
Nurse mare foals are a byproduct of the racing and show horse industry. No, they are not the foals born into this industry; they are born to the mares that often raise these fine champions, while these foals are left without much opportunity to survive.
Expensive show and racing broodmares are bred back each year, usually during their foal heat, but due to the requirements of many registries they cannot be artificially inseminated. As a result, the mare is required to be transported to the breeding farms for a period of about 30-40 days. Due to the high value and insurance restriction associated with her newborn foal it remains at the owner’s farm and is nursed and nurtured by a surrogate nurse mare. The mares’ own foals are left without the care they need to survive and they often die or are sold to tanners where they are killed for their hides.
Recently much has been learned about this little known industry and many nurse mare farms are beginning to attempt to correct the inherent wrongs of the industry. More and more farms are placing their foals with rescue groups and others who can give the foals the care they need to grow and thrive. However, the cost in time and money can be astronomical. These foals need constant care and commitment, just as any baby does.
The AHDF supports new regulations proposed by the equine industry that would ensure that all nurse mare foals be at least 2 months old before being separated from their mother and that the industry support the rescues that take in these foals. This is an old industry, one that has remained hidden for decades, but one that needs to change NOW.
You can help protect these helpless foals by refusing to buy items made from “pony skins”. Many people do not realize that these items come from these young defenseless foals. Do not buy ropes, tail extensions or other items made from horse hair at all unless they can guarantee that the hair is gathered humanely from LIVE horses (most are not).
(http://www.whitebirdapps.com/?page_id=71)
The fact that the racehorse mare is usually sent back to the “stallion farm” only a short while after giving birth is horrible. Though this is not the main subject of my blog I must mention my dismay at reading this. This industry is more evil than I previously thought! As to the cost of raising a foal, I adopted and raised a nurse mare foal three years ago and found it to be expensive, but not detrimental. My foal did need constant attention because she was emotionally scarred from being taken from her mother. We had to feed her through a tube for two weeks because she refused to drink out of a bucket. It was only after I had created a bond between us (mainly running with her in the pasture) that she started eating on her own. This shows that these foals are not merely a “byproduct” of this industry, they are the victim of greed.