Early Spring, 514 AV
It was that time again and The Sanctuary was lucky no one had foaled early. Kavala had every broodmare due to foal in the boarding pasture that was usually designated for boarders. For the Konti, she liked to run her herds naturally. But since she had so much stress on the horses not being out on the Sea of Grass year round, when in the pasture there was sometimes mix-ups and squabbling among the yearlings, broodmares, mares who had already foaled, and stallions. So Kavala had taken to separating them neatly into multiple groups. The stallions all ran together with the geldings. They did not fight. Kavala made sure all her studs were war trained and suitable to be turned out with each other. If they were not she cut them and sold them as geldings.
And in fact, all her geldings for that matter where under three and in training. Once they were fully trained at age four, they were sold off as riding horses or given to the Kuvay’Nas under her contract with the city of Riverfall. Geldings had no place in her breeding program and she was stern about it.
Since it was early spring, there were no weanlings to speak of. Instead there were just long yearlings, two year olds, and three year olds in a mixed herd. Anything she was not training as a mount but instead using in her breeding program (even if too young to breed) went into the broodmare herd. So the broodmare herd consisted of mares that were heavily pregnant, not pregnant, or not old enough to be bred. Once they foaled, the mares were separated out into the broodmare pasture and left to relax and raise their babies for four or five months. Then, once the foals had started to wean themselves off their mothers, they were moved to the mixed youngling herd and started on lessons. The mares were then returned to the broodmare herd, and everyone was happy.
Breeding was done in the spring, not on the foaling heat but on the next heat after that. So unless all the mares were bred and stallions were turned out to help guard them, no stallions ran with the mares until then.
It was a complex system, but one that Kavala was finding worked well for her. And with all her broodmares in the boarder paddock, she could watch the heavily pregnant ones for signs of immediate foaling and move them from the pasture into a birthing stall.
The stalls were all prepared. It was one of the first things Kavala did. She ordered in a wagon load of fresh straw, stripped anything remotely old out of the big birthing stalls, and padded them well with the soft bedding. Then, carefully, she got out a ton of supplies and made up burlap bags containing foaling kits for each mare. IF she had forty mares to foal out, she would make forty kits. The broodmare barn had twelve stalls. Each stall was heavily padded with straw, laid in with food, and fresh water.
Kavala had four mares in stalls currently, and was busy making up the first foal kits of the season. She did so by laying out the supplies on long tables she set up for the purpose. Then she’d take her burlap bag, walk down the table, and pick the supplies she needed for each mare. Half the battle was getting the supplies ready. And she didn’t chance the fact that she’d keep one kit for every mare. No… Kavala had learned when foals started to come, you needed everything at hand. And keep everything at hand she did.
The first table needed tail wraps. Kavala liked to wrap each mare’s tail with heavy gauze or spare linen. It kept the hair from being in the way of the birth or getting sucked back into the uterus in the middle of contractions where a baby is being pushed but not expelled. Kavala took extra lengths of linen – mostly from used linens that had worn holes in the facilities bedding department. She cut them into long strips then rolled the whole thing, tying it off with a small strip of leather. She repeated this forty times, nodding when anyone came to help and setting them to the task of doing it themselves. Once the tail wrap was rolled and tied off, it was then wrapped in a spare piece of linen to keep the wrap itself clean.
The next station was where she took small saved bladder and stomachs from rabbits or sheep they slaughtered and filled it with a mild detergent soap. These were tied off tight, so they wouldn’t leak, and added to the pile to be picked for the kits later. The little bladders were useful if awkward. They contained the soap that if mixed with water to help sanitize the mare’s rear when it was time to foal out. Forty bladders were filled, tied off, and left to be picked later.
The next was a small bottle of disinfectant. That and a set of forceps, rolled in a cloth with lots of linen squares that could be dipped into the disinfectant by the forceps clutching the linen and swirled around the where the umbilical cord was broken off in the mare.
Next she added clamps with bandages to deal with any torn umbilical cords or other types of injuries. Bandages were added to the pile next to them. Then a pile of scissors and scalpels were added. These were freshly cleaned and packed away each year having been in foal kits for seasons and seasons at The Sanctuary. Next a pile of towels were stacked high on the table, a mixture of fluffy fresh body and hand sized were laid out... The Sanctuary went through a lot of towels. It couldn’t be helped. Each kit was going to get a pile of towels in and of its own right. Three large ones and four small hand towels were all going into the kits.
Next a set of OB straps that Kavala had made for each of the kits was laid out. The straps were made of leather and not the normal chains she used on calves. Horses were more delicate, but sometimes the foals had to be turned or pulled. The leather straps came in handy.
Further along the tables she laid out glass jugs and long tubing made of animal gut. The enemas were for the foals that sometimes had compacted material in their digestive track which kept them from defecating. The situation could get dangerous if this occurred so Kavala always had enemas handy in case the baby needed it. Next to the enemas were laid out thermometers, suturing, cat gut, and finally a pile of halters and lead ropes.
Kavala knew the only thing left to do was make up a huge batch of Colic Mixture. And that mixture would go into glass vials, bet set on the table last, and packed on the upper portion of the kit to make sure it was handy to get too.
The Colic Mixture would take time, but then Kavala had set aside the late morning to make it happen. Once she got the colic mixture one, she’d pick and stack all the kits, making sure they were ready to go, and then tackle foaling season as the first few mares went into labor.
Count: 1,242 - posted 6/16
It was that time again and The Sanctuary was lucky no one had foaled early. Kavala had every broodmare due to foal in the boarding pasture that was usually designated for boarders. For the Konti, she liked to run her herds naturally. But since she had so much stress on the horses not being out on the Sea of Grass year round, when in the pasture there was sometimes mix-ups and squabbling among the yearlings, broodmares, mares who had already foaled, and stallions. So Kavala had taken to separating them neatly into multiple groups. The stallions all ran together with the geldings. They did not fight. Kavala made sure all her studs were war trained and suitable to be turned out with each other. If they were not she cut them and sold them as geldings.
And in fact, all her geldings for that matter where under three and in training. Once they were fully trained at age four, they were sold off as riding horses or given to the Kuvay’Nas under her contract with the city of Riverfall. Geldings had no place in her breeding program and she was stern about it.
Since it was early spring, there were no weanlings to speak of. Instead there were just long yearlings, two year olds, and three year olds in a mixed herd. Anything she was not training as a mount but instead using in her breeding program (even if too young to breed) went into the broodmare herd. So the broodmare herd consisted of mares that were heavily pregnant, not pregnant, or not old enough to be bred. Once they foaled, the mares were separated out into the broodmare pasture and left to relax and raise their babies for four or five months. Then, once the foals had started to wean themselves off their mothers, they were moved to the mixed youngling herd and started on lessons. The mares were then returned to the broodmare herd, and everyone was happy.
Breeding was done in the spring, not on the foaling heat but on the next heat after that. So unless all the mares were bred and stallions were turned out to help guard them, no stallions ran with the mares until then.
It was a complex system, but one that Kavala was finding worked well for her. And with all her broodmares in the boarder paddock, she could watch the heavily pregnant ones for signs of immediate foaling and move them from the pasture into a birthing stall.
The stalls were all prepared. It was one of the first things Kavala did. She ordered in a wagon load of fresh straw, stripped anything remotely old out of the big birthing stalls, and padded them well with the soft bedding. Then, carefully, she got out a ton of supplies and made up burlap bags containing foaling kits for each mare. IF she had forty mares to foal out, she would make forty kits. The broodmare barn had twelve stalls. Each stall was heavily padded with straw, laid in with food, and fresh water.
Kavala had four mares in stalls currently, and was busy making up the first foal kits of the season. She did so by laying out the supplies on long tables she set up for the purpose. Then she’d take her burlap bag, walk down the table, and pick the supplies she needed for each mare. Half the battle was getting the supplies ready. And she didn’t chance the fact that she’d keep one kit for every mare. No… Kavala had learned when foals started to come, you needed everything at hand. And keep everything at hand she did.
The first table needed tail wraps. Kavala liked to wrap each mare’s tail with heavy gauze or spare linen. It kept the hair from being in the way of the birth or getting sucked back into the uterus in the middle of contractions where a baby is being pushed but not expelled. Kavala took extra lengths of linen – mostly from used linens that had worn holes in the facilities bedding department. She cut them into long strips then rolled the whole thing, tying it off with a small strip of leather. She repeated this forty times, nodding when anyone came to help and setting them to the task of doing it themselves. Once the tail wrap was rolled and tied off, it was then wrapped in a spare piece of linen to keep the wrap itself clean.
The next station was where she took small saved bladder and stomachs from rabbits or sheep they slaughtered and filled it with a mild detergent soap. These were tied off tight, so they wouldn’t leak, and added to the pile to be picked for the kits later. The little bladders were useful if awkward. They contained the soap that if mixed with water to help sanitize the mare’s rear when it was time to foal out. Forty bladders were filled, tied off, and left to be picked later.
The next was a small bottle of disinfectant. That and a set of forceps, rolled in a cloth with lots of linen squares that could be dipped into the disinfectant by the forceps clutching the linen and swirled around the where the umbilical cord was broken off in the mare.
Next she added clamps with bandages to deal with any torn umbilical cords or other types of injuries. Bandages were added to the pile next to them. Then a pile of scissors and scalpels were added. These were freshly cleaned and packed away each year having been in foal kits for seasons and seasons at The Sanctuary. Next a pile of towels were stacked high on the table, a mixture of fluffy fresh body and hand sized were laid out... The Sanctuary went through a lot of towels. It couldn’t be helped. Each kit was going to get a pile of towels in and of its own right. Three large ones and four small hand towels were all going into the kits.
Next a set of OB straps that Kavala had made for each of the kits was laid out. The straps were made of leather and not the normal chains she used on calves. Horses were more delicate, but sometimes the foals had to be turned or pulled. The leather straps came in handy.
Further along the tables she laid out glass jugs and long tubing made of animal gut. The enemas were for the foals that sometimes had compacted material in their digestive track which kept them from defecating. The situation could get dangerous if this occurred so Kavala always had enemas handy in case the baby needed it. Next to the enemas were laid out thermometers, suturing, cat gut, and finally a pile of halters and lead ropes.
Kavala knew the only thing left to do was make up a huge batch of Colic Mixture. And that mixture would go into glass vials, bet set on the table last, and packed on the upper portion of the kit to make sure it was handy to get too.
The Colic Mixture would take time, but then Kavala had set aside the late morning to make it happen. Once she got the colic mixture one, she’d pick and stack all the kits, making sure they were ready to go, and then tackle foaling season as the first few mares went into labor.
Count: 1,242 - posted 6/16