The decision of which stallion to put your mare to is rarely an obvious one. There’s many aspects to take into account – bloodlines, type, temperament, conformation, movement and more. For huge-scale breeding operations it can be more of an exact science, with knowledge born from years of experience and the scope for quantity and trial and error. But for the smaller studs or for the one-horse breeder, choosing the right stallion for your mare can be an agonising process.
This is where James Crawford comes in. He owns and manages Elite Stallions, which offers access to many of the best stallions in Europe via imported chilled or frozen semen. James also gives the benefit of his experience to those owners who are unsure of what stallion to use. “Working with around 400 mares per year, you get a good picture of what works and what doesn’t,” says James. “More of my time is spent giving advice than anything else.”
James is a qualified vet, and when he worked full-time in practice an increasing amount of his time was spent working in reproduction. It became a natural step to what he does now. He still does some locum work occasionally, but most of his time – especially during the breeding season – is spent on Elite Stallions business. “My veterinary background is enormously helpful. You can have an intelligent conversation with the owner and the vet about timing, and that’s very important,” he explains.
He has been involved with Elite Stallions since January, having bought the company from founder Lisa Niemy in January 2011. “Lisa is a friend and client of mine, and she’d built up Elite Stallions considerably over three years,” he says.
The company predominantly caters for those looking for dressage and jumping stallions, though there’s an increasing number of eventer and pony stallions listed too. Reading through the list of stallions that the company has on its books is a bit like reading a who’s-who in the sporthorse stallion world. It’s little surprise, however, when you consider that James is one of the leading UK agents for studs like Paul Schockemoehle’s PSI, Boeckmann, Blue Hors and Sosath stallions. “I work with a core of about 10-12 studs. PSI has over 60 stallions, while most have 10-12 stallions each,” explains James.
These stallions include some of the leading lights and biggest names in the sporthorse world.
“This year’s most popular stallion is Totilas. Fifteen people used him for their mares, which given his price is more than I thought I’d get. Balou de Rouet also produces very smart, very attracting, willing foals who enjoy life,” James says.
Feeding the Breeding Mare, Foal and Stallion
When it comes to breeding the future stars of the equine world, there are many different factors which affect conception rates and the healthy development of the foetus, from hormonal control, lighting, nutrition and even interaction with other horses. Getting just one of these delicate factors wrong can influence the success of a breeding season and a bad breeding season is not only frustrating, but can also be extremely costly if breeding is your business.
In this article we will look at the nutritional side of a successful breeding programme, because feeding and nutrition has a major influence upon the health and therefore the reproductive capacity of all parties involved.
Scientific research shows that a mare and stallion’s breeding potential can be enhanced by following a specific nutritional program throughout the year, and conception rates have been reported to be higher when the natural evolutionary pattern is followed.
Preparing for the Breeding Season
The Mare – Pregnancy is a huge ask of any animal and although reproduction is essentially what we are all on this earth for, management efforts can be futile if the mare isn’t ready for this physically draining experience. In the wild, a mare is most likely to conceive during the spring, when the grass is rich and the plane of nutrition increases to a point where her body has enough reserves to perform the biological changes that will result from a successful pregnancy. To mimic this rise in nutrition and enhance her condition, it has been widely published that reducing the mare’s condition to a state where she is slightly underweight coming out of winter and then introducing a nutritional “flush” around March/April will encourage the mare’s body to initiate the biological changes needed to prepare her for reproduction.
The next question will then be what should be fed during this “flush” for optimum results? Feeding a high specification of vitamins and minerals, increased protein levels and a dense supply of energy on a high fibre base is perfect. Of course, if your mare is already pregnant at this point she should already be receiving this higher specification diet. If this nutritional flush is coupled with other variables such as increased day length (and associated increased exposure to light), then it is possible to manipulate the breeding season so that it starts slightly earlier than it might otherwise naturally occur.
It’s important to have a mare at her optimum weight at the time of desired conception. If a mare looks unwell and is generally lacking in condition, then ovulation and fertilisation failure might occur. On the other hand, a mare that is too fat will also have increased chances of embryonic failure. A fat condition score of between 3-3.5 (from a scale of 0-5) is ideal for a mare going into the breeding season.
The
Stallion – through the non-breeding season the stallion should be fed in accordance with his workload and be provided with a high specification balancer. The only time that a stallion requires extra nutrition is during the covering season.
The Breeding Season
The Mare –As long as the mare is maintained in good condition and her maintenance level nutritional requirements are being met, then conditions for conception should be optimal. However, if the mare has a foal at foot during the breeding season then she will also be lactating and so will have increased energy requirements. As a result, extra care and attention needs to be paid to her diet.
A 500kg mare will produce up to 18 Litres of milk per day for her foal. This ability to lactate and provide the foal at foot with access to her nutritious milk is highly dependent on feed consumption, water availability and energy intake, and the nutritional value of her milk will drop if she is not fed the correct levels of energy and nutrients, or has restricted access to water. During lactation, a mare’s energy requirement will be almost double her normal maintenance level and if she drops weight because of insufficient energy intake, then not only will she have a lower milk yield, but her ability to re-conceive will also be greatly inhibited.
Protein requirements will also increase during lactation, again to around twice that of her maintenance level. The protein offered should be of high quality, (containing a wide variety of amino acids) and the NRC levels state that a mare in her first month of milk production needs around 1535g of crude protein per day. As mentioned previously, if the mare is allowed to become overweight (4 or above on the fat condition score) then this will have a detrimental impact upon re-conception rates, not to mention the extra weight adding excess pressure to her joints. Monitoring your mare’s weight using a weighbridge will help you to assess if any weight is being lost or gained and her diet can then be adjusted accordingly.
F
oal at foot – At this stage in the breeding cycle, the foal at foot may only be around 9-10 days old and will be dependant on the milk of its mother. There is no need for any concentrates at this early time, but the foal may start nibbling the mother’s feed and a little bit of grass.
The Stallion – The breeding season is of course the time when the stallion is at his most active and his nutritional requirements significantly increase as a result. During the breeding season a stallion will require, on average, an extra 20MJ of energy per day to maintain condition on top of his usual daily ration. As sperm production increases, so the levels of some important nutrients must also be increased; an extra 160g of high quality protein should be fed on top of maintenance levels, along with a high specification of the antioxidants vitamin A and vitamin E, which reportedly increase fertility.
Months 1-8 of Gestation
The Mare – If your mare has no foal at foot, then simply feeding her at maintenance level will be perfectly adequate for the first 8 months of gestation. During these 8 months, as long as she is receiving a wide spectrum of vitamins, minerals, amino acids and maintenance levels of energy, her nutritional requirements will be met and the foetus development should be optimal. The main dangers at this stage are soluble carbohydrates – feeding a high starch diet which includes high levels of grains can result in the foal being born with growth abnormalities such as osteochondritisdissecans (OCD). If your mare has a foal at foot then once her lactation slows (or you wean the foal) then her enhanced lactation diet can drop to maintenance level of feed, as indicated above.
Foal1 – During the next few months, the foal will start nibbling grass and some of the mare’s concentrate feed. As weaning time approaches, be aware that a drastic switch from mother’s milk to concentrates will be highly traumatic if it is not carried out gradually. Try introducing the foal to a specifically designed stud concentrate around the age of 2 months and encourage him to eat plenty of fibre as well. By gradually converting him to a stud mix and reducing access to mother’s milk, the transition process will be far easier and this will also help the foal to receive all the nutrients he needs as the mother’s milk quality decreases.
The Stallion – After all the excitement of the breeding season, the stallion can go back to his normal maintenance levels of essential nutrients, but he may need a few extra calories if he has lost condition. Stallions often come out of the breeding season a little on the lean side and some slow release energy sources on top of his maintenance ration (such as vegetable oil) should get him back to tip top condition.
Last 3 Months of Gestation
The Mare – It is during the last trimester of gestation that the mare’s diet must be carefully re-evaluated. Continuing to feed a simple maintenance level diet during the last 3 months may result in serious problems for both the mare and the foal. A whopping 60% of the foal’s growth will occur during these last 3 months, which is why the nutritional requirements of the in-foal mare increase 20% during this final stage. Failure to provide a higher specification diet during this time will cause the mare to drain nutrient, protein and energy reserves from her own body, causing weight loss, poor health and exhaustion and will inevitably result in growth deficiencies and possible long term health problems for her foal. Providing increased energy and nutrition may be easy to accomplish in a non-pregnant horse, however, at this stage of gestation the mare’s capacity to process food drastically reduces as the increased size of the foal takes up most of the internal space! This is where a good quality stud mix comes into play. Stud concentrates that have been well formulated will supply a higher concentration of vitamins, minerals, amino acids and energy in a relatively small ration. One essential micronutrient duo to bear in mind in late gestation is calcium and phosphorus, as the mare’s requirements will almost double, due to the necessary role that they play in bone development and milk quality.
Foal 1 – At this point, the first foal will be approaching the 1 year old mark. His nutrient requirements will have reduced and now is the time to take him off a concentrated stud mix and switch down to a low, slow releasing energy diet which also supplies a high specification of amino acids, vitamins and minerals. Feeding a diet which is high in starch should especially be avoided for the young horse, as soluble carbohydrates will encourage rapid growth which will result in weak bone formation. The aim should be to maintain a slow and consistent rate of growth to ensure spurts are avoided and development is strong.
The Stallion – Again, maintenance levels apply here.
Birth!
The Mare – As milk production should already be well underway at the birth of the foal, the high specification diet detailed above for the lactation phase should now be fed: twice the maintenance levels of slow release energy, twice the levels of high quality protein and elevated amounts of calcium and phosphorus are all essential. Once again, a high quality stud mix will provide all these nutrients and this, along with access to fresh water at all times, will be perfect for helping to provide the recipe for lactation success!
Foal 2 – The most important factor in giving the newborn foal the best start possible in this world is to ensure that he receives the mare’s colostrum. Colostrum contains vital antibodies, high concentrations of protein and a vast quantity of vitamin A and is the first form of immunity the foal receives, which will help to protect him from the microorganisms in the immediate environment. The foal should suckle this colostrum within 30-180 minutes after birth and continue to feed sufficiently for the next 8-12 hours in order to gain strength.
Foal 1 – Now this first foal is a yearling, only low energy, maintenance levels of nutrients will be required. This diet can be fed continually as he matures and until he starts work, when energy and nutrient levels may need to be re-assessed to ensure weight loss does not occur.
The Stallion – Now the stallion should be in top condition and should continue to receive a high specification maintenance diet in order to prepare him for the breeding season ahead.
In conclusion, throughout the year there are many different aspects for breeders to consider; from the pregnant mare with a foal at foot, to the working stallion that requires a specific nutritional assessment as the breeding season kicks off. However, if the nutritional needs of all breeding horses are given the attention that they deserve, then weight should be maintained, deficiencies should not occur, conception rates should be high and the stallion, mare and foal should be healthy and happy, for optimum health and performance over their entire lifetimes.
For more information on The Pure Feed Company or for a free feeding plan for your horse, check out www.thepurefeedcompany.com, Tel: 0117 230 0027 or email info@thepurefeedcompany.com. You can also become a fan The Pure Feed Company on facebook at www.facebook.com/ThePureFeedCompany
Latin King 2005 16.3 dark brown. Graded and licensed Trakehner stallion.
Latin King boasts quality breeding with an excellent character and temperament to match. With his trainable attitude, athletic movement and scope he is set to have an exciting future. Bred originally for dressage, this stallion showed such potential in the cross country section of his performance test, it was decided he should concentrate on eventing. He is the winner of 5 year old qualifiers for the Bundeschampionat for eventing with 29 German eventing points. He is set to continue his competitive career in the UK with his new rider Natasha Halliday.
Latin King provides an excellent pedigree. His sire Hibiskus was ridden by German eventing team member Ingrid Klimke. Hibiskus was 2002 Reserve Champion Trakehner stallion and 4th overall in the German federal Dressage Championships. However, his sport career was cut short due to his popularity and demand in the breeding shed. He was proclaimed an elite stallion by the Trakehner Verband in 2010.
Hibiskus is the son of the late Elite stallion Latimer, who won the 2000 German Trakehner National Championships and German Federal Dressage Championships, gaining the highest total score at that time receiving perfect 10′s for his conformation and rideability. Hibiskus has also produced Zauberruf who is 6 and has competed at CCI* in USA.
King’s dam is the State Premium mare Lantana V who was the champion Trakehner mare at Neumunster, Germany in 2000. She has produced Le Rouge, the Champion Stallion at the 2004 Trakehner Stallion Grading. Her sire, Tycoon has competed successfully in both show jumping and dressage in Germany, and has a number of champion offspring and Reserve champion in the mare performance tests. Donaumonarch, Tycoon’s sire was a Grade A International showjumper. His grand dam Tugend II is the dam of premium
stallion Tolstoi.
Latin King already has promising offspring on the ground, the oldest of which are 2 year olds and have inherited his good looks movement and temperament
He will be available via frozen semen for season 2012 at £850 with generous concessions for proven mares and multiples.
Please contact Natasha via email: natashadoone@hotmail.com or 07967569374
Photograph by kind permission of Natasha Halliday
We know that a horse’s natural environment contains (and has contained throughout evolutionary history) a wide array of different plants, many of which are therapeutic. We also know that horses, like all other animals, can develop problematic conditions that these plants are able to resolve. Therefore it would be a huge evolutionary advantage to a sick animal if it could use these plants to resolve any health conditions it was experiencing. This is exactly what we are beginning to discover.
Zoopharmacognosy is the budding new science of animal self-medication. Researchers have witnessed several animal species, from caterpillars to chimpanzees, self-medicating on therapeutic plants when unwell. However, unlike their wild counterparts, captive and domestic animals
have little opportunity to forage on these plants when they begin suffering from a condition. Applied Zoopharmacognosy aims to provide domestic and captive animals the opportunity to self-medicate by bringing the appropriate plants to them.
Applied Zoopharmacognosy, as stipulated by its founder Caroline Ingraham, works by offering the animal a range of therapeutic plant extracts, allowing the animal to choose the selection that suits its needs best. If a horse needs a particular plant extract it will display certain behaviours towards that extract; if it doesn’t require the extract it will become disinterested and/or walk away. At all times it is the animal that chooses what it needs and regulates the amount it takes (these abilities seem to be based on internal biological mechanisms).
N.B. Applied Zoopharmacognocists work with plant extracts (typically essential oils, absolutes, macerates and dried herbs) as they contain a greater concentration of the active compounds than are found in the fresh plant. If a domestic animal becomes sick, their condition can get progressively worse to the point that fresh plants are too weak to deal with the problem if they did not have the opportu
nity to self-medicate at the onset. Extracts are also less bulky to carry around than the fresh plant.
In both the wild and captivity, breeding presents many potential problems that can affect the well-being of either the mother or the foal. Hormones can become unbalanced, birthing can become difficult and milk can dry up. There are several plants that can influence hormones and the reproductive system and so we would expect horses to be able to self-medicate on these plants when reproduction doesn’t go smoothly.
Piggy French won the gold medal for Great Britain at this week’s Greenwich Park Eventing Invitational CIC**, riding the KWPN sporthorse gelding DHI Topper W. The pair had clocked up a clear open lead in the dressage phase and remained in pole position throughout the Olympic test event competition.
The short, twisting, hilly cross-country course had led to some speculation that Thoroughbred types may rule supreme in the middle phase. However, the cross-country proved to be of little influence and seven of the 39 starters made the optimum time. These included the Dutch-bred DHI Topper, who finished on his dressage score of 34.70 penalties.
DHI Topper W (Optimaal x Donna Mail) is an 11-year-old gelding who came from DHI Performance Horses in Lancashire, and was bred by Benny Wezenberg from the Netherlands. The win at Greenwich cemented a successful season for Topper W and Piggy, who were winners at the Burnham Market CIC*** and finished third at the Saumur CCI***.
Speaking about her dressage test, Piggy said: “This is the best he’s done in a long time. He’s consistently in the 40s but he’s come on a level today – but he needs to if he’s got the possibility of being an Olympic horse.”
TWO BRITS ON THE MEDAL PODIUM
With things looking promising for next year’s Games, the Brits dominated at this home event – fellow Team GBR rider Pippa Funnell also made the medal podium, picking up the bronze medal with the home-bred mare Billy Shannon. The relatively inexperienced eight-year-old only stepped up to intermediate level last year, but has been consistently placed in the top 10 and finished third in the CCI*** at Chatsworth in May.
Pippa had moved up from fifth to third on the final day at Greenwich, by merit of two clear showjumping rounds. Despite the lack of official team competition – only individual medals were awarded – the competition was held under the Olympic format of two showjumping rounds, the second for the top 25 riders only.
Billy Shannon comes from the Funnell’s and Donal Barwell’s Billy Stud, and was the winner of the Burghley Young Event Horse final in 2008. She is certainly one to look out for in the future, having coped well with the buzzy atmosphere and undulating terrain at Greenwich.
“I think a lot of her – hopefully she’s going to be a nice mare for the future,” said Pippa.








