Dr. Nancy, I appreciate your kindness to all the animals especially for the brain surgery patients. When you call your patients darlin’ it makes me smile. Thank you for your dedication. You are greatly loved by viewers and animals alike.🥰
Thank you Doc for letting us observe the castration. I like that you use technical terms that we can look up and learn. I can tell that you love the animals. You are the best!
The same reason an "employee " talks over the vet and ferrier and questions their opinions? Kimberley is getting to comfortable and is not respecting boundaries I just watched her try and tell the ferrier to cut the heel of a sore pony and the ferrier spoke up thankfully and said no its there holding majority of the weight and eventually as the hoof damage would be taking corrective ferrier work not go chopping it all off at once doing more damage than good, then Kimberley said oh ki I meant this part of heel now had the ferrier thought she knew what she was talking about and cut that first chunk of heel "now thats not what she meant: Come on supposedly she took online training for a ferrier which would be great nut you don't get to be a ferrier that is able to work on "nit the regular hoof" from the online training it's in field experience coming across issues and trying things to see and know what works, hence why they hire a ferrier for his knowledge, his experience, and Kimberley needs to back off unfortunately and just allow him to talk, work and use his experience Before there is something tragic that comes from this. This it went on in that episode to show Kimberley not even knowing that a frog is dead on the hoof ? The ferrier had to correct her when she said " you can tell what's dead and alive through the colour of the frog" he said all the tissue that isn't vbeeding is dead, which means the frog is dedicated where ypu can cut off." She said oh I know that's what I meant again, so again had the ferrier been insecure and not spoke up again kore false knowledge be spread from Kimberley. So my point is she does this with three vet too, allow the vet to speak no need for someone who isn't even a vet tech to bebover talking
Dr. Nancy may not be q cook, but she surely showed all interested viewers how to prepare and cook TESTICLES. Her preparation beat that of my vet many years ago, who told me he fed my cat's testicles to his MONKEYS! THANK YOU AGAIN, DR. NANCY, for giving us viewers valuable insights into the world of veterinary medicine!
Thanks for another great installment! I never fail to learn something. Today's interesting bit was about not suturing. I'd never thought about that, but what sense that makes! ...OTOH, as a vegan, I had to kind of skip the recipe portion. 🌿 All told, Churro is SUCH a sweetie. He's going to make someone the perfect companion. 🥰 (P.S. *gets gelded. No apostrophe. /teacher mode 😊)
I was thinking the same thing on the title 😅 and the “cooking tips” at the end… 😟😳 but otherwise it’s really cool to learn about and I love seeing how well these animals are taken care of at horse plus. Kimberly and churro are so sweet together.
Guess it was definitely the best decision ever getting a full time Vet Dr Sandy has been flat out since she started who thought you would have so much work for a vet. Oh that’s right you did!! 🤣🤪🤩🤩👏👏👏🇦🇺🇦🇺
I lived in a place where the vet always asked if you wanted the testicles whether it was horse, pig, sheep, etc. Rocky mountain oysters. People there were hungry.
I have never been so hungry to eat testicles from any animal. Many years ago, I had a friend that had a granddaddy who raised turkeys. They ate "turkey nuts" as they were called. They resembled pistachios that had been roasted. Trust me, I never tasted one of them. However, this video was a good one, and I always enjoy learning new things, even if I'm not going to eat parts and pieces of it.
I like the vet and her superstitions. I get that😊. I love how she also explain things like eating testicals or the placenta on Candy which was very interesting
Such a good surgical team. Sharing procedure information makes this very interesting. Thank you for sharing. Wish the old guy the best. Thank goodness for pain killers. 🐴
I wish I had space for a horse/equid. Churro absolutely has stolen my heart and every time I see him I want to cry. He's such an amazing donkey-and I will be honest, I'm not a fan of donkeys or mules. I'm more of a horse gal. But Churro is the BEST. Whoever adopts him will have an amazing companion and buddy for years to come. I wish it was me, but maybe...maybe in the future when I have a new house and a new set up I can see about adopting from Horse Plus
The sound of the cutting clamp made me cringe. And I was definitely not expecting the cooking show. These videos are amazing and I appreciate how the animals welfare always comes first
They show part of the intake on the next episode of their show "Horse Shelter Heroes" the week after auction. My guess on why they don´t show the whole intake anymore, is that it takes a long time to film the whole thing and they have more things to do right now, they also want to show it in the episode. We also get better quality of the intake and can hear all they say on the episode than on a phone live, like the assessment. But that is just me guessing🤷
They don’t have good cell service or Wi-Fi at the quarantine barn so quality is really sketchy. It also can be just really heartbreaking and depressing…so many have to be put down during some intakes. We understand it’s the only thing to do sometimes, but it’s just hard on everyone to see that and to be live on camera when it’s happening
Some mile people will castrate at 4 days. I've had one foal castrated that young. No problems, other than weird looks from my vet. Absolutely no negative effects from that.
I had two dogs. I thought perfect one each. On a 8 month old colt. They said no. So I pan fried them. Nope the dogs would not touch them. So if my puppy's won't definitely think I would never eat them.