Hand Raising a Newborn Donkey Foal
I’m writing
this for all donkey owners faced with hand raising a newborn foal.
I was a
first time donkey owner, a one person operation and over sixty years old when I
purchased a pregnant jennet and two other maiden donkeys. Less than a year
later, I ended up raising the mare’s five day old foal. I’ve never had anything make me feel so
helpless and inexperienced as having a five day old donkey foal screaming and
yelping for a mother who had clearly abandoned her. I hope this information will help anyone in
the same situation who may need advice.
The key is to trust yourself and use your best judgment. Not everything you read applies to every
situation or every foal.
For
starters, make sure you have a package of milk replacer and a baby bottle on
hand in your foaling kit, in case of the unthinkable. Even though you may wish it won’t happen, it
might. Also, once the baby is born, make sure you have the vet come within the
first twelve hours to ensure it received Colostrum from the mother’s milk. I unknowingly waited five days and luckily
the foal was o.k.
Once the
foal was born, I started watching the mare and her foal and of course never
having been through the experience before, I didn’t trust my judgment in
recognizing possible signs of trouble. In hindsight, I questioned whether the
mother was bonding with her baby because by the second day she would let me
walk in the paddock and be alone with the baby while she stood twenty feet
away. Once, I also observed her attempt a kick to push the little one away. I kept thinking “if I didn’t know
better I’d say she wanted me to have the baby”. Well guess what, she did. So my advice is to trust yourself, if it
doesn’t feel right, it probably isn’t.
I also
observed that the baby was very rough when nursing, snatching and yanking the
teat. In hindsight, I think the foal was not receiving enough milk. I kept monitoring the mare and it seemed to
me that she never bagged up enough to support a young foal. But since I didn’t
know what a full jennet bag looked like, I just assumed everything was
alright. So I recommend you have the vet
check this when he makes his initial visit to check the foal.
On the foal’s
fifth day, I finally called the vet to come make a routine check, that’s when
all hell broke loose. Once the vet drew blood from the foal and we placed the
foal back in the paddock, the mother not only rejected her, she tried to kill
the foal by kicking it. The vet
suspected that drawing the blood changed her smell, but it’s my belief that the
vet was simply the straw that broke the camel’s back. When the opportunity presented itself for the
mother to get rid of the foal, she did so.
We tried for an hour to reintroduce them after which time the vet
instructed me to hand raise the foal because it would be too dangerous to
experiment further and from his perspective the mother could never be trusted
with the foal.
At this
point the true horror of the situation set in for me. Frankly, the vet left me uncertain as to
whether I was capable and up to the task of raising the foal. He’s an old time
vet and I think he thought I didn’t have it in me. From my perspective I didn’t know if I did or
not, but I could not let her die without making every effort. He told me I had about twenty four hours to
get the baby to drink milk or it would be a major crisis and if she did not
drink by morning to contact him immediately.
He instructed me to purchase a powdered milk replacer especially developed for horses from a Farm and Feed store
and to try to bottle feed her (no more than 4 ounces initially). I've read you can also use goats milk. He then instructed me to take
her first thing in the morning to a local horse farmer and ask him teach her to
“bucket feed.” The vet stated that foals
can aspirate the contents of the bottle and drown or get pneumonia when bottle fed. Therefore he
advised me to get her on the bucket as soon as possible. This proved to be the best advice he gave me,
because bucket feeding is so much easier.
It was already 4 p.m. and I live 45 minutes from any type of feed store
but I sent someone to quickly purchase a regular baby bottle and powdered milk
replacer (Foal Lac). I spent that night in the barn
on the floor with the distressed foal trying to get her to take the bottle. She
screamed and howled all night. It took
from 6 p.m. until 1 a.m. to get her to drink the bottle of warmed milk
replacer. Finally, I was able to coax
her by sitting on a hay bale and placing the bottle horizontally behind my knee
so that only the nipple showed. She licked the nipple and drank her first four
ounces as she buried her head in the side of my knee. I’ve never been so relieved. We made it through the first night and ultimately she took another two ounces
later that night.
At 8 a.m., I
loaded the baby foal into the back seat of the car and took her to a local
horseman who agreed to teach her to drink.
Amazingly, he taught her to drink from a bucket in 20 minutes. He held her firmly but gently and repeatedly
saturated her nose with milk until she learned to sip. I remember thinking that I would have been
too gentle and hesitant to properly teach her.
I vowed not to treat this donkey as I have my dogs, that is like they
are humans. I knew I could not have a donkey with separation anxiety, braying,
howling, wetting or chewing every time I departed. Therefore, I knew I would
have to be emotionally strong and not overreact to the little foal. Despite her numerous attempts she definitely
was not allowed in my lap. I remained
true to my word. She brayed and howled
when I left her in the evening and in spite of myself I continued to the house.
She tried to climb in my lap and I resisted, gently placing her back on the
ground. From day one I provided her with gentle corrections when she tried to
jump on me. I did allow her to bury her
head and otherwise snuggle, who could resist.
My next
hurdle was determining how much to feed her.
I constantly checked the internet for advice, but generally there were
no specifics on exactly how much to feed. I didn’t have an effective way to
obtain a birth weight on her. Most
information stated that mini foals are born weighing between 20 and 30 pounds,
so I assumed that my foal was average which would put her at 25 pounds. In
hindsight, I think she was smaller.
Additionally, everything I read stated that
the first month was the most critical period for a foal, so I dedicated all my
effort to attaining the first month. Each month attained became a
milestone. All sites stated she should
be fed six to eight times a day. I
quickly concluded I simply couldn’t keep that schedule and I certainly could
not sleep in the barn with her every night.
At this point, I had to use my best judgment. I continually implored her to hang in there
with me as we learned together. Initially for the first couple of days, I did
feed her eight times a day, arising at3 a.m.
Ultimately, I decided her last feeding of the day would be at 11 p.m.
and then I would feed her again at 6 a.m.
I reasoned that as long as she was drinking well during the day she
should be able to make it seven hours overnight. For the next three days, I fed her the bottle
five/six time a day. I fed her at 6 a.m;
11 a.m.; 3p.m. 7p.m; and 11 p.m and if she appeared to be hungry I would offer
her an extra helping in between.
When she was
eight days old, I shifted her over to the “bucket” system by using a small
plastic Tupperware container. She sipped the contents from the container as I
held it. At this point I also let her
determine how much she should drink. I
think within a couple of weeks she was up to 6 ounces at each feeding. As she started to grow, I increased the
amount she drank by how much she tolerated.
She never “over drank,” if she felt full she stopped drinking. Also, by this time I offered her water with
each feeding. This schedule continued until she was almost a month old.
It was
during this period that I also learned of another system that I could have used
which entails converting a medium size IGLOO cooler/thermos into a substitute
milker. Some folks drill out the cooler where the faucet is and replace the faucet with a rubber lamb size nipple. I
think you can even purchase a pre-made device on the internet. At any rate, they hang the thermos on the
fence post and the foal can drink whenever they want. The benefit of this system is that you don’t
have to be physically present when the foal drinks. The downfall is that the
foal could aspirate the contents. This system will work if you have a maiden
donkey you can place with your foal. Of
course the thermos as with any system must be routinely cleaned .
In terms of
housing, I had no choice but to put the foal in the stall alone, however, I
separated the stall from the other donkeys, with a wire gate, which allowed the
other donkeys to have nose contact with
her. I also installed an inexpensive
baby monitor so that I could hear everything from my house. I lined the stall
with straw and hay since I read that they can also aspirate sawdust shavings.
During the
day I would let her out to play alone for an hour or so at a time in the wire
fence paddock. Once again, the three
donkeys (including her mother) could go nose to nose with her through the
fence. Her mother could have cared less. I quickly realized that for the foal’s sake
this situation could not go on for long.
I had read many internet stories about hand raising horses and if they
do not receive proper mentorship from another horse, they grow up unmanageable
and untrainable. I was determined not to
have this happen to the foal. I wanted a
healthy, normal, happy donkey. I briefly thought about having one of my maiden
donkeys raise the foal, but when I put each of them in with the foal, neither
maiden showed much interest. Once again, my better judgment told me no. My
concern was that the foal’s mother was also the herd leader to the other
jennets.
My little
foal was now two weeks old and growing up strong, but lonely and isolated.
Finally, in desperation, I reasoned that perhaps a weanling or yearling donkey
could help the foal adjust and would be young enough for both of them to bond.
I searched the internet, until I finally found a lovely 10 month old weanling
named “Shawna” that had been placed up for sale by Shorecrest Farms in
Pennsylvania. Fortunately, Shawna’s
owners were in agreement that the plan might work and they were willing to
transport the weanling to me.
I started
the introduction process of all donkeys by putting my three big donkeys out to
pasture for a few days. I placed Shawna
in the front paddock which allowed her to go nose to nose with the big donkeys
and if she came close to the stall she could go nose to nose with the
foal. Shawna spent the first couple of
nights howling, she too was missing her family.
On the third day I divided the foal’s stall in half with another gate
and I moved Shawna into one half. I
brought the bigger donkeys back in the paddock.
The two little donkeys quickly bonded and within two days they were both
sharing a stall together and both could go nose to nose with the bigger
donkeys.
My foal was
just over three weeks old and presumably a happy donkey. She bonded with the
weanling quickly. Fortunately for me
Shawna is a “sweet” little donkey with a gentle unassuming temperament. Shawna
was old enough to eat hay and grain and the foal studied everything she did. Of
course, it only follows that within a couple of days the foal decided she would
not drink her milk anymore. She only wanted to eat grain and hay like the
bigger donkey, even though she was not capable.
By this time, she was a little less than a month old, so I knew she
still needed her milk. I placed a call
to the vet and was instructed to try her on “Foal-Lac pellets” which is pelletized milk
replacer. It worked, the foal continued
to eat her Foal-Lac five times a day until she was about six weeks old, at which
point she started trying to eat grain and stopped eating the pellets. In responding to her needs, I started feeding
her four times a day and mixing the Foal-Lac with Mare & Foal feed, the same grain Shawna was eating.
Once she was
four months old I cut her feedings down to three times a day and I continued
increasing the mix of Foal-Lac and Mare & Foal grain until she was six
months old. Admittedly I kept her on the milk pellets longer than most advise
but I wanted her to have the best start possible. I also used these feeding
times to bond with both donkeys by grooming them and gradually getting them
accustomed to halters, leg lifting etc.
Aside from
the customary vaccinations the only other important issue I encountered was
that I dewormed the foal when she was four months old, using an equine version
of Ivermectin. The day after deworming
the foal went off her feed for the evening meal and appeared sick and
lethargic, so I quickly called the vet for an emergency visit. Her vitals were fine. The vet indicated that perhaps passing the
worms had given her an upset stomach. Within several hours, the foal was
herself again. I was instructed the next
time I dewormed her to use a Strogycide which I did and all was fine. I think
if I could do it over again, I would not have used the Equine Ivermectin on her
and started her out with another type of dewormer. I have continued to use the Equine Ivermectin
on my other Jennets with no problems.
Today, my
foal has grown ino a beautiful young donkey. She’s smart, well mannered, has an
excellent temperament and is an otherwise normal mini donkey. When I enter the paddock she stays at my side until I leave and frequently she gives me donkey hugs by circling around my legs. The one thing I have noticed, that I cannot change is that she does not appear to have the same "fear" response of the unknown as the other donkeys. I don't think this is a good thing, but she is relatively safe where she is and I will count on the other donkeys to help teach her in this.
I fully integrated her into the herd at six months of age by introducing her to one donkey at a time over the course of two weeks.
My foal is now approaching two years old and presumably a happy donkey. The experience has bonded both of us for life. It has also brought me closer to the other jennets I own. Donkeys are so smart and they watch everything. They watched me raise this foal and it increased their trust level with me. They know I will go to the end of the earth for them.
I hope this information is helpful for anyone raising a donkey foal and if you find yourself in this unfortunate situation, trust yourself and good luck.
I fully integrated her into the herd at six months of age by introducing her to one donkey at a time over the course of two weeks.
My foal is now approaching two years old and presumably a happy donkey. The experience has bonded both of us for life. It has also brought me closer to the other jennets I own. Donkeys are so smart and they watch everything. They watched me raise this foal and it increased their trust level with me. They know I will go to the end of the earth for them.
I hope this information is helpful for anyone raising a donkey foal and if you find yourself in this unfortunate situation, trust yourself and good luck.