Why a mare may seem different after her first foal: full analysis
A mare may seem different after her first foal, and in some cases she is. In a commentary highlighted by The Horse, Nancy Diehl, VMD, MS, addressed that common question with a cautious answer: “sometimes, maybe,” pointing readers toward the effects of pregnancy, foaling, hormonal shifts, and foal-rearing on later behavior and trainability. The takeaway is less about a fixed personality rewrite and more about how major reproductive and maternal events can shape behavior, at least for a time. (warmbloodbreeding.com)
That framing fits with what equine behavior research has shown for years. Studies of mares before and after foaling have documented meaningful postpartum changes in social behavior, including reduced allogrooming and a tendency for mares with foals to separate into distinct subgroups. At the same time, some individual patterns remain stable across years, suggesting that core temperament may persist even when maternal behavior temporarily changes how that temperament is expressed. (sciencedirect.com)
Normal postpartum behavior can itself look dramatic to handlers. According to AAEP educational material published by IVIS, maternal behavior commonly includes close attention to the neonate, guarding, facilitating nursing, and keeping intruders away. Under domestic management, some mares can appear especially hypervigilant or demonstrative, particularly when isolated or housed with unfamiliar horses rather than supported by a stable social group. (ivis.org)
That’s where the distinction between “personality” and “state” matters. A mare that was previously easy to handle may become more reactive around her foal without having undergone a permanent behavioral shift. Merck Veterinary Manual notes that mares rejecting foals usually do so immediately after birth and that this is more common in primiparous mares, underscoring how first-time mothers may need closer observation during bonding and early nursing. Post-foaling pain, retained fetal membranes, or other complications can further influence behavior and should be ruled out before a behavioral label is applied. (merckvetmanual.com)
Industry guidance also points to management as a major modifier of what clinicians and breeders observe. Research in herd-housed Icelandic horses found that postpartum mares changed their interaction patterns after foaling, but the authors concluded that mixed-age, mixed-sex herd housing did not inherently disrupt normal mare-foal bonding when adequate space was available. In other words, some behavior changes may be adaptive responses to environment and foal protection, not evidence that a mare has become difficult or unreliable. (sciencedirect.com)
Why it matters: For veterinary professionals, this is a useful reminder to interpret post-foaling behavior through a clinical and management lens. When pet parents, breeders, or trainers report that a mare is “not the same” after her first foal, the workup should consider normal maternal protectiveness, parity, pain, postpartum complications, housing, social stress, and the timing of return to training. That approach can help prevent both missed medical issues and unfair expectations of mares during a biologically intense period. (ivis.org)
There’s also a client-communication angle. Veterinary teams are often the ones explaining that some postpartum behavior changes are expected, especially in first-time mares, while also identifying the red flags: aggression that escalates, failure to allow nursing, signs of pain, or behavior that persists well beyond the early foal-rearing period. Clear guidance on safe handling, observation, and gradual reintroduction to training can make these cases more manageable for farms and caretakers. (merckvetmanual.com)
What to watch: Expect continued emphasis on individualized postpartum management rather than one-size-fits-all assumptions about mare temperament, with the biggest practical questions being how long behavioral changes persist, how parity and environment shape them, and when altered behavior signals a welfare or medical problem rather than normal maternal adjustment. (sciencedirect.com)