Weaning with our pups has always been a simple process at
a time when the mother is pleased to have us take over responsibility for her
youngsters. It is a leisurely process over about ten days so that when the moment arrives it is hardly noticed. With our hawks it is a similar process at fledging when the falcon
has worked herself extremely hard for a few weeks and is only too pleased to be
taken out of the chamber and leave finishing of the eyasses to us. I have
developed a system of adjacent chambers so that the door can be opened for her
to choose to sit out of sight of her youngsters which she readily does for relief
from their constant screaming for food. When the day arrives it's a very simple
process to just close the door and her period of parental duties is done.
Sound carries in the stillness of night, mother and foal
can still faintly hear each other at opposite ends of the yard in separate
buildings. Barking muntjack, bulling cows echoing for miles on still night air, owls from
screachers to hooters, moorhens and roosting cock pheasants, all join in the
cacophony when usually peace and tranquility prevail under the starlight.
Not having bred horses for a few years and not having
weaned a colt for 24 years one simply forgets what it was like but today our
concern is much increased from our harsher youthful exuberance of many years
ago. In those far off days of our youth we just bolted stable doors and left them to get on with it? I am
sure we didn't do quite that but I don't remember this trauma we have now. Today our treasured
colt has his hoof prints on the white walls around the eaves! He seems to
have spent as much time on his back legs up against the walls as he has on the
floor. Unseasonably warm weather has helped keep him dripping with sweat, his
fine skin like dark wet silk, spectacular to look at but harsh on the nerves.
Obviously it was all extremely exhausting for him with
unrelenting tension, his adrenaline kept him going and going, wet and dripping
with sweat but by mid afternoon of the following day it seemed he was a little
more thoughtful, not much but I sensed we could make a step forward.
Before we made our new stabling in the barn, where our colt had spent the first five months of his life with his mother, we kept our horses in our yard of loose-boxes adjacent to the house - an
intimate arrangement that worked well for us. One of these stables was brought back into use for his weaning. It was after four days our colt Asti stepped
confidently out of his new stable into the strange surroundings of the yard, house
and garden. With some care he relied on my confidence and walked among the
fallen conkers under the horse chestnut tree to the paddock where he was
familiar with his surroundings. He stopped and looked back to the yard from
which he had come, his mother called from her stable in the barn reigniting the
fireworks and we had our first experience of lunging on the grass. For this I had been prepared with him already on the long lunge rein and with appropriate lunge whip just for guidance.
Only twenty laps or so and he refocused again, back onto
me so we had a cuddle and set off back to the yard. He was still feeling the
heat of this very warm day and was quite wet so a shower from the hose provided welcome
cooling, cleaning and refreshment. The bath was not new to him as during the
heat of summer we had taken care to ensure he got used to it as one of his
additional experiences at his mothers side. The sweat scraper got most of the
water out of his coat and without being in any way perfectionist about the
process Jenny and I kept things changing and
moving along quite rapidly before is thoughts might get the better of
him. As soon as he looked respectable again he willingly walked back into his
new home, sharing the busy comings and goings of life in the yard.
Some brief neighing soon died down and when I looked
about thirty minutes later he was flat out in the straw, fast asleep with his
legs twitching as he dozed. The first sleep he had for several days. This
evening the progress was remarkable, his attitude most welcoming, evening meal
all finished up and obviously delighted with my company in his box, reveling
in having his body stroked, shoulder scratched, ear pulled and head rubbed.
His mother also turned a corner, stopped pacing
the box and was this evening chewing hay as fast as she can get through it. Of
course hard feed was restricted now that milk is not needed, water had been restricted briefly but as the worst of milk production had eased,
her bag contracting, she was composed enough to drink a full bucket.
So after a few days we now start to look forward to
organising ourselves to the new routines and way of life that an extra occupied
stable brings. Our stallions have always lived as part of the family adjacent
to the house and for Asti, an unusually friendly foal from birth, the prospect
is proving very welcome. After ten days or so he is happy to have a paddock to himself, to peacefully graze for three or four hours, visit the gate if we appear and now he responds to a whistle. With an Indian summer we are all enjoying unexpected sunny autumnal weather, Asti has learned to pick his own blackberries, dried leaves crackle under foot, fallen apples brighten up his evening meal. Pleasure of creating a new character in the family our daily joy. At last the trauma of weaning is over, another transition complete.
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