Showing 11-20 of 21 clinics
Belmont Vets Ltd is a small-animal practice that treats cats, dogs and several small pets (including rabbits, guinea pigs, ferrets and hamsters) and is accredited as an RCVS Cat Friendly Clinic. The clinic advertises preventative healthcare plans (Pet Health Club®), free nurse clinics, and additional options like K‑Laser Therapy and pet travel health certificates. From the latest reviews available, owners most often describe: - Kind, respectful handling from the whole team (receptionists, nurses and vets). - Thorough investigations, with one owner saying a vet “went out of her way to get to the bottom of the issue” for their cat. - Serious-case care, including life-saving surgery after early cancer signs were spotted, and support through a leg amputation recovery. Emergency/out-of-hours is unclear from the information provided: the clinic is described as providing emergency vet services, but one recent review states there is no out-of-hours service.
Belmont Vets Ltd is a small-animal practice that treats cats, dogs and several small pets (including rabbits, guinea pigs, ferrets and hamsters) and is accredited as an RCVS Cat Friendly Clinic. The clinic advertises preventative healthcare plans (Pet Health Club®), free nurse clinics, and additional options like K‑Laser Therapy and pet travel health certificates. From the latest reviews available, owners most often describe: - Kind, respectful handling from the whole team (receptionists, nurses and vets). - Thorough investigations, with one owner saying a vet “went out of her way to get to the bottom of the issue” for their cat. - Serious-case care, including life-saving surgery after early cancer signs were spotted, and support through a leg amputation recovery. Emergency/out-of-hours is unclear from the information provided: the clinic is described as providing emergency vet services, but one recent review states there is no out-of-hours service.
Brookfield Veterinary Practice
Hereford
Our Score (84/100)
Brookfield Veterinary Practice describes itself as a family-run, independent clinic and a Veterinary Nurse Training facility. It’s set up for routine care as well as urgent, same-day problems and end-of-life support: reviews describe weekend emergency attendance and rapid assessment for an eye injury (numbing the eye and removing a grass seed). The website also states it runs its own 24‑hour emergency service for registered clients. Owners repeatedly mention thorough explanations and discussing options before treatment, plus regular updates during inpatient care (for example, a cat with a urinary blockage).
Brookfield Veterinary Practice describes itself as a family-run, independent clinic and a Veterinary Nurse Training facility. It’s set up for routine care as well as urgent, same-day problems and end-of-life support: reviews describe weekend emergency attendance and rapid assessment for an eye injury (numbing the eye and removing a grass seed). The website also states it runs its own 24‑hour emergency service for registered clients. Owners repeatedly mention thorough explanations and discussing options before treatment, plus regular updates during inpatient care (for example, a cat with a urinary blockage).
Wye Valley Vets Ltd
Hereford
Our Score (84/100)
Wye Valley Vets Ltd is a founder-led practice established in 2015 by Dr Chris Dixon (no wider corporate group is mentioned). The clinic describes a purpose-built facility adapted for veterinary use, including separate dog and cat areas, on-site diagnostic equipment, a laboratory, and a pharmacy/prescriptions service. The website also highlights surgical capability (including TPLO and eye surgery), and the practice is listed as a veterinary nurse training facility. In recent reviews, owners most often point to specific, practical positives: being seen the same day when needed, successful cruciate surgeries without post-op infections reported, and dental extractions handled with a “fair and reasonable” invoice. One recent account strongly conflicts with this, alleging a lack of monitoring and discussion of options during a serious blood-platelet condition (thrombocytopenia), and no support over a final 20-hour deterioration.
Wye Valley Vets Ltd is a founder-led practice established in 2015 by Dr Chris Dixon (no wider corporate group is mentioned). The clinic describes a purpose-built facility adapted for veterinary use, including separate dog and cat areas, on-site diagnostic equipment, a laboratory, and a pharmacy/prescriptions service. The website also highlights surgical capability (including TPLO and eye surgery), and the practice is listed as a veterinary nurse training facility. In recent reviews, owners most often point to specific, practical positives: being seen the same day when needed, successful cruciate surgeries without post-op infections reported, and dental extractions handled with a “fair and reasonable” invoice. One recent account strongly conflicts with this, alleging a lack of monitoring and discussion of options during a serious blood-platelet condition (thrombocytopenia), and no support over a final 20-hour deterioration.
Newhall Veterinary Surgery Ltd appears to be a smaller, personal-feeling practice (ownership/group isn’t stated in the information provided). Based on client reports, it handles routine procedures and more serious medical cases, with examples including a dog vasectomy and an illness that required a 5‑day stay. Reviewers also mention clear communication (explaining things “in detail”) and transparency around costs (an “upfront scale of charges” referenced).
Newhall Veterinary Surgery Ltd appears to be a smaller, personal-feeling practice (ownership/group isn’t stated in the information provided). Based on client reports, it handles routine procedures and more serious medical cases, with examples including a dog vasectomy and an illness that required a 5‑day stay. Reviewers also mention clear communication (explaining things “in detail”) and transparency around costs (an “upfront scale of charges” referenced).
Belmont Farm & Equine Vets Ltd is a farm-and-equine-focused veterinary practice (no corporate group affiliation is mentioned in the information provided). Reviews repeatedly describe vets doing on-site visits and phone support for livestock and equines, and one owner specifically mentions getting help as a “novice smallholder” with donkeys, goats and sheep. The practice is also mentioned as running “useful courses,” and one reviewer highlights that services continued through Covid lockdown. Concrete specifics mentioned by owners include: - Support for equine cases (“especially for everything Equine!”). - Farm animal care for donkeys, goats and sheep. - Phone advice plus on-site visits. - Kind, humane support “at the worst time for us” (end-of-life context implied, but not explicitly stated).
Belmont Farm & Equine Vets Ltd is a farm-and-equine-focused veterinary practice (no corporate group affiliation is mentioned in the information provided). Reviews repeatedly describe vets doing on-site visits and phone support for livestock and equines, and one owner specifically mentions getting help as a “novice smallholder” with donkeys, goats and sheep. The practice is also mentioned as running “useful courses,” and one reviewer highlights that services continued through Covid lockdown. Concrete specifics mentioned by owners include: - Support for equine cases (“especially for everything Equine!”). - Farm animal care for donkeys, goats and sheep. - Phone advice plus on-site visits. - Kind, humane support “at the worst time for us” (end-of-life context implied, but not explicitly stated).
Eye Veterinary Clinic Ltd
Leominster
Our Score (81/100)
Eye Veterinary Clinic Ltd is described on its website as a dedicated veterinary ophthalmology referral practice, with a purpose-built, state-of-the-art eye hospital and a team of specialist-led ophthalmologists and nurses. It also states it provides 24/7 care for pet eye problems. No corporate group ownership is mentioned in the available information. Based on owner and referring-vet reviews, the clinic appears set up for both urgent eye cases and planned ophthalmic workups/surgery—examples include a same-day operation for a corneal ulcer, surgery after a perforated cornea, and eye removal discussed as an expected end-point for a long-running eye problem. Owners also mention clear explanations of options and medications, help with pet insurance claims, and written reports sent back to the primary vet after assessment.
Eye Veterinary Clinic Ltd is described on its website as a dedicated veterinary ophthalmology referral practice, with a purpose-built, state-of-the-art eye hospital and a team of specialist-led ophthalmologists and nurses. It also states it provides 24/7 care for pet eye problems. No corporate group ownership is mentioned in the available information. Based on owner and referring-vet reviews, the clinic appears set up for both urgent eye cases and planned ophthalmic workups/surgery—examples include a same-day operation for a corneal ulcer, surgery after a perforated cornea, and eye removal discussed as an expected end-point for a long-running eye problem. Owners also mention clear explanations of options and medications, help with pet insurance claims, and written reports sent back to the primary vet after assessment.
Vine Tree Vets
Ross-On-Wye
Our Score (78/100)
Vine Tree Vets is a general veterinary practice that also operates as a veterinary nurse training facility. Recent reviews most often describe two main types of visits: urgent illness appointments (including being seen within an hour) and end-of-life care (multiple detailed accounts of euthanasia appointments). Owners repeatedly mention clear discussion and decision-making before euthanasia, supportive reception staff, and practical at-home management advice after treatment. While most recent written feedback is positive, there are also a couple of low-star ratings in the latest set that don’t include written detail.
Vine Tree Vets is a general veterinary practice that also operates as a veterinary nurse training facility. Recent reviews most often describe two main types of visits: urgent illness appointments (including being seen within an hour) and end-of-life care (multiple detailed accounts of euthanasia appointments). Owners repeatedly mention clear discussion and decision-making before euthanasia, supportive reception staff, and practical at-home management advice after treatment. While most recent written feedback is positive, there are also a couple of low-star ratings in the latest set that don’t include written detail.
Mortimer Vets is an independently owned veterinary practice caring for dogs, cats, horses and small pets. The clinic highlights modern diagnostic and treatment facilities with full in‑patient care, and it runs its own small‑animal out‑of‑hours advice service (with Vets Now support for emergency treatment if needed). In reviews, owners repeatedly mention clear diagnosis and practical discussions of options—one describes a problem another vet couldn’t diagnose for six months being identified in a single visit. Home euthanasia is also specifically mentioned, with one owner describing the vet (“Kaz”) coming to their house so their dog could be calm and settled.
Mortimer Vets is an independently owned veterinary practice caring for dogs, cats, horses and small pets. The clinic highlights modern diagnostic and treatment facilities with full in‑patient care, and it runs its own small‑animal out‑of‑hours advice service (with Vets Now support for emergency treatment if needed). In reviews, owners repeatedly mention clear diagnosis and practical discussions of options—one describes a problem another vet couldn’t diagnose for six months being identified in a single visit. Home euthanasia is also specifically mentioned, with one owner describing the vet (“Kaz”) coming to their house so their dog could be calm and settled.
A P Vet presents itself as a referral-focused practice offering veterinary and holistic support, including acupuncture “for any animal” and services aimed at reducing unnecessary interventions (for example, titre testing to check whether a dog truly needs a booster). The website emphasises a “team approach” and lists rehabilitation and cancer care alongside complementary options like herbal medicine and laser therapy. In the latest written reviews available to us, owners repeatedly mention clear explanations of procedures, efforts to keep pets comfortable (cats are specifically mentioned), and vaccination decisions guided by results (one owner notes only one dog needed a distemper top-up).
A P Vet presents itself as a referral-focused practice offering veterinary and holistic support, including acupuncture “for any animal” and services aimed at reducing unnecessary interventions (for example, titre testing to check whether a dog truly needs a booster). The website emphasises a “team approach” and lists rehabilitation and cancer care alongside complementary options like herbal medicine and laser therapy. In the latest written reviews available to us, owners repeatedly mention clear explanations of procedures, efforts to keep pets comfortable (cats are specifically mentioned), and vaccination decisions guided by results (one owner notes only one dog needed a distemper top-up).
Hay Veterinary Group
Hay-On-Wye
Hay Veterinary Group is a pet practice that (per its website) cares for “all species of pet” and offers routine wellness checks alongside support for more serious situations. Reviews describe both planned and urgent care: one owner used an out‑of‑hours service for a very ill cat who stayed in for three days, with phone updates and the option to speak to the vet; another describes compassionate support at end of life for a dog with mouth cancer, including a condolence card with wildflower seeds. Ownership/structure isn’t clearly stated in the available sources. One reviewer says the practice was “taken over by a large company” and felt service and personal touch had declined since then, while other recent reviews remain very positive.
Hay Veterinary Group is a pet practice that (per its website) cares for “all species of pet” and offers routine wellness checks alongside support for more serious situations. Reviews describe both planned and urgent care: one owner used an out‑of‑hours service for a very ill cat who stayed in for three days, with phone updates and the option to speak to the vet; another describes compassionate support at end of life for a dog with mouth cancer, including a condolence card with wildflower seeds. Ownership/structure isn’t clearly stated in the available sources. One reviewer says the practice was “taken over by a large company” and felt service and personal touch had declined since then, while other recent reviews remain very positive.
