Fort Recovery Veterinary Center

Fort Recovery Veterinary Center We are a full service veterinary clinic in western Mercer County, Ohio. We offer veterinary care to both small & large animal patients, boarding/grooming.

Fort Recovery Veterinary Center provides a full range of medical, surgical, and dental procedures to help keep your pet healthy and happy. Our large animal services include on farm care for cattle, horses, sheep, goats, alpacas, and other livestock. Please let us know how we can help you and your animals!

Perfectly said
11/22/2024

Perfectly said

Dogs come into our lives to teach us about love.
They depart to teach us about loss.
A new dog never replaces an old dog, it merely expands the heart...

Erica Jong ✨

Credit to unknown artist

Frank was spotted in Ansonia west of the American Legion and north of the river.  I spent 2 hours calling for him and wa...
10/31/2024

Frank was spotted in Ansonia west of the American Legion and north of the river. I spent 2 hours calling for him and walking around the property where he was spotted with no luck. Ansonia people keep an eye out for him please.

Frank is a toy poodle that climbed out of a 6’ tall kennel.  He was at a client’s house to breed his toy poodle.  He ran...
10/26/2024

Frank is a toy poodle that climbed out of a 6’ tall kennel. He was at a client’s house to breed his toy poodle. He ran odd from Washington Rd near highway 118. He has not been seen since Thursday evening. He is microchipped. He is Dr Kim’s dog. If anyone has him or has information on him, please contact Dr Kim Forthofer-Braun.

Found at Minnich Poultry.  He is microchipped.  We have tried calling the person attached to the microchip, but she does...
07/25/2024

Found at Minnich Poultry. He is microchipped. We have tried calling the person attached to the microchip, but she doesn’t have a voicemail set up. Suspect he has a new owner because the microchip is registered to someone in Decatur. Riley is 14 years old. Bischon Frise. Owner has been located!!

😆😆
05/11/2024

😆😆

LOL!

Euthanasia is a 💝 gift.
04/30/2024

Euthanasia is a 💝 gift.

💔🌈

Beware
04/16/2024

Beware

😂  If only they could talk
04/04/2024

😂 If only they could talk

Important information
04/02/2024

Important information

Written by a colleague and worth sharing. Chewy certainly isn't sponsoring little league teams, putting ads in the yearbook or sponsoring 4H or holding your hand as you say goodbye to your best friend of 16 years. We care. About your pet. About you. About our community.

03/13/2024

😂😂

So true and 🤢 Gross!!
03/10/2024

So true and 🤢 Gross!!

03/02/2024

The old cow was 4 days post-calving with a low grade fever, off feed, and reluctant to move. On physical exam, she also had distended jugular veins with pulses, indicating heart failure, and a "washing machine" murmur- caused by fluid around the heart and sounding like your washing machine at work. This was a classic case of hardware disease

Hardware disease, technically known as traumatic reticuloperitonitis, occurs when a cow eats a sharp piece of metal or other object, which travels to the stomach compartment known as the reticulum, and then perforates the wall and stabs into the heart (or it can pierce the lungs, liver, or other organs).

For less severe cases of hardware, we can try to treat them but it is often not successful. For cows already in heart failure from it, the prognosis is hopeless.

This cow was euthanized and an inquisitive producer opened her up to see what that might look like. Note the magnet recovered from the reticulum with a bent nail and various scraps of metal attached to it. The magnet did its job but it didn't catch the small, pointy piece of metal on my hand. And that piece of metal, the size of a paper clip, brought down a 1500 lb cow.

ADD-ON: Since I posted this, I've been told multiple times that it is sad. It is sad. It is absolutely devastating to see this happen. So the obvious question is what else can be done to prevent it.

The source of the hardware can be from building or demolition projects, but often, it is from people's garbage. Roadside garbage like glass bottles and aluminum cans find their way into a cornfield or hayfield and get shredded by the harvesting equipment. I've even heard of an archery hunter's broadhead being lost in a cornfield and later removed from a cow that died this way. And besides the magnets in the cows stomachs, many farms have magnets on their feed mixing equipment to catch any metal. But the sharp objects are not always magnetic. Cows are particularly susceptible because unlike other livestock that use their lips and teeth to eat, cattle use their tongues and they are far less particular about what they grasp and swallow.

So the biggest thing you can do to help these cows out is to get rid of your garbage properly. Farmers don't throw their garbage in your front yard. Don't throw your garbage where they and their cows live, work, and eat.

Randy enjoying a much needed rest
02/02/2024

Randy enjoying a much needed rest

Address

119 State Route 119
Fort Recovery, OH
45846

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