Dictionary Definition
foal n : a young horse v : give birth to a foal;
"the mare foaled"
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Old English fola, from Germanic *fulon, from Indo-European *poul- ‘young animal’. Cognate with Dutch veulen, German Fohlen, Swedish fåle; and (from Indo-European) with Greek πῶλος, Latin pullus. Compare filly.Noun
- A young horse, especially just after birth or less than a year old.
Translations
young horse
- Albanian: mëz
- Bosnian: ždrijebe
- Breton: ebeul
- Catalan: pollí, poltre /
- Crimean Tatar: bala, at bala
- Croatian: ždrijebe
- Czech: hříbě
- Danish: føl
- Dutch: veulen
- Erzya: парнэ (parne), вашо (vasho)
- Esperanto: ĉevalido
- Finnish: varsa
- French: poulain
- German: Fohlen , Füllen
- Greek: πουλάρι (poulári)
- Hungarian: csikó
- Icelandic: folald
- Italian: puledro
- Latin: equulus
- Macedonian: ждребе
- Maltese: felu
- Maori: punua hoiho
- Norwegian: føll
- Old English: fola
- Polish: źrebak , źrebię
- Romanian: mânz
- Russian: жеребёнок (žer'eb'ónok)
- Serbian:
- Slovene: žrebe , žrebiček (dimin.)
- Spanish: potranco , potro
- Swedish: föl
- Turkish: tay
- Welsh: ebol
Verb
- In the context of "equestrian": To give birth; to bear offspring.
Translations
give birth
- Finnish: varsoa
- Icelandic: kasta
- Macedonian: се ождребува
- Polish: oźrebić się
Anagrams
Extensive Definition
A foal is a horse that is one year old or
younger. More specific terms are colt for a
male foal and filly for a female foal. When the foal is
nursing its dam (mother), it may also be called a suckling. After
the young horse has been weaned from its dam, it may be called a
weanling. After it is
one year old, it is no longer a foal, and is called a yearling.
There are no special age-related terms for young horses older than
yearlings. When young horses reach breeding maturity, the terms
change: a filly over the age of three (four in horse
racing) is called a mare and a
colt over the age of three is called a stallion.
A castrated male horse is called a gelding, regardless of age.
(There is no specific term for a spayed female horse, they are
simply "spayed mares".)
Early development
Foals are born after a gestation period of approximately 11 months.Birth takes place quickly, consistent with the status of a horse as a prey animal, and more often at night than during the day. Foals are born with an ability to quickly escape from predators; normally a foal will stand up and nurse within the first hour after it is born, can trot and canter within hours, and most can gallop by the next day. A newborn foal's legs are almost as long (90%) as those of an adult horse.Healthy foals grow quickly and can put on up to
three pounds or
over a kilo a day. A
sound diet improves growth and leads to a healthier adult animal,
although genetics also plays a part. In the first weeks of life the
foal gets everything it needs from the mare's milk.
Like a human infant, it receives nourishment and antibodies from
the colostrum in milk
that is produced within the first few hours or days following
parturition. The
mare needs additional water to help her produce milk for
the foal and may benefit from supplementary nutrition.
A foal may start to eat solids from ten days of
age, after eight to ten weeks it will need more nutrition than the
mare's milk can supply; supplementary feeding is required by then.
It is important when adding solid food to the foal's diet to not
overfeed the foal or feed an improperly balanced diet. This can
trigger one of several possible growth
disorders that can cause lifelong soundness problems. On the
other hand, insufficient nutrition to mare or foal can cause
stunted growth and other health problems for the foal as it gets
older.
Weaning and maturity
It is typical for foals under human management to be weaned between four and six months of age, though under natural conditions, they may nurse for longer, occasionally until the following year when the mare foals again. A foal that has been weaned but is less than one year old is called a weanling.Mare's milk is not a significant source of
nutrients for the foal after about four months, though it does no
harm to a healthy mare for a foal to nurse a month or two longer
and may be of some psychological benefit to the foal. A mare that
is both nursing and pregnant will have increased nutritional
demands made upon her in the last months of pregnancy, and therefore most
domesticated foals
are weaned some time in the autumn in the Northern
Hemisphere.
Weanlings are not capable of reproduction.
Puberty
occurs in most horses during their yearling year. Therefore, some
young horses are capable of reproduction prior to full physical
maturity, though it is not common. Two year olds sometimes are
deliberately bred, though doing so, particularly with fillies, may
put undesirable stress on their still-growing bodies. As a general
rule, breeding young horses prior to the age of three is considered
undesirable.
Early training
seealso Horse training In spite of rapid growth, a foal is too young to be ridden or driven. However, foals usually receive very basic horse training in the form of being taught to accept being led by humans, called halter-breaking. They may also learn to accept horse grooming, hoof trimming by a farrier, having hair trimmed with electric clippers, and to become familiar with things it will have to do throughout life, such as loading into a horse trailer or wearing a horse blanket. One of the most important aspects of working with foals is to remember that horses in general have excellent memories, so a foal must not be taught anything as a young horse that would be undesirable for it to do as a full-grown animal.There is tremendous debate over the proper age to
begin training a foal. Some advocate beginning to accustom a foal
to human handling from the moment of birth, using a process termed
imprinting or
"imprint training". Others feel that imprint training of a foal
interferes with the mare and foal bond and prefer to wait until the
foal is a few days old, but do begin training within the first week
to month of life. Yet other horse breeding operations wait until
weaning, theorizing that a foal is more willing to bond to a human
as a companion at the time it is separated from its mother.
Regardless of theory, most modern horse
breeding operations consider it wise to give a foal basic
training while it is still young, and consider it far safer than
trying to tame a half-wild adult-sized horse.
Horses are not fully mature until the age of four
or five, but most are started as working
animals much younger, though care must be taken not to
over-stress the "soft" bones of younger animals. Yearlings
are generally too young to be ridden at all, though many race horses
are put under saddle as yearlings, usually in autumn.
Physiologically young horses are still not truly mature as two-year
olds, though some breeds do start young horses in a cart or under saddle at that age. The most
common age for young horses to begin training under saddle is the
age of three. A few breeds and disciplines wait until the animal is
four.
See also
References
- Lyons, John and Jennifer J. Denison. Bringing Up Baby. Primedia Enthusiast Publications, 2002. ISBN 1-929164-12-2. Describes methods of training a young horse from birth up until it is old enough to ride.
- Miller, Robert M. Imprint Training of the Newborn Foal. Western Horseman Books, 2003. ISBN 1-58574-666-5 Explains imprint training of young foals in the first days of life.
foal in Breton: Ebeul
foal in German: Fohlen
foal in Erzya: Вашо
foal in French: Poulain (cheval)
foal in Icelandic: Folald
foal in Italian: Puledro
foal in Kurdish: Canî
foal in Dutch: Veulen (dier)
foal in Dutch Low Saxon: Vul
foal in Norwegian: Føll
foal in Polish: Źrebię
foal in Sicilian: Pudditru
foal in Finnish: Varsa
foal in Swedish: Föl
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Houyhnhnm, be confined,
bear, bear a child, bear
young, birdling, brood
mare, calf, calve, cast, catling, charger, chick, chickling, chicky, colt, courser, critter, cub, dobbin, dogie, drop, duckling, entire, entire horse, equine, farrow, fawn, filly, fledgling, fryer, gelding, give birth, gosling, have, have a baby, have young,
horse, kid, kit, kitten, labor, lamb, lambkin, lie in, litter, mare, mount, nag, nest, nestling, piglet, pigling, polliwog, prancer, pullet, pup, puppy, shoat, stallion, steed, stud, studhorse, tadpole, tarpan, throw, top horse, travail, war-horse, weaner, whelp, wild horse, yean, yeanling