Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Dr. Oakley, Yukon Vet is an American television series on Nat Geo Wild. The show premiered April 4, 2014. [ 1] The show stars Dr. Michelle Oakley and follows her adventures usually around her home base of Haines Junction, Yukon [ 2] and Haines, Alaska. She studied Zoology at the University of Michigan, getting her degree in 1991. [ 3]
Spouse. Debby Miller. Robert M. Miller (born March 4, 1927) is an equine behaviorist and veterinarian, [1] best recognized for his system of training newborn foals known as imprint training. Miller is also one of the early adopters and promoters of Natural horsemanship. His work is often referred to by natural horsemanship clinicians.
Emergency Vets is a reality television series that aired on Animal Planet. First aired in 1998, it depicts the working and outside lives of the veterinarians at Alameda East Veterinary Hospital in Denver, Colorado, plus the animals that they treat. At its peak of popularity, Emergency Vets alternated with The Crocodile Hunter as Animal Planet's ...
Dan Patch (April 29, 1896 – July 11, 1916) was a noted American Standardbred pacer. At a time when harness racing was one of the largest sports in the nation, Dan Patch was a major celebrity. He was undefeated in open competition, and was so dominant on the racetrack that other owners eventually refused to enter their horses against him.
An examination of the factors behind Dan Blacker's 527 CHRB violations found there are reasons this wasn't caught earlier and he is not suspended. Why a trainer with 527 violations is still racing ...
James Hallen (1829–1901) — British veterinarian who served as General Superintendent of Horse Breeding in India [7] Greg J. Harrison — avian veterinarian. Susanne Hart (1927– 2010) — South African environmentalist. Antonie Marinus Harthoorn (1923–2012) — conservationist who worked in Africa. Herbert Haupt (born 1947) — Austrian ...
Veterinary medicine is the branch of medicine that deals with the prevention, management, diagnosis, and treatment of disease, disorder, and injury in non-human animals. The scope of veterinary medicine is wide, covering all animal species, both domesticated and wild, with a wide range of conditions that can affect different species.
1942: Patricia O'Connor Halloran, class of 1939, becomes the first female zoo veterinarian, working at the Staten Island Zoo [7] 1970: The Coggins test, a blood test to identify if a horse is a carrier of equine infectious anemia, a viral disease found in horses, is developed by Dr. Leroy Coggins and colleagues.