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Marbling Mare

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Last activity 2016-04-21 3:40 PM
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crashlyashley
Reg. Jul 2013
Posted 2016-04-15 6:15 PM
Subject: Marbling Mare


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Has anyone had luck marbling their mare? Thanks!
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1DSoon
Reg. May 2009
Posted 2016-04-16 7:16 AM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare





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 Only person I know that has actually tried it, ended up with an infection to end all infections. 


 
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Keepkick'n
Reg. Nov 2007
Posted 2016-04-16 8:00 AM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare



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I had a marble put in one of our mares that was horrible in heat. She would lay on the trailer and pee whenever I took her somewhere. Had a marble inserted, no infection, and it seemed to work. Super long story short, she developed pigeon fever and it went internal. The mare is no longer sound to run. So, we got the marble out and the mare conceived on her first heat after marble removal. We now have a gorgeous filly.

Would I go the marble route again? Probably not.

Edited by Keepkick'n 2016-04-16 8:01 AM
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crashlyashley
Reg. Jul 2013
Posted 2016-04-16 8:32 AM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare


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Yikes that is good to know. Thank you!
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crashlyashley
Reg. Jul 2013
Posted 2016-04-16 8:34 AM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare


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Keepkick'n - 2016-04-16 8:00 AM

I had a marble put in one of our mares that was horrible in heat. She would lay on the trailer and pee whenever I took her somewhere. Had a marble inserted, no infection, and it seemed to work. Super long story short, she developed pigeon fever and it went internal. The mare is no longer sound to run. So, we got the marble out and the mare conceived on her first heat after marble removal. We now have a gorgeous filly.

Would I go the marble route again? Probably not.

Thank you for sharing. My main barrel horse is that way, horrible heat cycles, rubs and leans on the trailer and is just miserable. I have been able to mostly keep her controlled with supplements but would like to find something that is a little cheaper and more consistent in the long run. Do you think the marble had anything to do with the issues she had later?
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SG.
Reg. Sep 2003
Posted 2016-04-16 5:52 PM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare


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No and I don't recommend it 
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caracer
Reg. Jan 2004
Posted 2016-04-16 8:06 PM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare





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Location: Stephenville, Texas
My friend has a horse that was marbled and developed a bad infection. The mare is now sterile.
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Keepkick'n
Reg. Nov 2007
Posted 2016-04-16 10:20 PM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare



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No. Pigeon fever is a virus and completely separate issue. And, in hindsight, she was probably harboring the PF when we had the marble inserted. Really hate PF.
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crashlyashley
Reg. Jul 2013
Posted 2016-04-16 10:27 PM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare


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Thank you all for the information. I really appreciate it. It is unfortunate it hasn't worked better since the concept is great.
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KatieMac88
Reg. Apr 2012
Posted 2016-04-17 11:19 AM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare



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We tried it in two of our mares. One had terrible heat cycles and would kick the trailer bad. The marble worked wonders on her. We haven't had an issue since. The other mare just had normal heat cycles but she did not handle the marble well at all (she's a sensitive type mare anyway). We had it taken out a week later because she developed a fever and acted colicky and stressed. Once the marble was out and we treated her for infection in case there was any she was good to go. It was stressful for a couple weeks though. So long story short, it works great for some and bad for others.
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crashlyashley
Reg. Jul 2013
Posted 2016-04-17 11:24 AM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare


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My mare is horrible in the trailer. Rubs her hip raw, bites at stuff, kicks, produces milk when she doesn't have a colt. I am mostly able to keep her under control with supplements to help her hormone imbalance but was looking for something that I didn't have to hope she ate it all. It sounds like most people haven't had good luck so I'm sure I'll pass. I don't want to put her through more than I need to. Glad it worked well for your one though :) first positive feedback I have heard about it.
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ND3canAddict
Reg. Sep 2003
Posted 2016-04-19 7:56 AM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare



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 This is what I use for my daughter's mare.  She is almost always in heat and is pretty difficult.  It's expensive, but safe and I only have to monkey with it once a month.

 
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ND3canAddict
Reg. Sep 2003
Posted 2016-04-19 7:57 AM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare



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RunNitroRun
Reg. Oct 2011
Posted 2016-04-19 12:15 PM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare



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We had asked about marbling a mare we had (horrible heat cycles) and our vet said if you never have plans to breed her then it's something to look into; however, if you every think there may be a possibility of wanting to breed the mare then don't. He said the marble itself can cause damage making implantation harder and infections from the marble can render the horse sterile.

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Gunner11
Reg. Mar 2011
Posted 2016-04-19 12:27 PM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare



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RunNitroRun - 2016-04-19 12:15 PM

We had asked about marbling a mare we had (horrible heat cycles) and our vet said if you never have plans to breed her then it's something to look into; however, if you every think there may be a possibility of wanting to breed the mare then don't. He said the marble itself can cause damage making implantation harder and infections from the marble can render the horse sterile.


Just curious, if someone has no plans for breeding, and the mare suffers from horrible heat cycles, is spaying a viable option?
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lhighquality
Reg. Apr 2013
Posted 2016-04-19 12:46 PM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare


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Gunner11 - 2016-04-19 12:27 PM

RunNitroRun - 2016-04-19 12:15 PM

We had asked about marbling a mare we had (horrible heat cycles) and our vet said if you never have plans to breed her then it's something to look into; however, if you every think there may be a possibility of wanting to breed the mare then don't. He said the marble itself can cause damage making implantation harder and infections from the marble can render the horse sterile.


Just curious, if someone has no plans for breeding, and the mare suffers from horrible heat cycles, is spaying a viable option?

Probably too expensive for most of us, would be my guess.
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Gunner11
Reg. Mar 2011
Posted 2016-04-19 12:49 PM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare



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lhighquality - 2016-04-19 12:46 PM

Gunner11 - 2016-04-19 12:27 PM

RunNitroRun - 2016-04-19 12:15 PM

We had asked about marbling a mare we had (horrible heat cycles) and our vet said if you never have plans to breed her then it's something to look into; however, if you every think there may be a possibility of wanting to breed the mare then don't. He said the marble itself can cause damage making implantation harder and infections from the marble can render the horse sterile.


Just curious, if someone has no plans for breeding, and the mare suffers from horrible heat cycles, is spaying a viable option?

Probably too expensive for most of us, would be my guess.

I assume that also, I have no idea what it costs.
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lhighquality
Reg. Apr 2013
Posted 2016-04-19 1:01 PM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare


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Gunner11 - 2016-04-19 12:49 PM

lhighquality - 2016-04-19 12:46 PM

Gunner11 - 2016-04-19 12:27 PM

RunNitroRun - 2016-04-19 12:15 PM

We had asked about marbling a mare we had (horrible heat cycles) and our vet said if you never have plans to breed her then it's something to look into; however, if you every think there may be a possibility of wanting to breed the mare then don't. He said the marble itself can cause damage making implantation harder and infections from the marble can render the horse sterile.


Just curious, if someone has no plans for breeding, and the mare suffers from horrible heat cycles, is spaying a viable option?

Probably too expensive for most of us, would be my guess.

I assume that also, I have no idea what it costs.

In my area you would have to travel to a Vet school, there are 2 about 3-4 hours away!!
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Mis_Trev
Reg. Jan 2014
Posted 2016-04-19 2:17 PM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare


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lhighquality - 2016-04-19 11:46 AM
Gunner11 - 2016-04-19 12:27 PM
RunNitroRun - 2016-04-19 12:15 PM We had asked about marbling a mare we had (horrible heat cycles) and our vet said if you never have plans to breed her then it's something to look into; however, if you every think there may be a possibility of wanting to breed the mare then don't. He said the marble itself can cause damage making implantation harder and infections from the marble can render the horse sterile.
Just curious, if someone has no plans for breeding, and the mare suffers from horrible heat cycles, is spaying a viable option?
Probably too expensive for most of us, would be my guess.

I give my mare Regumate... If I had no plans to breed her then the cost of spaying over a lifetime would be a lot less than paying for Regumate. 

I am glad someone asked about marbling... I have been considering whether to try or not.  My understanding was marbles are only good for 90 days max.  Then you would have to have it removed.  
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whatadoll
Reg. Nov 2007
Posted 2016-04-19 3:53 PM
Subject: RE: Marbling Mare


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Location: Whitney, NE
Spaying is a viable option, and helps a ton. It isn't without risks, though, so do your homework.
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