Whether or not to have a mare as a roping or performance horse is a
controversial topic. I believe most mares present no significant behavioral
problems, and some of the great roping horses I’ve seen have been mares.
However, if you talk to someone who has suffered with a difficult mare, they’ll
say they never want another one.
Mares typically have a 21-day cycle. When cycling normally, the
mare will be in heat (estrus) for five to seven of those days. Those are usually
the troublesome days. However, the time of year impacts that cycle. In the late
fall with decreasing daylight hours, or photoperiod, most mares go into a
dormant period. As the photoperiod increases in early spring, mares start
cycling again.
There is a transitional period with a lot of mares in early
spring, when they may be showing signs of estrus for two weeks or more at a
time. This phenomenon is due to the mares not completing the heat cycle with an
ovulation. They are therefore are under the influence of estrogen produced by
many immature follicles on the ovaries this time of year. Time will solve this
phase, once they start ovulating.
As a veterinarian, I’m often asked what can be done to minimize
the distractive, or disruptive, behavior associated with some mares in heat.
There are several possibilities. Putting the mare on a progesterone
supplementation program will usually mask the signs of estrus. Progesterone has
been referred to as the hormone of pregnancy.
Progesterone is naturally produced by the ovary after an
ovulation, and is produced by the placenta during pregnancy. Sources of
progesterone supplements can be in the form of daily oral administration, long
acting (repository) injections that last for weeks, and off label use of cattle
implants. Another method of suppressing estrus that’s evolved is the placement
of a glass marble (about one inch in diameter) in the mare’s uterus.
One other thing I’d like to mention regards the mare that experiences
behavioral changes not on a cyclical basis. The mare that becomes aggressive and
even stallion-like in attitude should be examined by a veterinarian for the
possibility of an ovarian tumor. In this case, surgical removal of the affected
ovary is the only treatment recourse.