Foals should NOT be weaned before they are 3 months old. Six months is better for the foal. I prefer gradually weaning over a few weeks as they approach 6 months rather than an abrupt separation.
After about six months of life, the foal will leave its mother. Like walk around a distance away from her but the mother will not like it, they can be fully separated from their mothers from 8-12 months.
They can live without their mothers (dams) when they turn six months old.
At that age, foals should be weaned and able to eat solid food. There should be feed for foals of that age at your local feed/tack store. You can also consult your vet to see if they think your specific foal needs a different diet for some reason.
If they are weaned older there is more trouble weaning them and if you wean them younger they will need vitamin shots
At six months!
At 4-6 weeks.
At about 3 to 4 months. You really need to separate the mother and foal when it is time to wean. The mother will nurse the foal for as long as a year if you let her.Most foals are weaned around 4-6 months of age. However, studys show that foals weaned too early are more likely to develope vices. The best thing to do would let the mare decide when it is time to wean. However, there are special cases such as if the mare is losing alot of weight even when you increase her calorie intake, and then you should wean the foal early.
Most people weaned their colts and fillies when they are six months old. Although I heard some weaned the foals when they are only four months.
At that age, foals should be weaned and able to eat solid food. There should be feed for foals of that age at your local feed/tack store. You can also consult your vet to see if they think your specific foal needs a different diet for some reason.
Nine or ten months, or just let it wean itself, which is kinder.
Foals sould be weaned anywhere from 3-7 months of age. Also, A pony is NOT a baby horse. You mean a FOAL.
Foals are ussually weaned around 4 to 6 months of age, with the most common being 6 months. Although, in the wild the Mustang foals may nurse for a year.
If they are weaned older there is more trouble weaning them and if you wean them younger they will need vitamin shots
Yes, foals will nurse up until the mare makes them stop or until they are weaned at four to six months of age. In wild and feral herds the foals may nurse up until they are a year old.
Most foals nurse right up until they are weaned... generally at between four and eight months of age. It depends on the horse and when the owner wants to wean the foal.
In domestic situations many foals are weaned at four to six months old. In feral and wild herds however many foals are not weaned until they are eight months to a year old on average. It is in the best interest of domestic horses to let the foal nurse until at least six months of age and many mares will naturally wean their own foals if they are bred again.
Typically, you would wean your foal at approximately 6 months of age. Foals do not need to be suckling on the dam too far beyond that age. Most of the time foals are weaned so the mare can return to a more relaxed life. Nursing a foal is a drain on the mare, lactating mares require more nutrition. People often wean foals so the dam can return to her normal job (showing, racing, trail riding)
I doubt that the foals together, whether in a stall or pasture, would stress more than alone. It's always preferable to put weanlings together especially when first separated from the mares.
In nature a foal stays with it's mother until 6 months to one year of age, depending on the sex. Domestic horses however typically have their foals weaned from them at between 4 and 6 months of age.