Every year in spring, as the days get longer, mares start to have their monthly cycles again and enter their reproductive period. Some mares will be more sensitive to these changes than others, presenting discomfort, pain and/or unpredictable behaviour, making them difficult to handle. For broodmares, again, not all mares will have equal fertility levels, but there are solutions that can improve fertility.
From the age of two until the end of their lives, mares go into heat in spring, after the winter period, called "anoestrus" when the reproductive system is at rest. The lengthening of the days has an impact on the reproductive hormones of the mares. Longer exposure to light generates a positive action on a part of the brain called the pineal gland, which slows the secretion of melatonin – the sleep hormone – and the hypothalamus produces more GnRH (Gonadotropin Releasing Hormone), a hormone that stimulates the ovaries. This means that the reproductive cycle can begin.