Showing 3581-3590 of 4068 clinics
LLM Farm Vets
Higham
Our Score (59/100)
LLM Farm Vets is a farm and equine-focused veterinary practice (also seeing pets) and is listed as a veterinary nurse training facility. The website describes the practice as having been caring for pets for “over a century,” with an experienced team and a “patient and client come first” approach. Recent reviews most often talk about farm/equine call-outs and practical, clearly explained treatment plans—examples include “various treatments” for a new horse, and a yearling’s castration supported by both a vet and a nurse.
LLM Farm Vets is a farm and equine-focused veterinary practice (also seeing pets) and is listed as a veterinary nurse training facility. The website describes the practice as having been caring for pets for “over a century,” with an experienced team and a “patient and client come first” approach. Recent reviews most often talk about farm/equine call-outs and practical, clearly explained treatment plans—examples include “various treatments” for a new horse, and a yearling’s castration supported by both a vet and a nurse.
Tor Equine Ltd
Newton Abbot
Our Score (59/100)
Tor Equine Ltd is an independent, locally owned equine-only veterinary practice. The website describes 24/7 ambulatory care and says they run their own out-of-hours emergency service. Based on the services listed, they appear set up for both routine work (e.g., vaccinations, dentistry) and more involved investigations (digital radiography, ultrasound, endoscopy/gastroscopy), with a surgical suite and clinic facilities.
Tor Equine Ltd is an independent, locally owned equine-only veterinary practice. The website describes 24/7 ambulatory care and says they run their own out-of-hours emergency service. Based on the services listed, they appear set up for both routine work (e.g., vaccinations, dentistry) and more involved investigations (digital radiography, ultrasound, endoscopy/gastroscopy), with a surgical suite and clinic facilities.
Our Score (59/100)
From the latest reviews available, owners most often mention
- •Equine procedures and on-site treatment, including gelding a young horse and sedating/treating a needle-shy horse during a bank-holiday call-out. - Practical communication around visits, such as confirming they’re en route shortly before arrival. - A mixed picture on admin/customer service: one owner reports vaccination reminders being sent to the wrong number, delayed replies to messages, and dissatisfaction with how concerns were handled.
From the latest reviews available, owners most often mention
- •Equine procedures and on-site treatment, including gelding a young horse and sedating/treating a needle-shy horse during a bank-holiday call-out. - Practical communication around visits, such as confirming they’re en route shortly before arrival. - A mixed picture on admin/customer service: one owner reports vaccination reminders being sent to the wrong number, delayed replies to messages, and dissatisfaction with how concerns were handled.
Williamson Vets appears to be connected with LLM Farm Vets (the clinic website source references “LLM Farm Vets” and “First Field in the livestock performance”). The limited website text points to a farm/livestock focus, including references to livestock performance, a pharmacy, and TB work. Reviews are mixed: some mention friendly staff and support “night and day,” while several recent reviews criticise the practice for being part of the farming industry or describe it simply as “disgraceful.” A few older reviews talk about meals/food, which may indicate some reviewer confusion about what’s being reviewed.
Williamson Vets appears to be connected with LLM Farm Vets (the clinic website source references “LLM Farm Vets” and “First Field in the livestock performance”). The limited website text points to a farm/livestock focus, including references to livestock performance, a pharmacy, and TB work. Reviews are mixed: some mention friendly staff and support “night and day,” while several recent reviews criticise the practice for being part of the farming industry or describe it simply as “disgraceful.” A few older reviews talk about meals/food, which may indicate some reviewer confusion about what’s being reviewed.
Pinkham Equine Veterinary Services
Salisbury
Our Score (59/100)
Pinkham Equine Veterinary Services is an equine-only practice (horses are repeatedly referenced in reviews). Owners describe vets taking time to diagnose problems thoroughly and explain options clearly, including cases where more than one vet attended the same horse. Non-clinical support is also mentioned: office staff are described as helping with insurance claims for treatment and communicating clearly before appointments.
Pinkham Equine Veterinary Services is an equine-only practice (horses are repeatedly referenced in reviews). Owners describe vets taking time to diagnose problems thoroughly and explain options clearly, including cases where more than one vet attended the same horse. Non-clinical support is also mentioned: office staff are described as helping with insurance claims for treatment and communicating clearly before appointments.
Our Score (59/100)
Veterinary Equine Dental Technician appears to be a small, named-team equine dental service (no corporate group ownership is stated). Reviews repeatedly describe a calm, low-stress approach for horses that dislike dental work, with owners saying the team explain the process step-by-step and provide written dental records after appointments. Specific procedures mentioned include removal of wolf teeth and ongoing annual dental visits, alongside follow-up-style support such as answering owners’ questions and giving tailored management advice for dental conditions.
Veterinary Equine Dental Technician appears to be a small, named-team equine dental service (no corporate group ownership is stated). Reviews repeatedly describe a calm, low-stress approach for horses that dislike dental work, with owners saying the team explain the process step-by-step and provide written dental records after appointments. Specific procedures mentioned include removal of wolf teeth and ongoing annual dental visits, alongside follow-up-style support such as answering owners’ questions and giving tailored management advice for dental conditions.
Coastal Veterinary Group
Burnham Market
Our Score (59/100)
Coastal Veterinary Group is described by reviewers as privately owned and part of a wider Coastal Vets group; this particular site is mentioned as a small branch with a reception area and one consulting room. Based on the written reviews available, it seems set up primarily for consultations and medical assessment, with owners highlighting that the vet “looks for the problem, rather than just treating symptoms” and that medication was prescribed after checks. Multiple reviews mention pets being handled gently—examples include helping an older dog and making a nervous pug feel comfortable during the visit.
Coastal Veterinary Group is described by reviewers as privately owned and part of a wider Coastal Vets group; this particular site is mentioned as a small branch with a reception area and one consulting room. Based on the written reviews available, it seems set up primarily for consultations and medical assessment, with owners highlighting that the vet “looks for the problem, rather than just treating symptoms” and that medication was prescribed after checks. Multiple reviews mention pets being handled gently—examples include helping an older dog and making a nervous pug feel comfortable during the visit.
Walker Equine Vets
Cullompton
Our Score (59/100)
Walker Equine Vets is an independent, ambulatory equine practice for horses, ponies and donkeys, with facilities that include stabling and treatment rooms. Based on the website and reviews, the practice is set up for in-the-field visits plus on-site investigations and elective procedures (including lameness investigations, standing surgery, gastroscopy, X‑rays and scanning), and it states it provides a 24/7 emergency service.
Walker Equine Vets is an independent, ambulatory equine practice for horses, ponies and donkeys, with facilities that include stabling and treatment rooms. Based on the website and reviews, the practice is set up for in-the-field visits plus on-site investigations and elective procedures (including lameness investigations, standing surgery, gastroscopy, X‑rays and scanning), and it states it provides a 24/7 emergency service.
Poultry Health Services is a specialist veterinary service focused on the commercial poultry and gamebird sector, with support also mentioned for pigeons and backyard poultry. The website describes a broad offering that goes beyond routine clinical work, including laboratory diagnostics, structured “packages” for different poultry systems (layers, broilers, rearing, gamebirds), and export/import certification. In the latest written reviews available to us, pet owners most often point to staff being knowledgeable and practical to deal with—one reviewer specifically highlights that information is explained in plain, easy-to-understand terms rather than heavy scientific jargon, and another names “Carol” as especially knowledgeable and helpful.
Poultry Health Services is a specialist veterinary service focused on the commercial poultry and gamebird sector, with support also mentioned for pigeons and backyard poultry. The website describes a broad offering that goes beyond routine clinical work, including laboratory diagnostics, structured “packages” for different poultry systems (layers, broilers, rearing, gamebirds), and export/import certification. In the latest written reviews available to us, pet owners most often point to staff being knowledgeable and practical to deal with—one reviewer specifically highlights that information is explained in plain, easy-to-understand terms rather than heavy scientific jargon, and another names “Carol” as especially knowledgeable and helpful.
Feedback is mostly positive about pragmatic, “sensible and realistic” decision-making and calm handling in difficult moments (e.g., euthanasia). However, there are also complaints about poor follow-up/communication after a microchipping mistake (a puppy reportedly found to have two microchips and messages being ignored).
Feedback is mostly positive about pragmatic, “sensible and realistic” decision-making and calm handling in difficult moments (e.g., euthanasia). However, there are also complaints about poor follow-up/communication after a microchipping mistake (a puppy reportedly found to have two microchips and messages being ignored).
