Quizzes & Puzzles33 mins ago
pregnant horse
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by rapha. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.one foal was already born around two weeks ago and we suspect another three on the way. These were accidental as a rig managed to get among the mares around january this year. We were concerned about the fact that the mare has been lactating for two weeks and not producing a foal.
Should we get a vet or leave her a little longer???
rapha, your mare would be called a maiden mare here, not having foaled before. Assuming, lets say, a mid-January breeding, then you really wouldn't expect a foal until sometime mid-December. Here's a birth date calculator: http://www.countrylifefarm.com/Training/foaldate.cfm
Colt foals usually take a little longer than fillies. Not much, but it could be up to two weeks. A maiden mare, such as yours, may not show a whole lot of belly if she is large framed. For maiden mares the udder is your best indication... it will become intermittently very firm and then slack off slightly. If it has been firm for a few days, with waxy, dried milk at the end of the teats, and especially if the milk has changed color noticeably, then foaling is probably within two to seven days. When your mare is approaching actual birth, she will shiver noticeably, like they do when shedding flies in the summer. She will be nervous, sometimes pawing the ground and perhaps looking back at her flanks. She may lie down and get up repeatedly. These are normal actions, by the way. Finally, once her water breaks, you can expect delivery within 20 minutes to one hour. The foal will come feet first, then the head, followed by the body.
Is this your first foaling? We've had horses around here for years and it's still an exciting time... Good luck!