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Yes, you'd need to check first of the stallion is approved or needs approving by your breed registry first for shipped semen, and also make sure the stallion has been tested the year you ship it, or in other words, has "had his pipes cleaned" for the season. Stallions' semen does not always ship well or arrive in good shape at all points of the season, it can vary. Hotter weather can cause semen quality to deteriorate before the stallion is even collected. You'd also need to know what his history looks like so far for the season, and what the results of it being tested or shipped look like...I had someone try to ship me cooled semen once for breeding that could not survive the mixing with the extenders used in it for shipping; even the control sample held back at their vet's office was dead by the next day. This results in useless semen being shipped at high cost. A good reproductive vet will check motility and viability of semen before charging you for AI on your end. This will help you get back your stud fee if the semen is no good, but you are still out the shipping costs.
Me personally, whatever stallion you pick, I would go and see that stallion in person and meet him before breeding to him. A lot of people, pictures and videos can say or show a lot of things, but all the proof you need will be right in front of you when you see it in person. Airline tickets can be costly but nowhere near as costly compared to breeding something you don't want. A person can doctor a video or picture to appear like a lot of things.
I would also ask if the stallion you pick has been tested for VD, especially if he has ever been used for live cover or has been imported from outside the country. You'd be surprised how many people assume that horses they import have been tested for everything under the sun coming through quarantine. If they don't know, have them test it or pass them up. I've passed on a stallion who was doing live covers AND collections in the same season for this reason.
There are also a few folks out there who say they CAN ship semen but have never actually DONE it. They say this so the customer can pay for their training and testing, and so they can collect money up front. The time to find out a stallion isn't able to be collected is not after you've paid and maybe even had your mare induced into heat or waited for her to get a follicle ready to ovulate. You certainly want to make sure your stallion owner "vets out" as well as the stallion himself, because you don't want to be calling for semen and have them going "Ummmmm..."
Yes, you'd need to check first of the stallion is approved or needs approving by your breed registry first for shipped semen, and also make sure the stallion has been tested the year you ship it, or in other words, has "had his pipes cleaned" for the season. Stallions' semen does not always ship well or arrive in good shape at all points of the season, it can vary. Hotter weather can cause semen quality to deteriorate before the stallion is even collected. You'd also need to know what his history looks like so far for the season, and what the results of it being tested or shipped look like...I had someone try to ship me cooled semen once for breeding that could not survive the mixing with the extenders used in it for shipping; even the control sample held back at their vet's office was dead by the next day. This results in useless semen being shipped at high cost. A good reproductive vet will check motility and viability of semen before charging you for AI on your end. This will help you get back your stud fee if the semen is no good, but you are still out the shipping costs.
Me personally, whatever stallion you pick, I would go and see that stallion in person and meet him before breeding to him. A lot of people, pictures and videos can say or show a lot of things, but all the proof you need will be right in front of you when you see it in person. Airline tickets can be costly but nowhere near as costly compared to breeding something you don't want. A person can doctor a video or picture to appear like a lot of things.
I would also ask if the stallion you pick has been tested for VD, especially if he has ever been used for live cover or has been imported from outside the country. You'd be surprised how many people assume that horses they import have been tested for everything under the sun coming through quarantine. If they don't know, have them test it or pass them up. I've passed on a stallion who was doing live covers AND collections in the same season for this reason.
There are also a few folks out there who say they CAN ship semen but have never actually DONE it. They say this so the customer can pay for their training and testing, and so they can collect money up front. The time to find out a stallion isn't able to be collected is not after you've paid and maybe even had your mare induced into heat or waited for her to get a follicle ready to ovulate. You certainly want to make sure your stallion owner "vets out" as well as the stallion himself, because you don't want to be calling for semen and have them going "Ummmmm..."