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Why do geldings get so excited about foals?

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  • Why do geldings get so excited about foals?

    My riding gelding saw our new foal for the first time today and got so excited he totally lost it. I'm not talking interest and amazement, I'm talking threw a fit then fell back in it. He was parading and craning his neck and bellowing as if he had seen the second coming. I wish I had video.

  • #2
    Yeah - I have one that is like that with pigs. I mean - he really really moons over them.

    I'm sure there is a grand sounding scientific name for the behavior but when I see it, I just shake my head and mutter, you silly knucklehead....then stand there and laugh. They are so weird sometimes.

    Do we get to see pictures?
    Brothers and sisters, I bid you beware
    Of giving your heart to a dog to tear.
    -Rudyard Kipling

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    • Original Poster

      #3
      Of Baby or Tantrum?

      After thinking about that for a minute, I'm glad he got excited over the baby,and not some silly ole pig

      Comment


      • #4
        I had a gelding who did the same thing! Freak out when he saw a foal. I let him come over and meet one of the ones we had on the farm. He sqealed and was so funny about meeting the foal, I lost it. He never lost sense of trying to find them...
        Unbridled Oaks - Champion Sport Ponies and Welsh Cobs

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        • #5
          Our gelding was the same when we had our lambs. He just loved them. Funnier yet was the crows. When they first bleated the crows would answer - I could see their beaks opening, yet they sounded like lambs.
          Proud member of People Who Hate to Kill Wildlife clique

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          • #6
            my gelding used to be in a field across from where they would turn out the babies. He would stand at the fence and stare. If they wandered out of his sight he would get hysterical.

            funny guys.
            A man must love a thing very much if he not only practices it without any hope of fame or money, but even practices it without any hope of doing it well.--G. K. Chesterton

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            • #7
              must be a mamma near bye

              A baby helps Geldings remember fondly the days when they were intact. And a little baby means a Mommy is nearby by. Mommy's got one little baby, maybe she wants another....

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              • #8
                Caution should always be used around geldings and new babies. Sometimes they will attack the foal and try to kill it. I don't know why, I'm sure there is some scientific reasoning for it but I'd be very careful turning a young foal in with a gelding unless I knew from past experience that the gelding was safe around foals. Some are, some aren't.. even if they have been raised with foals around the barn.

                Just be careful.. you may think he's mooning over it now but it's very possible for him to chase it, bite it and try to kneel on it. I've had at least one foal with lifetime scars on his neck from just such an encounter when he was 2 days old. Luckily momma got to him in time but I'm always super cautious now with introducing geldings to babies.
                Donna Sabatine
                Kryo Kinetics USA, LLC Licensed Technician
                Horse Identification Using The Alpha Angle System

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                • #9
                  HAHA i never knew that was a gelding thing, i just thought mine was weird.
                  Our neighboring farm has babies, and our x-c fild borders their paddocks. If there's any little ones out, my gelding will stop and stare (great song btw) and then try to walk really fast and excited over to say "hi!" Funny thing is if there are just plain horses out he spooks at them.
                  Horse power

                  Horse" pow`er\ (Noun) The extraordinary capacity of a horse to elevate the human spirit.

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                  • Original Poster

                    #10
                    Originally posted by XenophonKnows View Post
                    A baby helps Geldings remember fondly the days when they were intact. And a little baby means a Mommy is nearby by. Mommy's got one little baby, maybe she wants another....
                    That's what I told him... "I guess you know she's done "IT" at least once huh?

                    Don't worry, the mare and foal have completely seperate turnout. It did make me wonder what happens when people think it's OK to just throw everyone out together. What a mess that would have been. And I'm glad I had the forethought to put him in his stall while we moved the mare.

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                    • #11
                      my gelding goes out with 2 coming yearlings. he's 5 and their body guard! lmao he loves his babies! he's adorable with them they sleep on both sides of him and he sleeps in the middle. but saying that he has also been out with babys before!

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                      • #12
                        Ah yes, geldings & foals. Our gelding field abuts the field where our babies were turned out a few summers ago...they were VERRRY interested in what was going on as per these pics:

                        http://pets.webshots.com/photo/29330...97913210TWizvi

                        http://pets.webshots.com/photo/21154...97913210gKOerk

                        http://pets.webshots.com/photo/24455...97913210DASCMZ

                        And the objects of such intense & uniform scrutiny:


                        http://pets.webshots.com/photo/24281...97913210wWQPwN - Typical of her

                        http://pets.webshots.com/photo/23201...97913210ogeyms
                        \"Don\'t go throwing effort after foolishness\" >>>Spur, Man From Snowy River

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                        • #13
                          My retired gelding is the same way. We always give him the babies post weaning to teach them how to be a horse...he's gentle but firm with them. When the babies are still new born all he does is stare at them and nicker...he keeps nickering at them up until they're weaned. He spends the first few days turned out with them just staring at them and playing with them . After a few days the novelty wears off and he starts teaching them their manners, though.

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                          • #14
                            The mare pastured next to my gelding foaled last summer, and he, too, was fascinated.

                            He and the baby ended up being best friends, which really surprised me because he's not the most social. I'd take him out to ride and she'd run up and down the paddock squealing for him. He NEVER whinnies, but he would always reply to her. When baby had her first trailer-loading experience he got very concerned.

                            After being overprotective for the first few days, Mama would leave the baby napping by the fence and go off and do her own thing, while my boy stood guard from his side of the fence. Dismaying for me, because the shade reached her side but not his, but it was pretty dang cute anyway.

                            The first day -- Willie fascinated, Mama annoyed, Baby oblivious:
                            http://i20.photobucket.com/albums/b2...s/100_0082.jpg

                            But they were all pretty inseparable after a while:
                            http://i20.photobucket.com/albums/b2...e/100_0077.jpg
                            http://i20.photobucket.com/albums/b2...e/100_0079.jpg
                            http://i20.photobucket.com/albums/b2...e/100_0104.jpg
                            http://i20.photobucket.com/albums/b2...e/100_0760.jpg
                            Member of the Standardbreds with Saddles Clique!
                            They're not just for racing!
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                            • #15
                              All horses on our farm are fascinated by new babies. The mares will all line up to admire the new baby and nicker to it, the youngsters also watched with fascination, the geldings are interested also but seem a bit uncertain as to why, and the stallions catcall and tell the mares to come and visit to make another baby.
                              Last edited by Ridge Runner; Mar. 31, 2009, 10:01 PM.

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                              • #16
                                I didn't know it was just a gelding thing...

                                One of my fondest memories is when we had a foal born at the farm. Momma & colt were at the far end of the barn. This particular barn kept mare & foal in for about a week post delivery. The day of baby's first turnout came & we had to walk Momma and baby past all the occupied stalls to get to turnout. All of the horses were so excited they were nickering & whinny-ing trying to catch a glimpse of baby. It was adorable.
                                "We're still right, they're still wrong" James Carville

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                                • #17
                                  Originally posted by Czar View Post
                                  Ah yes, geldings & foals. Our gelding field abuts the field where our babies were turned out a few summers ago...they were VERRRY interested in what was going on as per these pics:

                                  http://pets.webshots.com/photo/29330...97913210TWizvi

                                  http://pets.webshots.com/photo/21154...97913210gKOerk

                                  http://pets.webshots.com/photo/24455...97913210DASCMZ

                                  And the objects of such intense & uniform scrutiny:


                                  http://pets.webshots.com/photo/24281...97913210wWQPwN - Typical of her

                                  http://pets.webshots.com/photo/23201...97913210ogeyms
                                  Those pictures are so cute! The boys all lined up together are so funny I don't think either of my geldings have been around foals before but the one gelding is TERRIFIED of small ponies
                                  No hour of life is wasted that is spent in the saddle. ~Winston Churchill
                                  For Hope, For Strength, For Life-Delta Gamma
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                                  • #18
                                    My husband and I were just discussing this. We had a filly on sunday and my gelding saw her for the first time today. The mom is my horse's sister and he is just so freaked out about the new addition.

                                    It is so funny.

                                    Comment


                                    • #19
                                      Originally posted by SmartAlex View Post
                                      My riding gelding saw our new foal for the first time today and got so excited he totally lost it. I'm not talking interest and amazement, I'm talking threw a fit then fell back in it. He was parading and craning his neck and bellowing as if he had seen the second coming. I wish I had video.
                                      Hahaha that's too funny, I can totally visualize it.

                                      My Trakehner gelding was/is this way. However, I always assumed it was because he wasn't gelded until he was six years old and he was bred a few times. It was embarrassing - he'd go totally gaga over them. We used to say that he must have thought he was the father...

                                      Comment


                                      • #20
                                        Originally posted by CenturyOak View Post
                                        Caution should always be used around geldings and new babies. Sometimes they will attack the foal and try to kill it. I don't know why, I'm sure there is some scientific reasoning for it but I'd be very careful turning a young foal in with a gelding unless I knew from past experience that the gelding was safe around foals. Some are, some aren't.. even if they have been raised with foals around the barn.

                                        Just be careful.. you may think he's mooning over it now but it's very possible for him to chase it, bite it and try to kneel on it. I've had at least one foal with lifetime scars on his neck from just such an encounter when he was 2 days old. Luckily momma got to him in time but I'm always super cautious now with introducing geldings to babies.
                                        I agree. Before I owned her my mare, she was severly injured trying to break through a fence to save her foal. She has scars on her neck from slamming into the fence. The foal was taking a nap by the fence when a gelding in the pasture next to it pulled it under and killed it. Aparently the gelding was acting really interested in the baby and friendly up until that point. Ever since then my mare HATES other horses (apparently she didn't before). All the horses in the pasture would be grazing together on one end and my mare is off by herself on the oppisite end. God help any that come within a 20ft radius of her. I have had her for 6yrs and she is only just starting to get over this and hang out near other horses. She also used to panic when I rode in a arena with other horses if one came out of the corner towards us. Just be carefull!!

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