all of his feet and rub and touch his legs every time
I see him (everyday !) He is doing great.
Thank you for everything.
Ayn
|
1879.8 | More names | KITYKT::GITA | recycled stardust | Mon Apr 25 1994 10:37 | 7 |
| For names:
Just in Time
Lightning Bolt (from your description)
Timely Arrival
Gita
|
1879.9 | Male/Female preferences... | ASDG::CORMIER | | Mon Apr 25 1994 14:27 | 11 |
|
You seem to prefer male horses. Any reason why you would not have
wanted the foal if it had been female?
Just curious,
Simone
|
1879.10 | names | ANGLIN::DUNTON | Node: Was aware of | Mon Apr 25 1994 15:09 | 19 |
| I was thinking about what I would name a baby if my mare had one.
These are a few of my favorites:
Hello Gorgeous
Dancing Slippers
Aladdin
Jasmine
Sweet Pea (O.K. so it's a dorky name but it's cute)
Soleil
High Steppin'
High Hat
Fire Starter
Out of your list I would pick Amadeus.
Good luck!!!
|
1879.11 | Feeding your new Colt | ROMEOS::DELAROSA_RA | Raul | Mon Apr 25 1994 17:34 | 55 |
| Hi,
Congradulations on your new colt. I don't think there are too many
things more exciting than to have a new "family member". I just got my
wife a 4 year old Polish Arabian Gelding and I'm as excited as she is.
You asked a question regarding what to feed the horse. I'd like to
make a couple suggestions from things I learned at Cal Poly a couple
years ago.
#1 Don't feed the colt the HOT feed like Omeline unless your vet
recommends it. I've seen significant bone growth problems due to
feeding a colt too hot of food. They need as close to natural
environment as possible. Think what a horse does in the wild and this
usually is a good indicator of what they should be eating. Omeline
isn't out there. Grain & molasses is hard for them to digest and it
contains a lot of natural sugars that their bodies aren't ready for
yet. It overstimulates bone growth. This might sound good but it
isn't. The young horse pays for it as he matures with health problems.
#2 Don't overfeed the colt.
Please ask your vet for an exact diet and then stick to it.
The majority of problems I encountered when I worked with the Vets and
Horse shoers was from over feeding. God made the horse to move an
average of 35 miles a day free grazing. eating a couple pieces of grass
at a time. We put them in small paddocks and feed them feasts
continuously and it takes it's toll on the horses.
#3 Give them free run of a corral.
Free exercize is the best way to build strong bones in a young colt.
They need the circulation in their hoof walls to grow strong hoofs.
Bones grow naturally in the area that they are stressed. This means
that if you exercize a horse freely then they will have significantly
more dense bones and larger and stronger bones. This makes a real
strong mature horse. Lounging horses puts uneven stress on 1 side of
the joints before they are hard and this can also cause problems if
over done.
The bottom line is to sit back and enjoy watching them with the
exception of the interaction to make them leg and head friendly.
I worked as a farrier for a year and visited a couple Thoroughbred stud
farms. I learned a lot by watching the old Mexican Caballeros work the
young race horses. Those guys are significantly wiser and gifted than
most of our hight tech trainers. Patience is a virtue.
"God give me patience, and give it to me now!"(impatient man's prayer)
Have fun with your new baby. I raised and trained my first horse
myself and it was the best learning experience. I did make some
mistakes which overstressed my horse which was why I decided to study
at Cal Poly before I trained my next one. They look tough because they
are so big but their bodies are just as sensitive to stress and illness
as we are.
Take care,
Raul
|
1879.12 | why I prefer males | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Wed Apr 27 1994 13:39 | 18 |
| Simone,
To answer your question about why I prefer MALE horses.
I was boarded at a very large stable with my first horse (Thoroughbred
gelding), all the mares ALWAYS had their ears back, when you walked
by them they often tried to nip you. On the Schooling side of the
barn they had about 75 school horses....all the mares caused problems
when they were in heat etc. All I ever heard from the other boarders
who had mares was this problem and that problem because they were
in heat or whatever....so, I did not get a very good impression..
I have a German Shepherd...all my German Shepherds have been males
because that is what I want...I had one female when I decided to
have a litter...she was tempermental etc. I still loved her and
kept her but basically I prefer the male.
Ayn
|
1879.13 | NAMED-BUT LEG IS BENT | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Wed Apr 27 1994 13:53 | 31 |
| Hi everyone ! Thank you for all this great advice.
My foal was named on Sunday, Apr. 24th), I was up there with him
and some friends and the owner said that the foal was going to be
in an article in a magazine for May..she was asked to write an article
on the foal, so the first name that came to mind was.."SUDDEN
IMPACT"...that was one of my choices...everybody liked it and if
you could all see him, well, this name suits him very well !! As
soon as he comes out of the stall with his "mom" he bursts out and
takes off and kicks and jumps and stands on his hinds legs (playing
of course !!), its just great to see him. So he is named, his "Stable
Name" will be just whatever...Sudd, Sudden..I believe that a name
is a name and there is no requirement for two or three names for
one animal.
I do however need some help with regards to his LEGS. I have about
100 pictures of him. (the owner said that this foal is the most
photographed foal that she has ever seen!!!), anyway, when you look
at his legs from the side it seems like he is not standing straight,
sort of bent at the knees. It is bothering me, because I checked
magazines and other books that I have at home at all of these foals
seem to have straight legs. Everyone keeps saying that he'll grow
into his legs...but nobody is really giving me a straight answer...I
know his legs look a bit bent at the front or "over at the knee"...I
think anyway, but I don't know how to tell if that is it, I don't
know if its because he is still young etc. etc. PLEASE HELP ME,
I AM WORRIED.
THANKS,
AYN
|
1879.14 | Thank Raul | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Wed Apr 27 1994 14:00 | 7 |
| RAUL,
THANK YOU for all of this terrific advice. This is very helpful.
Thanks again !!,
Ayn
|
1879.15 | | ASDG::CORMIER | | Wed Apr 27 1994 17:02 | 14 |
|
Ayn,
Thanks for answering my question. Actually, there was discussion
regarding gender preferences in here not too long ago. I think quite
a few people feel as you do about mares. I've had both and like 'em
either way.
BTW: I like the name, Sudden Impact, but only for dressage, not
X-Country ;^).
Simone
|
1879.16 | Knees | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Wed Apr 27 1994 17:14 | 10 |
| What do you think would be a straight answer about his legs?
First of all, being slightly "over at the knee" is considered
*beneficial* by many conformation experts(e.g. Dr. Deb Bennett and Dr.
DeWitt Owen).
Secondly, many foals are born with tight muscles and tendons that need
time to stretch out and look "normal". Since this foal is only 3 weeks
old, his legs probably change a lot in the near future. I have seen
foals with crooked looking legs straighten out to be perfect.
|
1879.17 | | MPGS::MENARD | | Thu Apr 28 1994 16:24 | 7 |
| My foal was the same way, and I was just as concerned as you are. The
vet told me the same thing - it was considered normal. As he got older
(a few months) the problem went away.
Kathy
He sounds adorable:-)
|
1879.18 | | STUDIO::BIGELOW | PAINTS; color your corral | Thu Apr 28 1994 16:26 | 3 |
| If you think your foal looks funny....we have a �arab pont foal at the
barn who is all legs and quite funny looking! Can't wait to see him in
a few weeks when he straightens out!
|
1879.19 | pushy-roush temperment | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Fri Apr 29 1994 13:37 | 29 |
| Thanks for your help...I feel much better about his legs now !
I saw him yesterday (Apr.28th) - he's exactly 2 weeks old now.
Anyway, I always go in the stall, brush him everywhere, touch his
legs everywhere and put the halter on (every visit)..last
night...Christine (the mare's owner-who is very knowledgable) told
me to go ahead and attache the lead while I was in the stall and
just hold him quietly as I brush him. Well, he was fine, but then
he starts leaning on me, swishing his telling (no ears back), just
playing or whatever..but very rough and I was very nervous. Then
he would stop and stand perfectly, then he would get excited and
start pushing me over and jumping a bit, THEN !!! he started jumping
right to the ground to push me around !! I was very nervous and
just stood back slightly, but I did say "NO". He kept doing this
every once in a while. Christine said that he was rebelling...I
thought he was trying to dominate/play..because he wasn't really
pulling on the rope to give him reason to rebell...I guess. (he
was outside all day too !!)
1) How do I discipline..or is "NO" enough ?
2) Is this normal, or is he unusually excitable and rough or are
all colts this pushy and rebellious ?
3) Does this mean that he will be 1200 lbs and suddenly fall down
and try to push around or what ?
HELP HELP HELP
Ayn
|
1879.20 | | STUDIO::BIGELOW | PAINTS; color your corral | Fri Apr 29 1994 14:38 | 12 |
| Try `quit it' instead of `No'. No can sound like Whoa, and can be
confusing.
Now is the time to be aggressive with your colt and let him know you
are the boss. Ask someone experienced in handling foals to show you.
If you wait too long then it will be much harder!
Foals will bounce around, but they should be taught that once on the
lead, they are to behave (just imagine how hard it will be to
halter him if he does not stand still).
|
1879.21 | Stand Up Now for Yourself | AIMHI::DANIELS | | Fri Apr 29 1994 17:37 | 29 |
| I think last month's Horseman's Yankee Pedlar had a really good article
about your space and the horse's space. The article gave direction
about how you have the right to your space and the horse isn't to
intrude on it. This means, leading your horse and your horse walks all
over you - literally. Some horses (my old horse had this bad habit)
will really butt you with their heads when they want to be in your
space but won't quite cross the line of putting their body into your
space. The other side of the coin is that the horse has a right to
expect to be led competently and given appropriate signals to stop,
stand, turn, etc.
This author usually works with older colts/fillies, spoiled older
horses and when she is teaching them about her space, she carries a
small hunt bat. The hunt bat makes more sound than has actual sting,
and she can use the butt of it in the ribs when the horse starts to
track in a crooked line and starts to walk on her.
I'm not suggesting you do this with a 2 week old foal, but this is most
definitely THE time to assert yourself and have him start to respect
you. You might want to tuck the hunt bat into your mind for future
reference.
I didn't know enough years ago to do this with a foal I used to own and
my ignorance turned him into a striker with his front foot. When he
was very little it was cute - I thought it was "play with me." It was
Partly that and partly dominance. When he got older it turned quite
dangerous. I had him professionaly trained and he did turn out very
nice, but a lot of it was caused by unnecessary weakness on my part.
|
1879.22 | Schedule to teach | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Wed May 04 1994 13:03 | 34 |
| My little foal (Sudden Impact) will be 3 weeks old tomorrow
(May 5/94). He is quite friendly now too, when you go into the
barn, he nickers, when you call him in the field he runs over and
nickers again and again. I am very glad that I spent each and every
day with him...this made a difference...the mare's owner (Christine)
also handled him right from birth and every day thereafter. He
loves people.
Thank you for all of your wonderful advice. His legs are still
bent over at the knee, but thanks for your advice on this also,
I have more confidence now. He moves great though, he is very lively
and his movement is fast and sturdy.
I am going to measure him again today or tomorrow with the measuring
tape...just curious.
Thanks again.
Does anyone know of a schedule or a plan of what he should know
from now until about 4-5 months. What should he learn ? At this
point, he wears his halter every day when I am with him, we remove
when nobody is around..he is fine with the halter. I brush him
everyday and he stands fairly good with that...as good as expected
for this age I guess !! I pick-up his feet, he doesn't like this
too much, but I am able to do it anyway. I have just started putting
on the lead in the stall and coaxing him forward and leading when
he is let outside...he leads quite well.
What else should he know ? What kind of plan should I work towards?
I really want to do the very best that I can with him.
Thanks,
Ayn
|
1879.23 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Wed May 04 1994 13:54 | 18 |
| Congratulations on your foal, they are a lot of fun. As another
noter stated though, behavior that is "cute" at 3 weeks old can
can turn into very bad habits. When my filly was about a month old,
I was feeding her and her mother grain out of separate buckets on
the ground. One day I was bringing the grain out, apparently not
quickly enough for her and she wheeled around and kicked me in the
knee. I didn't do anything when it happened but the next day brought
a whip with me when I put the grain out. She tried it again and I
gave her a crack with the whip. She has never offered to kick again.
The same with biting, that is something that can't be tolerated.
There are many good books out there on raising and training foals,
and I'm sure some of them have schedules on what you should expect
from the foal and when. The groundwork you put in now will be the
foundation for the rest of his life so you want to be consistant and
firm.
Good luck!
|
1879.24 | there are some really good books | ELMAGO::HBUTTERMAN | | Wed May 04 1994 16:27 | 21 |
|
Ditto - all of the last note and.......
Really... it sounds like you're on track and doing very well
together!! Congratulations for sure. Meantime, there IS
some real good reading out there. I can recommend two books
that I particullarly like, Blessed Are the Foals and From Foal
to Two... there are many many more... take yourself to the
nearest tack shop - book store - and take a look in the book
note in this file!
Continued good luck !
smiles - h
|
1879.25 | HELP WHEN ON GROUND | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Thu May 05 1994 13:39 | 19 |
| I saw him last night, I measured hime again...he is now 43" at the
wither..he was 41" 2 weeks ago. Not bad.
But, when I went into the stall (as usual), I felt his legs, brushed
him and put his halter on, then I put the lead on just to hold
him...well, he'll stand for a bit then he starts to swish his tail
around rapidly (as though he were really excited) and he starts
trying to push me around with his should...then he falls down from
trying to push me and rolls around on the ground thrashing and gets
up and trys again..of course I do everything to try and stop him,
but, I am very, very nervous and unsure at the point when he goes
to the ground, because I feel trapped in the stall with his legs
all over and I don't know where he is going to get up and then I'm
afraid he'll stand on the lead or get caught in it while he's rolling
around. He is not angry by any means..but how do you stop a horse
from going to the ground...expecially when your already cornered
and you cannot move too much ?? Is he too dominant ? What is he
doing ? What should I do ?
|
1879.26 | | DELNI::KEIRAN | | Thu May 05 1994 14:00 | 4 |
| Foals, just like any other young animal have a very limited
attention span. Maybe you're trying to do too much with him
and he just isn't ready for it yet. Let him be the judge of
how much he will stand.
|
1879.27 | Get help if you are unsure. | STUDIO::BIGELOW | PAINTS; color your corral | Thu May 05 1994 14:31 | 13 |
|
Good point Linda.....I just took that for granted.
Ayn- Perhaps you can bring mom out and put her on cross ties, or tie
her in the stall, and then lead the foal out of the stall. This way
you'll have more room. He'll bounce around, but you need to teach him
to behave on the lead.
If you are as nervous as you say you are, you may want to find
someone who handles foals regularly who can help out. THe foal
probably senses that you are nervous and is probably more aggressive.
|
1879.28 | OVER-AT-THE-KNEE HELP | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Fri May 06 1994 13:38 | 24 |
| The story with my foal is in Topic #1879, but I have a very specific
concern and need some help.
My foal is 3 weeks old now (May 5/94), he is still "over at the
knee". It seems to be quite a bit...I am not extremely experienced
with foals at all. But I did notice it when he was a week old and
everyone I asked just said that he'll grow out of it. I've looked
in every book in librarys, horse stores etc. There is not much,
I just want someone to tell me if they have ever seen a foal develop
nice straight legs if he/she was over at the knee. I am very
concerned.
The foals sire is just down the road at a big stable and there are
two other foals there...one is a half-brother to mine (same sire)
who is 2 weeks older and one is a quarter horse colt who is the
same age as mine....NEITHER OF THESE FOALS HAVE LEGS LIKE MINE..THEY
ARE STRAIGHT.....I CHECKED THEM BOTH CAREFULLY...ALTHOUGH MY FOAL
SEEMS TO HAVE LONGER AND BIGGER LEGS MAYBE, I DON'T KNOW...I'M JUST
CONCERNED AND WOULD LIKE AS MUCH INPUT AS POSSIBLE.
THANK YOU VERY MUCH
AYN
|
1879.29 | | QE010::ROMBERG | I feel a vacation coming on... | Fri May 06 1994 17:07 | 6 |
| I don't want to seem abrupt, but if you are really concerned,
consult your vet. Since none of us here on the ether have seen
your colt, we can't really give an accurate diagnosis or prediction.
kathy
|
1879.30 | don't worry yet | MTWASH::DOUGLAS | | Mon May 09 1994 09:30 | 32 |
| Ayn,
You are getting too hung up on how straight the foal's knees should
be. You have to remember that he is in fact just an infant. Give
him at least 6 months to develop.
You should be on a good inoculation schedule right now so you should
be seeing the vet within the next several weeks anyway. Have the
vet thoroughly examine the foal's conformation. He will be able
to give you some insight into this because of this educated
knowledge and because he gets to see "alot" of foals and can
make some comparisons for you.
The fact that the other 2 foals you mentioned had straight knees
at an early age really means nothing at this point. They are all
individuals and will grow differently. And if your foal is bigger
or long legged, there is alot more body weight for the foal to have
to carry, so it COULD be a factor to the stress on his knees. Also
if the foal is big, think of how it had to contort itself to fit
in the mother's womb. Sometimes, because of this, the foals will
be born with temporary leg problems. My filly was born with one
rear hoof pointing out instead of forward but within 4 months it
took care of itself.
Exercise in most cases will help to strengthen the foal's muscles,
tendons, and bones and in time they straighten out.
But note that this is just my opinion and you should consult with
a vet if you are concerned.
Tina
|
1879.31 | Vet's Opionion | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Fri May 13 1994 13:11 | 21 |
| On Thurs., May 12th the foal "Sudden Impact" was exactly 4 weeks old, he is 43.5"
at the wither.
The vet came and gave him his first set of shots and a wormer -
Eqvalan. The vet recommends this brand because it kills the larvae
and you do not need to change brands, there is no resistance...I
asked him specifically...and both vets said that there is not one
case of resistance (with this product any way) and that it is the
safest and most effective wormer around. This vet is very highly
recomended and is the most popoular vet in the entire area. So,
apparently I do not need another type of wormer.
I also asked the vet about his legs being "over at the knee", he
said that about 15-20% of foals are born with this type of fault
but they usually straightened out in time, but he said that my horse
may always have a slight appearance of it. He also said that it
is not severe and the foal functions great and looks great so that
it is not a concern in performance. He basically said not to worry
at all !!
Ayn
|
1879.32 | See WORMING topics | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Seattle Rain Festival: 1/1-12/31 | Fri May 13 1994 15:07 | 17 |
| >The vet came and gave him his first set of shots and a wormer -
>Eqvalan. The vet recommends this brand because it kills the larvae
>and you do not need to change brands, there is no resistance
I'm sure he meant that you do not need to change *drugs* rather than
brands. There are several brands of equine dewormer that contain the
same ammount the drug, ivermectin. Eqvalan is one of them. The others
that I know of are Zimectrin and Rotectin. Both are cheaper per dose than
Eqvalan...at least here in the US. Canadian prices may be different.
There are other deworming programs that American vets recommend highly
for young foals on breeding farms. One is the daily wormer Strongid-C
along with annual or semi-annual dewormings with an ivermectin based
dewormer. I'd suggest that you read all the topics under the WORMING
keyword before you decide on a deworming program.
John
|
1879.33 | very proud at 4 weeks ! | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Tue May 17 1994 13:38 | 26 |
| I was out at the farm again on Sunday, May 15/94. He is growing
quite nicely. His legs are starting to look straighter..I thought
it was just me, but a good friend of mine said the same thing.
The foal (now 4.5 weeks old), he spends all of his time with me
when I go see him in the paddock/field. He comes right over, I
slip the halter on..no problems at all. I picked up his feet, he
practically lifted them for me (he is so used to this now, since
I have been doing since he was 3 days old!!), he picks them up,
now I hold them up longer, put them down and say "good boy !" and
pet him, then I move on to the next foot. I lead him around a bit..I
say, "walk-on", he comes with me and then I praise him and talk
to him indicating that he is good, when he stops or fusses, I just
say "no !" (I do not jerk him or anything)..I simply give the opposite
tone of voice that I use when I am happy with what he is doing...he
always listens immediately and continues walking or stops fussing.
He seems to be learning quickly, I hope I am right !!
I just had to write this today because I was so happy and proud
of him on Sunday, he is everything I have ever wanted in looks and
temperment and he learns everything and he is always standing with
me and wanting me to scratch him like I always do or play a bit...he
is extremely friendly and people oriented. I am very proud.
I don't know what he should know at this age, but I think he is
doing very well !
Ayn
|
1879.34 | Shedding Foal Coat ? | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Thu May 19 1994 16:39 | 20 |
| I saw Sudden Impact yesterday (May 18th), he is 44" now ! he came
running over to me again and I put his halter on all lifted all
4 legs this time. Brushed him lightly, lead him around for a short
period of time.
I noticed that his face looked funny, it looks like the fur/hair
is coming off, but its skin underneath !!, no hair...it seems this
way anyway....the mare's owner said that his foal coat was coming
off and that his adult coat was "very fine" probably ! Well, it
must be very fine because I don't see anything at all...it just
looks funny thats all...being a "first time foal owner"...everything
is new and different. he is 5 weeks old, is that when they shed
their foal coat ? His color underneath seems darker (he is a
chestnut), he has black-like rings coming in around his eyes and
black around his nose and mouth. Is this all normal ? and what
color is he going to be anyway ? I thought a horse was the color
it was born with...except for lipizzaners which I understand are
born black. What are the facts ?
Ayn
|
1879.35 | Sounds like he's right on track | BOUVS::OAKEY | Assume is *my* favorite acronym | Thu May 19 1994 16:50 | 27 |
| � <<< Note 1879.34 by KAM500::MCLEOD >>>
� -< Shedding Foal Coat ? >-
� their foal coat ? His color underneath seems darker (he is a
� chestnut), he has black-like rings coming in around his eyes and
� black around his nose and mouth. Is this all normal ? and what
� color is he going to be anyway ? I thought a horse was the color
� it was born with...except for lipizzaners which I understand are
� born black. What are the facts ?
Ayn,
Sounds pretty normal to the foal I had many years ago along with pictures
of youngsters I've seen.
Their baby coat can be pretty different from their adult coat. Generally,
the nose is a good indication of their final color. Hair around the eyes
and nose is usually the first to go and leave them with pretty funny
looking faces until the rest of their body catches up.
Bays frequently are born with light/blonde socks which look very silly when
the blonde falls out leaving patches of the adult black.
Lipizanners are different than this. They are born dark and over a period
of years, their *adult* coat will change color to light grey (excluding the
bays).
|
1879.36 | what happens when they shed! | ELMAGO::HBUTTERMAN | | Fri May 20 1994 11:48 | 27 |
|
Sounds like he's on schedule... they shed when its time... and
usually the face is the first to shed because it gets the most
contact from nursing.
Horses are born with a 'foal coat' which can be deceiving as
far as what the exact color at maturity will be - but they don't
change what color they are (did that sound confusing). Ok, a bay is
a bay.. sometimes when they're born they have long whitish/yellowish
hair on their legs, but it you dig under the baby hair (and when
they shed out) you'll see solid hair. A chestnut is a chestnut - but
they are also born with a foal coat which can (and almost always will)
be different than their mature color. I had a chestnut colt born
quite a few years ago - at birth he was the color of wheat/honey and
his mane and tail were the same. When he shed out he was the color of
a hershey candy bar (dark chocolate) and his mane and tail remained a
bit off white. (he was stunning!)
So... don't worry. He's doing what he should, and it will be a
few months before you see what the 'whole' picture is going to look
like. And, don't be surprized if next spring when he sheds his
winter coat that it too is a bit different than what you remembered.
smiles - h
|
1879.37 | exit | STUDIO::BIGELOW | PAINTS; color your corral | Fri May 20 1994 12:52 | 11 |
| Here is what I've seen
My colt is a black and white paint. When he was born we thought he
was chestnut, but his undercoat was black (as was the skin). We didn't
discover this until I bodyclipped him.
This year as a yearling, his black spots have some white hairs
running through them. We arn't sure if this is because I body clipped
him again (early) or if he has a few stray hairs that are white running
through his black. They arn't real noticable, unless you look.....
but he is cute regardless!
|
1879.38 | Strangles Shot yes/no | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Fri May 20 1994 13:52 | 57 |
| Thank you so much for all of this information. This helps me a
great deal..boy I am learning a lot !! I do, however, have another
situation which I really think I need some help with.
1. My foal (Sudden Impact) who is now 5 weeks, is supposed to be
moved to the big farm (the owner's place) in June when the fields
dry up so that he can go with two other mares and foals for
the summer. He is now at a smaller farm with the other owner
until that time.
Question:
He just had his first set of shots 1 weeks ago (4 weeks old)
and wormer, although he is scheduled to leave around June 5th,
but he hasn't had a Strangles shot yet....he will not be 8 weeks
old at this time (which is a required age for this shot)..the
vet recommend the Strangles shot because he is going to a bigger
barn with a lot more horses etc.
But what is the risk of him getting Strangles if the other horse
there don't have it (as far as I know) and is a Strangles shot
dangerous ? I've heard some people in the Strangles notes say
that it could be dangerous ? But which is safer...having the
shot to protect him and worrying about that OR NOT having the
shot and taking to a barn where he MIGHT contract it ?!!!
Please give me your advice.
I know some of you might say..."just keep him where he is until
he is 8 weeks old and able to get the Strangles shot"...well,
this is also difficult because I am having a problem with the
lady (other part owner of mare) at the place where he is now
because I cannot do anything without consulting her..I can't
even go and see my foal without calling her and telling her
first, when I do get there (almost everyday...at the same time
for about 5 weeks) sometimes the foal in already in his stall
with mom and I just stand there stunned...like I am not there
to look at him stand in the stall...I go there to put his halter
on, lead him etc. The lady is very protective and treats me
like a 2 year old and also acts as though the foal is hers.
When I paid for the foal, I paid Wayne Byrne (the other owner)..he
actually had FULL ownership of the foal itself, he paid for
stud fee etc. Anyway, she is very rude to me at times and I
have not yet felt like I own him nor have I had a moment alone
because as soon as I drive up there she runs out and stands
there while I am with him. I have always been polite, but I
want a moment with my foal and I want to decide things for myself.
Sorry to go on like this, but I am very upset with this situation,
anyway as you can see, I would like him out of there asap so
that I can feel like I own him just for one minute ! I am always
there with him because I don't want to miss him growing up,
do you understand my dilema ?
The question is Strangles shot..yes or no ? What do you think?
When and how risky is the shot or how risky is taking him to
a new barn without a shot ? or what ?
Ayn
|
1879.39 | Strangles isn't a big deal.... | STUDIO::BIGELOW | PAINTS; color your corral | Fri May 20 1994 15:13 | 11 |
| I've never given my older horses the strangles shot, bucause they are
both 12, been shipped all over and have probably already had it. Both
mares were at a barn one winter where strangles was present and they
never caught it.
I think a lot of people and vets make up a big hype over strangles. If
you catch it early enough, then you can deal with it and control it.
The people I know who have had a problem with it usually waited too
long to treat it, or ignored the vets advice.
Your miliage may vary.....
|
1879.40 | | TOMLIN::ROMBERG | I feel a vacation coming on... | Sun May 22 1994 16:33 | 21 |
| The strangles shot isn't always 100% effective, either. I know horses that
have had the shot, and have come down with strangles. Strangles isn't a
big deal if you treat it carefully if you get it. We've never had it spread
in our barn because the owner is very meticulous about stall cleaning and
horse handling of the animal that has it.
Does the new barn have a strangles shot requirement? Have there been any
cases of strangles at your current barn in the recent months?
My horse has not had the strangles shot since I've owned him. I suggest you
discuss your situation with the vet. Does your vet know the other farm?
Discuss the options (move then shot, shot then move, no shot) with him/her,
and then make the decision based on what you feel comfortable with.
If it were my foal, I'm not sure I would give the shot unless it was a farm
requirement.
just $.02 from a non-baby owner.
kathy
|
1879.41 | No Strangles Shot | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Tue May 24 1994 13:12 | 11 |
| Thank you for that information. I am going to move him WITHOUT
the Strangles shot. I thought about what you have said and what
I have read elsewhere and he will be better off without it for now.
There are two other foals at this new place, one is w weeks old
and one is 8 weeks old...they are fine, they haven't had any Strangles
shots...and none of the horses in the barn have Strangles...therefore,
it is safe to assume that it is OK for him to go there...he will
be as safe as the other two which are very well cared for.
Thank you.
|
1879.42 | Trailering Foal | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Wed May 25 1994 11:14 | 26 |
| I would like some pointers regarding moving him. In about 2 weeks
or so the Mare's owner will be picking up the mare and foal to bring
to his facility..trailering.
He has trailered many horses....everybody tells me anyway. I going
to be there to watch or help or whatever is needed. What should
I expect from the two or from the foal...should he just follow his
mom on the trailer when she gets on ? I want to know what is
considered reasonably normal so that I have some idea of what to
expect and I want to recognize something that might be unusual or
dangerous...etc.
When they arrive at the other facility, should the foal be checked?
Is there any worry of colic or things to watch for because of the
stress/anxiety of the trailering (it's about 20 miles travelling)?
I know that I am asking a lot of questions, but I just want him
to be OK and I want to be aware of what is going on with him.
Your opinions will be very much appreciated.
Thanks again, Ayn
P.S. His legs are coming in VERY straight just like everyone said,
he still slight "over at the knee", but he is becoming straighter
each week.
|
1879.43 | First Day at New Place | KAM500::MCLEOD | | Fri Jun 03 1994 13:48 | 72 |
| Well, on Wednesday night (June 1st), my foal was moved from the
stable he has been at since he was born (he's now 7 weeks old).
The mares other owner's fields were dry and ready...and his other
two mares and foals were put out together for the first time on
Sunday....there is also one yearling out with them.
So, they walked the mare out of the barn and she walked right on
the trailer and Sudden walked right on behind her...no problems...we
closed everything and drove to the other stable. Upon arrival there,
we walked the two off the trailer just as easily as they got on.
We put them in a foaling stall for that night so they could adjust
to all the new things. The next day they were put out adjacent
to the field where the other mares and the yearling was...then at
6:00pm they were all put together for the first time. Well, I was
worried..what a sight ! Their all running around with ears pinned
back...my foal's mare is the biggest..the other two mares are Quarter
Horse and Arabian, mine is Hanoverian and Thoroughbred cross, so
she looks even bigger out there with them...boy she won't let anyone
near her baby ! But Sudden is soooo friendly (as I have mentioned
before), he wanted to go right up to the others..and he tried but
mom stood infront of him and chased the others when he went close
to them ! I watched all of this on the fence of course, I wasn't
going anywhere near them, althought, I really wanted to see my foal.
I have really bonded with him..it's strange because I was not like
this with my other horse. I guess I have seen my foal almost every
day for the past 7 weeks and there is something there that is really
strong and I felt it last night as I watched his mom panicking to
protect him, then watched him try to approach the other foals..I
wanted to see him, I wanted to pet him and tell him that everything
is O.K., I had something inside me that was urging to go there with
him, I was getting frustrated because I couldn't go pet him and
scratch him the way he likes it because all the other horses were
around. I went around to the other field to follow the fence line
up towards him, I was about 1/4 mile away from him and I decided
to call him like I always did before, so I just called out, "here
boy, come on, here boy"....he looked up right away, then the mare
looked and both came running towards me..he knows me ! I was shocked,
he came nickering right up to me and the mom stood looking around
frantically at the other horses, but Sudden rubbed his head on me,
he nickered, he leaned on me (as usual)..then I scratched him like
he wants and he stood there with me waving his head happily. I
have to tell you all of this because he truely has amazed me..he
really likes me..he feels safe with me and he knows me. Then the
mom decided to go into the other field to make sure that the other
horse were not coming back our way..she took off, but Sudden stayed
with me...his mom was gone and by now far out in the other field..I
was worried because I thought what if another horse comes to me..I
can't protect the baby ! The mom was now grazing slightly out there
and looking around for her foal to come...but he stayed with me!
I started walking towards her (she was very far away) of course
he followed me as usual...if I run he runs, if I walk he walks,
then he rubs up against me lightly and stands with me...I really
feel a very close bond with him. His mother started to canter back
towards us. When she arrived she nickered happily at him. It was
getting late and I had to go, so I scratched him and talked to him
some and to the mom (she knows me just as well as he does), then
I walked away slowly, Sudden started to follow, so I turned him
around, but he kept following me...he followed for quite a while
then he stopped and stared at me and turned back towards his mom.
Well, the owner came out and said that has had mares and foals around
here all of his life, but he had never seen anything like the bond
that is between the foal and I. He said a foal would never leave
its mother ESPECIALLY on the first time in a new place with strange
horses. He said the foal must have a lot of trust in me and strong
ties to do that..he was truely amazed. Thats what urged me to tell
all of you what happened on his first night with the new herd.
I am really glad to have found him..he is very special to me and
I'm sure that I am special to him.
Ayn
|
1879.44 | he's soo good | PASTA::PIERCE | The Truth is Out There | Tue Oct 15 1996 16:45 | 31 |
1879.45 | tieing - not problem | PASTA::PIERCE | The Truth is Out There | Mon Oct 21 1996 10:26 | 11 |
1879.46 | update | PASTA::PIERCE | The Truth is Out There | Tue Nov 12 1996 10:53 | 20 |
1879.47 | comet | PASTA::PIERCE | The Truth is Out There | Thu Dec 05 1996 09:39 | 11 |
1879.48 | update | PASTA::PIERCE | The Truth is Out There | Wed Mar 26 1997 09:53 | 23 |
|
Update:
Comet is 9mo old and 14hh at the withers, and 15hh at the butt :-) he
turned to 100% legs over night - it is so cool to watch how he grows.
We have been putting splint boots and polo wraps on him for the last
week. We want to get him used to them on the legs, since he'll be
lunging for 10min starting in June.
He is still the "best" boy! He loves everything we do to him. And he
is the best behavied horse in the barn.
Their is one horse at the barn who picks on him, but the other one the
new 3yr old Morgan - him and Comet play all day. Infact Comet has
become the instagater when it comes to starting a race - and he is
allwasy in the lead.
We think we will name his C.L.M. Comet for his registred name. We just
can't think of a good name for him and CLM is the 1st letter of all our
names who own him.
Louisa
|
1879.49 | update | PASTA::PIERCE | The Truth is Out There | Wed May 28 1997 09:12 | 33 |
|
Update
well our little Comet will be 1yr old on June 7th, so I wanted to get a
jump and start to lunge him (for 15min). I put his polo wraps on for the
1st time, and like everything he didn't care at all.
I then took him down to what we call "the ring" - but it's really a large
semi-flat pasture that is not fenced in (I know it's not a place to teach
a yearling to lunge, but you make do with what you got)
I started Comet to the right, and he walk right out to the length of lead I
gave him and he walk around like he'd been doing it his whole life. I then
thought I'd put in a bunch of "ho's" and "stand" and "walk-on's" and he
listened and obeyed every word command. I was in total shock. I then
thought I'd push my luck and ask for a trot - not thinking in a million
years that he's trot - well he amazed me again - he trotted on.
I asked for a walk and walk he did.
I then switched directions, and my little genius did have trouble with the
going to the left. He just had a hard time getting it. I had Carolyn walk
on Comets outside around the circle with him and he did fine, but when she
left his side - he wanted to turn.
We got him to go around 1/2 way by him self and we called it a day. We'll
just have to work on the left side a little.
But over all, I was very happy with our boy lastnight.
Lou
|
1879.50 | He's a genius all right! | DECWET::JDADDAMIO | Think softly | Wed May 28 1997 13:43 | 4 |
| Wow, Lou that's great! But, I wouldn't say that he didn't understand
when going to the left. It's probably just going to be his stiffer side.
Turning in like that is usually on the stiff side. Hope everything
continues to go so smoothly.
|