Folks on-line
Today is
Home
Place Ad
Place a Horse for Sale Ad
Place a Horse Trailer for Sale Ad
Place a Truck for Sale Ad
Place a Stallion Service Ad
Place a Tack Store Ad
Place a Rescue Dog Ad
Place a Services Provided Ad
New!
Record my horse's information (Free)
Log in to my account
For Sale
Barrel Horses for Sale
Barrel Horses for Sale Videos
Horse Trailers for Sale
Trucks for Sale
Stallion Service
Saddles and Tack for Sale
Rescue Dogs
Log in to my account
Stallions
Services
Events
Search for Barrel Horse Events
Place a Free Event Listing
Sanctioning Bodies
Find an Arena
List Your Arena Free
Live Webcasts
BHW Podcast Series
Live/Upcoming Webcasts
Forums
Barrel Racing Forum
Barrel Racers Directory
Trainers
In Memorium
BHW News
View My List
Contact
Contact Info
FAQ
BHW Banners
Custom Websites
Our Apps
Rate Page
Fraud Reporting
Find us on Facebook
ποΈ Forums
π· Albums
π¨ Skins
π Search
π Register
π» Logon
You are logged in as a guest.
Logon
or
register
an account to access more features.
Other Forums
Horse Trailers
Trucks
When to cut coming yearling?
Moderators:
luluwhit
,
gotothewhip
,
cindyt
,
crossspur
,
ForumAdmin
Jump to page :
1
Last activity 2017-12-08 1:32 PM
7 replies, 3797 views
View previous thread
::
View next thread
General Discussion
->
Barrel Talk
Flat
Threaded
Nested
RoaniePonie11
Reg. Jan 2011
Posted
2017-12-06 4:02 PM
Subject:
When to cut coming yearling?
Expert
Posts: 2685
Do you guys follow the farmer's almanac? Cut based on size? Behavior?
β Top
β Bottom
wyoming barrel racer
Reg. Apr 2006
Posted
2017-12-06 4:12 PM
Subject:
RE: When to cut coming yearling?
Neat Freak
Posts: 11216
Location: Wonderful Wyoming
We cut them in the spring before the flies come around. Usually April here in WY and then they go out to pasture until we start them under saddle.
β Top
β Bottom
madredepeanut
Reg. Aug 2017
Posted
2017-12-06 4:19 PM
Subject:
RE: When to cut coming yearling?
We castrate for any number of reasons. Sometimes it's whenever both testicles have dropped, or behavior has changed and they're acting stupid, or if we were going to leave them a stud and change our minds a year later or so. We try to geld when the temps aren't too hot, like the other poster said, to control flies, but sometimes that's not an option and you just have to get it done. Then fly spray becomes our best friend.
β Top
β Bottom
hotpaints
Reg. Feb 2007
Posted
2017-12-06 5:02 PM
Subject:
RE: When to cut coming yearling?
Elite Veteran
Posts: 898
Location: Mountains of VA
We just had this year's colt gelded on Nov. 18th. We always follow the Almanac for good castration and good weaning days for horses and sheep.
β Top
β Bottom
BARRELHORSE USA
Reg. Sep 2011
Posted
2017-12-07 11:02 PM
Subject:
RE: When to cut coming yearling?
Google castration of horses or weaning time ..
they have the same zodiac time to do it ..
I like spring time when temperatures are warming up and grass is turning green.
You want the moon sign to be going down into their legs ...
almost no bleeding or soreness ... keep them turned out to
walk around ...
https://www.farmersalmanac.com/calendar/best-days/farm-animals/castr...
Edited by BARRELHORSE USA 2017-12-07 11:04 PM
β Top
β Bottom
scared of sharks
Reg. Jul 2006
Posted
2017-12-08 1:06 AM
Subject:
RE: When to cut coming yearling?
Elite Veteran
Posts: 1056
my vet recommends december because it is not hot........no flies...........less swelling for somereason
β Top
β Bottom
madredepeanut
Reg. Aug 2017
Posted
2017-12-08 8:22 AM
Subject:
RE: When to cut coming yearling?
BARRELHORSE USA - 2017-12-07 9:02 PM
Google castration of horses or weaning time ..
they have the same zodiac time to do it ..
I like spring time when temperatures are warming up and grass is turning green.
You want the moon sign to be going down into their legs ...
almost no bleeding or soreness ... keep them turned out to
walk around ...
https://www.farmersalmanac.com/calendar/best-days/farm-animals/castr...
Most vets I know recommend you keep them stalled for the first 24 hours so they donβt run around and eviscerate through the incision and have their guts falling out. Then after 24 hours you can turn them out, and you actually should get out and work them ~15 minutes or so per day to keep the swelling down.
Personally, I would rather put my faith in a competent vet than the moon signs, but to each their own.
β Top
β Bottom
streakysox
Reg. Jul 2008
Posted
2017-12-08 1:32 PM
Subject:
RE: When to cut coming yearling?
Take a Picture
Posts: 12841
madredepeanut - 2017-12-08 8:22 AM
BARRELHORSE USA - 2017-12-07 9:02 PM
Google castration of horses or weaning time ..
they have the same zodiac time to do it ..
I like spring time when temperatures are warming up and grass is turning green.
You want the moon sign to be going down into their legs ...
almost no bleeding or soreness ... keep them turned out to
walk around ...
https://www.farmersalmanac.com/calendar/best-days/farm-animals/castr...
Most vets I know recommend you keep them stalled for the first 24 hours so they donβt run around and eviscerate through the incision and have their guts falling out. Then after 24 hours you can turn them out, and you actually should get out and work them ~15 minutes or so per day to keep the swelling down.
Personally, I would rather put my faith in a competent vet than the moon signs, but to each their own.
My vet says turn them out so they do not swell and will drain well, preferably with a cranky broodmare. Have done this for the past 40 years. Always cut when the signs are right. Never have a problem.
β Top
β Bottom
Jump to page :
1
Jump to forum :
General Discussion
----------------------
+ Barrel Talk
+ Teen Talk
+ Transportation
+ LET'S TALK NFR
+ Barrel Events
+ BHW Product Research Forum
+ Hay Forum
+ Sticky Forum
+ Live Events
+ Singles Corral
Search this forum
Printer friendly version
E-mail a link to this thread
Flat
Threaded
Nested
View previous thread
::
View next thread
© Copyright 2002-
BarrelHorseWorld.com All rights reserved including digital rights
Support - Contact
/
Log in to my account
'
(
Delete all cookies set by this site
)
Running
MegaBBS ASP Forum Software
© 2002-2026 PD9 Software
Registered to: Barrel Horse World