There is a drug used to supress heat called Regumate but you'd have to speak to your vet to see if it was suitable for your horse
yes mares go in heat in November they usually come in heat in spring and are on and off heat for a while
In the cold months many mares show no signs of heat. But as the days grow longer and the temperature climbs mares have more obvious signs of heat. Every mare is different but they have a cycle about once every 4 to 6 weeks on average. Some mares have cycles closer together, some not as often. If the mare is bred and becomes pregnant she will have no more heat cycles until what is called 'foal heat' after her foal is born.
Your horse will rub her rump against the fence or stall. She will try to cycle with your horses including fillies and mares! She will get very moody. She will have some vaginal discharge too.
some mares will mount other mares in season others will just also come into season. you may see extra urine output and also some squirting from the mare in season.
Female mules typically do not have a regular heat cycle like mares. They are usually infertile due to the mismatched number of chromosomes from their horse and donkey parents.
Normally, mares do not go off feed when they are in heat although, if they are near or in with a stallion, they may spend more time showing their interest and or being bred than eating.
all mares are different and they will not all get their first heat or in season at the same time. if they are around a stallion or can hear or see one they tend to go into heat earlyer and more usually but if they are not they start getting it when they are around 3years
Fillies at the age of four become mares and coming into heat is when mares seem to say to the stallions hey I'm ready to breed! So the age a female horse goes into heat is four just remember foals, colts, fillies, stallions and geldings especially geldings don't go into heat.
They can. Some mares continue to have heat cycles even during the cold months.
Mares come into heat approximately every 21 days.
Some do and some don't depending on rate of maturity. Many mares that are not ready to breed will come in to heat once a season and produce a persistent follicle (one that doesn't ovulate). They may stay in a prolonged heat or may not cycle.
Nerves in your finger react to the heat to keep it from burning