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Author Topic: local vet treats hawk caught in coyote trap  (Read 2774 times)
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Donna
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« on: 05-Feb-10, 08:00:32 AM »

 Smoky Mountain Animal Clinic in Seymour treats an entire spectrum of animals, from three-week-old puppies, to wild hawks injured by traps.
     On Tuesday morning residents brought an injured red tailed hawk into the clinic. It had been caught in a coyote trap off of Goose Gap Road.
    Veterinarian Lisa Garren did not hesitate to take the hawk, and plans to take it home to her barn to nurse him back to health.
    “We can’t keep him here at the clinic because of all the other animals,” Garren said. “He is really lucky his leg didn’t break in the trap.”
    The hawk had landed in the trap, and suffered a laceration on to his left foot. Garren expects she will be able to free the bird in about a week.
    “I’m going to feed him every day and watch him very carefully,” she said. “If I let him go too early I won’t be able to catch him and he won’t make it in the wild.”
    Garren was also treating a three-week-old bloodhound puppy in the office on Tuesday.
    “He is the runt of the litter and only weighs about two pounds,” she said while holding the puppy wrapped snuggly in a blanket. “He’s struggling a little bit, but we’ll try to get him through it.”
    The clinic, which has an in-house lab, mainly treats cats and dogs, but Garren also treats horses and Veterinarian Susan Sterling treats llamas, goats, pigs and ferrets on occasion.
     Staff at the clinic perform x-rays, ultrasounds, routine and emergency surgeries, and even acupuncture.
    “Acupuncture is really neat,” said Garren. “It is actually pretty common in horses; I have performed it on horses several times.”
    According to Garren, acupuncture can be used to treat anything from asthma to joint pain to gastrointestinal problems.
    “It actually works really well, I have had good results with it,” she said.
    Sterling is currently taking a course in acupuncture so she can perform it on animals in the clinic.
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valhalla
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« Reply #1 on: 05-Feb-10, 08:04:28 AM »

Reminds me of Bart's vet - Doctors and Vets in the country have to know about everything and how to treat it.
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Carol P.
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« Reply #2 on: 05-Feb-10, 07:06:43 PM »

Reminds me of Bart's vet - Doctors and Vets in the country have to know about everything and how to treat it.

My absolutely favorite books were the "All Creatures Great and Small" series by James Herriot.  It was amazing how many different creatures they had to care for. 

Not all Vet clinics will even accept a downed raptor.  Brian and I ran into this when we frantically tried to get help for Mariah.
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valhalla
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« Reply #3 on: 06-Feb-10, 07:27:35 AM »

Reminds me of Bart's vet - Doctors and Vets in the country have to know about everything and how to treat it.

Not all Vet clinics will even accept a downed raptor.  Brian and I ran into this when we frantically tried to get help for Mariah.

We've brought injured bunnies in - no charge - baby squirrels - no charge.  I do think it is the old-fashioned Country Doc thing.  Of course, heroics aren't performed, so it is always under the  knowledge that the animals will be put down, if necessary.
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