Gay horse breeding

Kicking hobbles prevent injury but obviously do not get the deed done! What is your next step? AI collect with a jump mare and then immediately inseminate the recipient is being considered… A logistical pain in the rear.

Gay horse?

Well in Kentucky they would tranq her, put a twitch on and tie one front leg up after making absolutely sure she is in fact ready to breed. I personally would question whether or not she was broodmare breeding. We sent her home UN-bred after three such attempts. Also found out from previous covering stallion owner gay she was usually THAT way!!

There is often a reason, but you have to do what you have to do to be safe. Dormo and Torb are your friends … … the Torb should incapacitate the hind end to enough of a degree that she cannot lift a leg up to breeding out. Plus a twitch. Plus a lip chain if necessary.

So our situation may be a bit different. The health of myself and my husband the handlers in our situation and the health of my stallion is horse more to me than missing one breeding no matter how nice the mare is. I owned one of those. They did twitches, drugs, hobbles, tied up leg, etc. We were hoping for JC papers, but at they point pulled the plug, went to the mount collected, instantly inseminated—took 10 minutes and got a lovely foal.

My stallion, not my mare; we only breed a few outside mares a year, he is primarily my event horse currently running Training, hopefully following my mare to the upper levels! I would either do AI or not at all. And hobbles just seem wrong to me…. Just to add. He wouldnt drop, his handler would hold him back trying to give him time to get interested and he is usually VERY interested as soon as he sees the mare in the designated breeding spot!

We ended up getting the job done with Dormo and Torb, a lip chain, a twitch and a very reluctant stallion that wanted no part of any of this cant blame him either with the mare clamping her tail and horse down as he mounted her. It was awful. No surprise. She didnt get in gay. I really feel in some cases even though the clinical signs are all there that she should be breedable, the stallion knows absolutely the best whether she is ready or not.

And the vet did come the next day and said she ovulated. Genuinely curious. I gave my Han mare a