Ranch Vets in Virginia

 
large animal vets listing pict

Home > Livestock Vets by State > Farm Veterinarians in Virginia

 

 

 

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 Bakersfield, CA who specialize in animals found here on the farm?
A: Click on "By Your Location" (left column) then "California" 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 Virginia.
A: For your local DVMs, follow the city-by-city links below to see large animal doctors in Virginia 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 Virginia?
A: Thousands of vets, for cattle, equine, goats and sheep, are listed on these pages. To find horse vets in Idaho, for instance, simply visit "By Your Location > Idaho."

 

 

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Your city-by-city listing, locate Ranch Vets in Virginia:

 

Abingdon Ashland Bedford Charlottesville
Clifton Colonial Beach Daleville Disputanta
Evington Farmville Forest Fredericksburg
Gordonsville Leesburg Lovettsville Manakin Sabot
Marshall Milford Stafford Steeles Tavern
Suffolk Suite 103, Virginia Beach The Plains TROUTVILLE
Warrenton Waterford Williamsburg Yorktown

 

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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":

 

It took her her years but she’s rid of the chair. And never once did she lose her patience, did he get mad or did they fight about it. Had she turned up her nose on the first date and said the chair’s gotta go, she might have gotten dumped and she knew that.

The point is: Don’t move into your horse’s house and go trying to rearrange the furniture on day one. Every horse has got a green chair, pitch it right away and he just might pitch you. With any relationship, you’ve got to ease in there. Ask for gradual change.

That’s today’s big concept. Don’t move your horse’s green chair out to the garage on day one. If the row of garbage cans scares the devil out of him - but he’s okay skirting them by 40 feet, begin looking for ways to move the chair one inch at a time. That means breaking up your training as I described above, one step at a time. It means today you practice your disengagements 40 feet from the cans and move to 39 when he’s relaxed. Tomorrow you practice at 39 then 38. Maybe you’ll move closer tomorrowy, maybe next week. Maybe you’ll move ten feet closer, maybe a hundred. Your horse will tell you clearly if he becomes agitated: Jiggy horses mean you’re moving too quickly. (rpt)

 

Read more or purchase

 

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)