A Horse of Course Monthly Horse Column - She's worth breeding!
Well, its a new year, so it must be a new breeding season.
If its a new breeding season, then Ive got to plead
again, "Please, dont breed your mare, unless.....
1. Shes worth breeding. (Of course you think shes
worth breeding, but shes not.)
Most mares are not worth breeding because they cant produce
a foal which will have dollar value. And if you think I am whistling
Dixie in the dark, just open your eyes and look around. Most weanlings
and yearlings at sales sell for less than the breeding fee, or the
cost of keeping a mare for a year. They are money losers.
Check with your neighbors who have bred mares. Theyve still
got the foals because they couldnt sell them. Theyre complaining
they are "horse poor" because they are still feeding the
last five foal crops. And they whine, "The market always seems
to be weakest just when I want to sell my foals."
The fact is, there is no market for the foals of mares who have no
proven record. That covers the vast majority of mares, which probably
includes yours.
If your mare is worth breeding, then she has distinguished herself
in some performance event, or her foals have already established themselves
as champions.
Now be honest, has the mare you are planning to breed actually been
an outstanding competitor, beating her competition time and time again?
If she has, great. Breed her and there will be a line of people waiting
to buy her foal at a fancy price.
2. You actually know what you are doing.
When you choose to breed a mare, be sure the resulting foal is going
to have strong market appeal. Know before you breed the mare there
are people (other than your family) who want that foal.
Unfortunately most people never consider what other horsemen want
in a foal. Instead of breeding to appeal to potential buyers, they
breed their mares trying to compensate for her weaknesses by choosing
a stallion with balancing strong points. There is no market for that
foal. You are the only one interested in him, so you are going to
have him for a long time.
Whether you keep the foal or sell the foal, for the sake of the foal,
be sure he or she is something with great market appeal.
3. You can afford to breed to a very good stallion.
Like begets like. If you breed to anything less than the best or
the most popular stallion you are going to get less than the best
and a foal that isnt popular. It costs money to breed to very
good stallions, so be prepared to pay the price. If the mare was worth
breeding, the foal will be worth having.
Dont try to be a genetics genius. You dont have to be.
If your mare is worth breeding and you breed her to a very good stallion,
or the most popular stallion, the foal will have dollar value and
there will be plenty of people ready to purchase.
If the cost of breeding the mare is a consideration, the resulting
foal is in trouble. You cant get a foal with dollar value breeding
to an unproven stallion, a poor performing stallion, a "free"
stallion, or the neighbors good ropin horse.
But you say you dont care if anyone wants to buy the foal.
You say you arent breeding to sell. You say youll take
care of the foal forever. Sure, and Ive got ocean front property
in Arizona.
4. You have the acreage and the know-how to care for the foal.
Love conquers all, but even loved foals suffer when they grow up
in small pens, box stalls, or one-acre lots. Unless foals can run
and play all day in big, big areas they are going to have troubles.
Protest all you want about how you are going to get the foal plenty
of exercise. The fact is, if you dont have the acreage, the
foal is going to have conformational and physical problems; count
on it.
Truly caring for a foal means not over feeding, not seeking rapid
growth rates, early and consistent hoof care, early and consistent
behavior discipline and a plan, not a dream, for the foals future.
By now, of course, you are pleading with me to "mind my own
business."
So I will. Good bye!
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