There are several important factors that anyone contemplating breeding should consider:
Is your mare suitable for breeding? Traits such as conformation and temperament are highly heritable and should be important considerations when selecting a mare. Mares with serious conformational faults or temperament issues are not ideal candidates. Mares considered suitable would have shown a high quality of performance during their competing career and have an amenable and reliable temperament.
Is your mare in good health? Health, body condition, vaccination and worming status can play an important role in the fertility of your mare.
Most mares have a 21 day oestrous cycle. This is divided into:
The cycles begin at puberty (approximately 18 - 24 months) and continue throughout the mare’s life.
Oestrus:
The mare is receptive to the stallion and is said to be ‘in season’. Typical signs of oestrus include:
During this time one or more follicles within the ovaries increase in size and rupture to release an egg (ovulation). The mare normally ovulates approximately 24 hours before the end of oestrus. The exact timing of ovulation can only be determined by performing repeated ultrasound scans of the ovaries. The maturation of the follicle can be monitored by the vet by successive rectal ultrasound examinations.
Dioestrus:
The mare is no longer receptive and may behave aggressively towards the stallion. She is likely to put her ears back, swish her tail and may squeal or lash out.
Control of the oestrous cycle:
Mares have a seasonal breeding period which is influenced by factors such as daylight length, temperature and nutrition.
Environmental and other effects (e.g. nutrition, lameness, worming etc) can exert a significant effect on the mares' reproductive cycle, especially during the ‘transitional period’. The transitional period is the period between winter anoestrous (when the mare does not cycle) and the onset of cyclic activity in the spring. The transition period also occurs in autumn when mares cease cycling and return to winter anoestrous. There are exceptions to this rule, as some mares (up to 30%) will cycle all year round.
The production of hormones that trigger the mare to start cycling is controlled by daylight. Therefore, the natural breeding season in the mare is strongest from May until August, when the days are longest and the weather is warmest.
During the spring months i.e. Feb-April the weather can be very variable and daylight hours are still relatively short. This in turn creates very variable oestrous activity in the mare, with one or more of the following scenarios often occurring:
During this period it is often difficult to predict when the mare will ovulate and thus determine the precise time to cover a mare. Because it is not cost effective to use stallions or stored semen during this unpredictable period, it is often wise to artificially manipulate the mare to encourage normal cycling and shorten the transitional period as much as possible. This can be done in a number of ways:
The gestation (pregnancy) length is 11 months (340 days) but considerable variation occurs with a range of 320 – 360 days, and sometimes even longer.