Ranch Vets in Michigan
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Home > Livestock Vets by State > Farm Veterinarians in Michigan
Finding a ranch vet, (for horses, cattle, sheep/goats, etc.) is a simple thing with this national, city by city listing of your local livestock veterinarians. Here are several examples:
Q: How do I find livestock vets in Richmond, VA who specialize in animals found here on the farm?
A: Click on "By Your Location" (left column) then "Virginia" for a listing of horse and cattle veterinarians near you.
Q: Calving season is coming up and I need to look up a cattle vet in Michigan.
A: For your local DVMs, follow the city-by-city links below to see large animal doctors in Michigan offering breeding and other reproductive services.
Q: I've recently adopted several mustangs. These horses need worming, shots, the works. How can I get contact info for nearby horse doctors in Michigan?
A: Thousands of vets, for cattle, equine, goats and sheep, are listed on these pages. To find horse vets in California, for instance, simply visit "By Your Location > California."
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Your city-by-city listing, locate Ranch Vets in Michigan:
| Ada | Allegan | Berville | Camden |
| Dewitt | Frankenmuth | Freeland | Kalamazoo |
| Kingsley | Lowell | Metamora | New Era |
| New Hudson | Niles | PLAINWELL | Rose City |
| Traverse City | Williamston |
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Stop Bucking Study Course
Horse owners and riders: If you'd like to put a solid foundation on your horse - or finally put an end to a nagging training issue, I would suggest the investment of $4.99 in one of my downloadable books:
- Download and print from your home computer
- 5 days, 5 chapters
- Learn at your own pace
An excerpt from "Stop Bucking Study Course":
The very fact that I get soooooo many requests to help folks with bucking horses tells me that there’s a whole lot of horses being rushed through their training. If those horse’s hadn’t been rushed they wouldn’t “still” be bucking. In our rush to hit the trail we literally hit the trail - because we’ve skipped something. We’ll spend this week figuring out just what.
And, yes, everything you’re reading goes for green horses - doubly this part about not rushing things. Like John Lyons says, “Don’t start with your goal.” Riding your horse past his buddy horse without him bucking is a goal, not a starting point. It’s blowing past all the hard work and skipping to the goal that gets us into trouble.
Am I saying never get on your horse till you’re absolutely sure, beyond the shadow of any doubt, that he won’t buck? No - at some point you’ve got to say to yourself “Self, I’ve done everything I can think of to get this horse ready and it’s show time “ Then either get on, find a kid that bounces better or buy a motorcycle. (rpt)
Other available courses include:
Your Foal: Essential Training
Stop Bucking (reviews)
Round Pen: First Steps (reviews)
Rein In Your Horse's Speed (For Owners of Nervous or Bolting Horses) (reviews)
Trailer Training (read the reviews)
