STALLION MANAGEMENT
Lesson Six
PASTURE BREEDING
The term “PASTURE BREEDING” in today’s
world refers to the natural method of turning the stallion out into a pasture
or paddock with a group of mares, allowing nature to take its course.
For those familiar with the natural
breeding of horses, it is very obvious the stallion is subject to possible
injury, either temporary or sometimes permanent. Because breeding stallions generally have a
high monetary value, the chance of injury is not a risk most breeders are
willing to take.
Another negative to pasture breeding
is that it is actually one of the least efficient methods of horse
breeding. The inefficiency is the result
of the fact the average stallion will only successfully breed between 20 and 25
mares in a breeding season. Compare this to a well-managed hand-breeding
operation, where up to 60, and oftentimes more, mares can be successfully bred
to a single stallion during a breeding season.
And when artificial insemination is the breeding method of choice, 200
to 300 mares can be successfully bred during a single breeding season.
Pasture breeding may make economic
sense for the small breeder or the owner of a stallion of minimal economic
value with marginal fertility.
Pasture breeding can also be
successful with mares which have been extremely difficult to get in foal. Often mares that are difficult under
unnatural circumstances will conceive when left to the natural course of
things.
Other advantages of pasture breeding
include reduced labor costs, reduced facilities costs and reduced need for
skilled technicians such as stallion handlers, Artificial Insemination
technicians and veterinarians. Another advantage is the minimizing of chances
of a human injury.
Most of the inherent risks associated
with pasture breeding are related to the horses involved in the procedure.
Being knowledgeable about horse behavior can help breeders to develop a program
whereby this risk is minimized.
Let’s discuss the management decisions
which may help turn pasture breeding into a viable breeding alternative.
RISK TO THE STALLION
One of the first factors that must be
considered is the increased risk of injury to the stallion. Pasture breeding
does increase the odds that a stallion may be injured by a mare’s kick.
Fortunately, these injuries are usually minor, since it does not take most
stallions long to learn to avoid putting themselves in harm's way. Although the
chance is slim that a mare would land a debilitating blow, the possibility does
exist and must be appropriately measured.
At highest risk for this kind of
injury is the stallion that has not been with a group of horses since he was a
yearling.
Removed from a herd as a young horse,
chances are that this stallion was prepped for a racing or show career. Then
after the bright lights of the winner's circle, he was retired to a stud farm
where he was indoctrinated into a hand-mating routine. His isolation from other
horses has been complete.
It is going to take longer for this
horse to readjust to herd life, alter his behavior and give mares the respect
they want. But it will happen. Survival instincts and herd instincts, in most
cases, have not been erased by 5,000 years of domestication.
In today’s modern horse industry, the
stallion that has been “away from the herd life” is going to be in the
majority; so having to deal with them is highly likely. If “Pasture Breeding” becomes the selected
method of breeding this particular stallion, then the stallion manager has a
challenge ahead to make sure the stud can successfully become a pasture-wise
breeder.
There are ways to help the stallion
survive the transition.
The preferred way to introduce a
stallion with this kind of background into a herd situation is to do so in
stages.
The first step would be to take the
kindest, most docile broodmare, who is in standing heat, and turn her and the
stallion into a paddock or small pasture for a few days. When the stallion
shows signs of being acclimated to his new-found freedom, his territory is
enlarged and more mares are introduced.
ADDING NEW MARES TO THE HERD
For the stallion experiencing his
first season out in the pasture, the addition of new mares to his herd is
usually not a problem. However, sometimes a seasoned pasture breeding stallion will
reject late arrivals once his herd has been established. To minimize this
occurrence, it is a good idea to introduce new mares when they are in heat and
receptive to the stallion. This does not always ensure acceptance into the
herd, but it does improve the odds.
Should a stallion absolutely refuse to
tolerate a particular mare, it is imperative to remove the mare quickly from
the pasture because she is at risk of injury. Stallions who reject a mare will
try to run the mare out of their territory. In a confined pasture environment,
there may be nowhere for these mares to go for safety. This leaves them
vulnerable to attack by the stallion. Attacks can be violent and deadly. Be
sure that the stallion accepts every mare that is put in his herd.
Another option for late-arriving mares is to
catch the stallion and bring him back into the breeding shed to cover the
outside mare. This procedure works well, but sometimes the stallion will reject
the hand-held mare. When using this technique, it is important to try and cover
the outside mare as close to ovulation as possible. Many pasture breeding
horses refuse to waste a breeding when they know that the mare is not ready to
ovulate.
IMPROVED CONCEPTION RATES
Another professed advantage of pasture
breeding is an improved conception rate for certain individual mares that have
been difficult to get in foal by AI or hand breeding. There are many anecdotes
heard in the horse breeding industry that attest to this phenomenon. An example
might go like this. Over several breeding seasons a breeder is having
difficulty getting the same four or five mares in foal. Unable to find any
physiological reason why these mares would not conceive, they are ultimately
turned out with the pasture stallion. In most cases, they were pregnant within
a very short period of time.
These mares generally could be
characterized as being very nervous and temperamental. It is thought that
returning them to nature for breeding allowed them to relax and let down, thus
enhancing their ability to become pregnant.
This solution to solving conception
would not have worked had these mares not been otherwise reproductively sound.
Turning a mare out with a stallion will not solve problems associated with
infections in the reproductive tract, pooling urine, or a host of other
abnormalities that would be better treated in a more restricted breeding
situation. It is important to check mares to ensure that they are sound
reproductively before turning them out with the stallion.
The same is true for the stallion.
Stallions with fertility problems are just as likely to have a reduced
percentage of conceptions in the pasture as in the breeding shed, although
marginally fertile stallions seem to have a better chance of causing
conceptions when allowed to breed at their own volition.
PASTURE BREEDING FOR WET MARES
Dealing with wet mares (mares with a
foal) can require the most skill in a pasture breeding operation. It is best to
band the pregnant mares into a breeding herd, along with the stallion. When
management and economics permit, these mares are then allowed to foal in the
pasture. I believe that there is no more risk from foaling in the pasture with
the stallion than there is from foaling in the pasture with a herd of mares
minus the stallion.
Actually, the stallion is not normally
associated with the risk factor to the offspring of a mare foaling in a herd.
The main cause of injury to a foal in this situation is the inability of the
dam to protect her new progeny. A foal without a protecting dam will usually be
ostracized by the herd. It will be attacked by the other members. It seems
logical to assume that nature dictated this behavior so that the liability, a
foal without a mother that would attract predators to the group, can be
eliminated.
To minimize a loss created by such a
situation, a good manager should keep close contact with the mares about to
give birth in order to ensure that all goes well. Usually, a mare will isolate
herself from the band a few hours before she foals. After the foal is up,
nursing, and running around, she will return to the herd.
In an attempt to bypass these kinds of
problems, some farms wait to turn the mares in with the stallion after they
have foaled and are exhibiting postpartum estrus. This seems to work well for them,
but introducing a new mare into the herd usually causes bickering. It is this
socialization period that puts the foal at risk for getting a swat and possible
injury from being in the wrong place at the wrong time.
One way to achieve the advantages of
both these practices and reduce the disadvantages is to leave the pregnant mare
with the herd during the day and put her in the foaling stall at night. Then,
one morning when this mare returns to the herd, accompanied by a youngster at
her side, introductions are not necessary. She resumes her position in the herd
and harmony is still intact. This system closely mimics nature's foaling
routine.
SPACE FOR PASTURE BREEDING
The space needed for a pasture
breeding operation depends on how many mares you wish to run with a stallion.
The minimum of one mare and one stallion requires no more space than a large
paddock. The maximum of 25 to 30 mares requires a large area, especially if you
want to run wet mares in the group.
In fact, small traps of less than 10
acres are not advisable for herds with foaling mares and/or wet mares. In these
small areas, it is difficult for a mare to isolate herself from the group in
order to foal. As has been previously discussed, this may jeopardize her
newborn foal.
Although the actual size to run a maximum
breeding herd is dependent on the type of country where you live, a reasonable
minimum for this type of operation would be about 40 acres, with optimal
conditions being between 80 to 100 acres.
NUMBER OF MARES BRED
The biggest disadvantage of pasture
breeding is that there are limits on the number of mares that can be bred to a
stallion over the course of the breeding season.
In a hand-breeding operation, we know
that 60 to 80 mares can be bred to a single stallion.
Using artificial insemination (AI) we
are limited more by the facilities and management than by stallion power, but
100 to 200 mares per stallion is not uncommon.
With pasture breeding a good ratio
would be 20 mares per stallion.
We can have the stallion breed more
mares, but larger herds lose their integrity and break apart into smaller
groups, making the stallion's job more difficult and increasing the odds that a
mare will be skipped in any given cycle.
Having a stallion that readily accepts
new additions to the herd could allow management to take out mares already
pregnant and introduce new non-pregnant mares, thus maintaining equilibrium in
herd size. In this way it is possible to
breed 40 or more mares in a 120-day breeding season. But if maximizing a
stallion's reproductive potential is the primary concern, pasture breeding is
not the technique of choice. However, a small breeder who has limited time and
expertise and a pasture with good fencing may do well to consider this
time-tested breeding system.
ASSIGNMENT (No Quiz)
Please answer each question as
completely as possible. Resources other than the written text are encouraged as
well as personal experiences. Please site your resources – include the link if
you used the internet; book title and author if you used hard copy.
Send your report to Dr. Sales at jacksales1234@gmail.com
Include your full name and email
address on the document.
1. Describe, in detail, what situations might
lead you to decide on using the pasture breeding method of a group of mares and
a single stallion. Include advantages and disadvantages in the use of pasture
breeding.
2. What is the best way to add a new mare (with
no foal by their side) to a group of pasture bred mares, during the middle of
the breeding season?
3. What is the best way to add a new lactating
mare (mare with foal by side) to the band of mares that are being pasture bred
if it is the middle of the breeding season?