Little Wolf Ranch
Well-Known Member
First of all, I want to say that I have never dealt with a stall weaver or fence pacer, but now that I have acquired one - I now know how difficult owning one is! So please be patient with me, as I literally know nothing about handling this type of situation.
Three weeks ago I was given a stallion whom I dearly love and cherish - he is a Magic Man son and I just adore him. He is loving, kind and super easy to handle on the lead and has been shown in his younger years. He is 16 years old and I already know that placing him in another home is not an option - he will live with us until the day God calls him home. The only problem with him is that he is a HORRIBLE fence pacer and stall weaver, and his weight reflects that. He has been a pasture-only breeding stallion for several years now and the previous owners say he has been at this weight for quite some time now, over a year. You can see his spine, hip bones, ribs, tail bone, etc. but still has some muscle and is about a 3 on the 1-10 scale.
I tried keeping him separate from my girls for about a week, which only escalated the problem as he could still hear them so he now has one mare he lives with 24/7 in the pasture and are stalled next to each other where he can see and smell her. This reduced the pacing and weaving by about 50% but is by no means gone. There are no other stallions on the property - only geldings and mares.
He is kept in his stall during the day with free access hay and a fan on him so he does not overheat. He is 31" tall and is fed 4 cups of 13% protein and 8% fat pelleted grain and 2 cups Calf Manna twice a day, sometimes he eats it all and other times he doesn't. He is turned out at night for some turnout so he wont be as hot. I have not seen an improvement in his weight at all, so I am starting to lean towards him needing a good floating (no teeth problems that I can see while eating or chewing, but that doesn't mean he doesn't need it) and I am assuming by his high stress level he most likely has ulcers. He is by no means lethargic - he makes me tired just watching him.
I have already ordered the ulcer meds and they should be here in the next day or two, he has already been dewormed with Panacur for 1 week when he first arrived and Zymectrin Gold this morning, and I am in the process of finding an equine dentist that will do miniatures in my area. I used to have one that would do minis but apparently she has moved away since I used her last summer.
I realize that this is a chronic and "learned" habit and from what I have read, there really isn't a way to "stop" them from doing it but is there anything more that I can do for him that may help? I would love to get him looking good and feeling better.
If someone would like to see pictures please PM me, but out of respect for his previous owners (it was a very sad situation) I won't make this a public bashing session.
Three weeks ago I was given a stallion whom I dearly love and cherish - he is a Magic Man son and I just adore him. He is loving, kind and super easy to handle on the lead and has been shown in his younger years. He is 16 years old and I already know that placing him in another home is not an option - he will live with us until the day God calls him home. The only problem with him is that he is a HORRIBLE fence pacer and stall weaver, and his weight reflects that. He has been a pasture-only breeding stallion for several years now and the previous owners say he has been at this weight for quite some time now, over a year. You can see his spine, hip bones, ribs, tail bone, etc. but still has some muscle and is about a 3 on the 1-10 scale.
I tried keeping him separate from my girls for about a week, which only escalated the problem as he could still hear them so he now has one mare he lives with 24/7 in the pasture and are stalled next to each other where he can see and smell her. This reduced the pacing and weaving by about 50% but is by no means gone. There are no other stallions on the property - only geldings and mares.
He is kept in his stall during the day with free access hay and a fan on him so he does not overheat. He is 31" tall and is fed 4 cups of 13% protein and 8% fat pelleted grain and 2 cups Calf Manna twice a day, sometimes he eats it all and other times he doesn't. He is turned out at night for some turnout so he wont be as hot. I have not seen an improvement in his weight at all, so I am starting to lean towards him needing a good floating (no teeth problems that I can see while eating or chewing, but that doesn't mean he doesn't need it) and I am assuming by his high stress level he most likely has ulcers. He is by no means lethargic - he makes me tired just watching him.
I have already ordered the ulcer meds and they should be here in the next day or two, he has already been dewormed with Panacur for 1 week when he first arrived and Zymectrin Gold this morning, and I am in the process of finding an equine dentist that will do miniatures in my area. I used to have one that would do minis but apparently she has moved away since I used her last summer.
I realize that this is a chronic and "learned" habit and from what I have read, there really isn't a way to "stop" them from doing it but is there anything more that I can do for him that may help? I would love to get him looking good and feeling better.
If someone would like to see pictures please PM me, but out of respect for his previous owners (it was a very sad situation) I won't make this a public bashing session.