Kettlecreek Ranch

Kettlecreek Ranch Breeding quality quarter horses. Focusing around the bonanza bloodlines. Great horses with looks and

05/29/2026
Out checking the mares and 🙏 for rain.
05/28/2026

Out checking the mares and 🙏 for rain.

05/10/2026

BROODMARE CHECKS

By Thomas R. Lenz, D.V.M., M.S.

NOW THAT COLD WEATHER HAS MOVED IN, most broodmares are out to pasture gestating until their expected foaling dates next spring. Unfortunately, each year up to 15 percent of broodmares that were checked safe in foal at 45-60 days lose their pregnancies by late fall. It's a good idea this time of year to recheck all of your mares by ultrasound or palpation to confirm that their pregnancy is progressing normally.

Too often, as mare owners, you don't know your mare lost her pregnancy until she doesn't foal in the spring. This is often so late in the breeding season that there is not sufficient time for your veterinarian to determine the cause of the lost pregnancy, treat and cor-rect the problem, and rebreed the mare. You lose an entire year.

Once your mare is confirmed safe in foal, there are a number of things that you can do to protect your investment and improve the odds of producing a healthy foal next spring. Many mares drop in body condition at the start of fall and winter because of decreased availability of good pasture and the onset of cold weather. The demands on the mare by the fetus won't require an increase in feed until the last one-third of pregnancy, but the energy required to keep warm will increase.

Research has shown that broodmares in moderate to fleshy condition will be better prepared to provide adequate milk for their growing foals and will breed back quicker than thin mares. A mare should have at least a body condition score 6. She should have a level back, slight fat cover over the ribs and fat should be evident along the sides of her neck and behind her shoulder. On the other hand, a mare should not be rolling fat because fat mares tend to produce less milk than moderately fleshy mares, and their foals gain less weight.

In the last trimester, the unborn foal's growth accelerates, as do the mare's nutritional requirements.

Her feed ration should increase accordingly. On average, a healthy mare in good flesh will gain 9-12 percent of her original body weight during pregnancy. For example, an 1,100-pound mare should gain roughly 100-130 pounds during the course of her pregnancy. She should gain roughly two-thirds of the weight in the final three months prior to foaling.

Develop a Plan
Once your mare is in good flesh, check her vaccination and deworming schedule.

Deworming and vaccination sched-ules vary according to your region, but a general recommendation is that mares should be dewormed every 60 days throughout their pregnancy. They should be vaccinated for tetanus and encephalomyelitis (sleeping sickness) four to six weeks prior to the expected foaling date.

Traditionally, breeders have only been concerned about eastern and western sleeping sickness, but with the speed that West Nile Virus is spreading across the country, every mare should be vaccinated against it prior to warm weather next spring. In addition, pregnant mares should receive rhinopneumonitis (thi-no) vaccinations during mid-to-late pregnancy.

A typical rhino vaccination schedule is to vaccinate pregnant mares during their fifth, seventh and ninth months of pregnancy. An alternate program is to vaccinate every other month once the mare becomes pregnant. Other common vaccinations that might be necessary in some parts of the country include strangles, Potomac Horse Fever, rabies and influenza. Contact your local veterinarian about a good vaccination program for your area of the country.

Other Concerns
If your mare is on her way to a broodmare farm or across state lines to be bred, now is a good time to ask your veterinarian to draw blood for a Coggins test for equine infectious anemia. EIA is a non-treatable, often fatal disease that can only be managed by preventing exposure to infected horses. A negative Coggins test and health certificate are required by most states and broodmare farms. Too often, mare owners are not aware of this requirement and learn of it only when they are ready to ship their mare.

Make decisions now regarding management of your mares if they are on tall fescue pasture or receiving fescue hay. Fescue is a common pasture in most parts of the country and is relatively harmless to adult horses. Unfortunately, it is frequently infected with an endophyte fungus (Festuca arundinacea) that causes prolonged gestation, lack of milk production and foaling problems in pregnant mares.

Remove pregnant mares from fescue pastures 60-90 days prior to their anticipated foaling date. If removing the mares isn't possible, provide them with plenty of good-quality fescue hay the last few months of pregnancy and consider administering domperidone daily. Domperidone helps counteract the effects of fescue toxicosis during the last 25-30 days prior to foaling. Because an affected mare, even following preventive treatment, might not produce adequate amounts of colostrum, it's a good idea to have some frozen colostrum on hand for the newborn foal.

Here’s a picture of Kinslee’s POA filly
05/01/2026

Here’s a picture of Kinslee’s POA filly

Took a drive out to see the foals tonight.
05/01/2026

Took a drive out to see the foals tonight.

04/28/2026

This stallion advertisement from the December 1962 issue of The Quarter Horse Journal features Light Bar and Lanolark.

Light Bar was a Quarter Horse foaled in 1957. He was bred by Homer L. Waldon in Riverside, California. Light Bar was by Lightning Bar, a son of the Thoroughbred stallion Three Bars, and out of Ariel Lady, by Little Joe Jr. His second dam, Lady Albert G, was also a Thoroughbred.

Light Bar made 30 starts and won seven races. He shared the 1960 AQHA Champion Three-Year-Old C**t title with Idle Hour. Light Bar stood at Waldon’s California farm. He sired 72 AQHA registered foals. He also sired High Bar, an Appaloosa Champion.

Lanolark was foaled on May 2nd, 1958. He was bred and owned by Dr. W. D. Lucas. Lanolark was by Alate and out of Frank’s Lark, by Jet Pilot, winner of the 1947 Kentucky Derby. As a two-year-old, Lanolark won three races including the six-furlong Citrus Belt Stakes at Pomona, which he won by nearly three lengths and equaled the track record of 1:10 flat. He later won two races against Quarter Horse company. His final race record was 36 starts, 7 wins, 7 seconds and 4 thirds, with $38,516 in earnings, which is the equivalent of about $410,000 today.

Lanolark covered his first Quarter Horses while he was still on the track. When he retired from racing, he stood in California and later moved to Ronny Schliep’s ranch in Haigler, Nebraska. In total, Lanolark sired 248 registered Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse foals in eight foal crops. Those included 75 ROM-eraners, 34 stakes finalists, 8 stakes winners, and 5 Superior Race Award-earners with earnings of $708,196 on the track. Lanolark was the damsire of AQHA Racing Champions Miss Thermolark and Moon Lark.

04/27/2026

Bar Caro was foaled in 1956. He was bred by Franklin B. Cox. Bar Caro was by the Thoroughbred stallion Three Bars and out of Chicaro Annie C, by Chicaro Bill. He was a full-sibling to Bar Annie, Chicabar and Cee Bars. Bar Caro made thirteen starts and won two races. He placed second in the 1958 Phoenix Quarter Horse Futurity.

Bar Caro was owned by Brad and Cecil Tate. He stood at the Tate Ranch in Lakin, Kansas. He sired 294 AQHA registered foals. He sired several Racing and Halter Register of Merit earners. Oak Bar was his most successful sons at stud. Oak Bar sired Superior Halter horses That Oak Bar, Carrie Oak Bar, Tara Oak Bar, Oak Bar Miss, Willys Oak Bar and Luras Oak Bar.

Three Bars, the sire of Bar Caro, was unquestionably the greatest sire of Quarter Horses. In his 24 years at stud, he sired 575 registered Thoroughbred and Quarter Horse foals. They included 356 race winners, 354 ROM-earners, 66 stakes winners, 38 Superior Race Award earners, 29 AQHA Champions, 17 Racing Champions and 2 Racing World Champions. His offspring earned $3,612,991 on the track and 2,129.0 points in the arena. Three Bars was inducted into the into the AQHA Hall of Fame in 1989.

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