Thursday, 1 October 2015

Almost done the second week of second (third) year

It is hard to believe that I am almost done my second week of second year.  I am now technically in third year of the program because my graduate entry year last year was equivalent to first and second year of the five year program.  Time is already flying by.

At the beginning of September I flew back to Edinburgh with my parents.  After spending a very jet legged day in Edinburgh we headed out on our vacation around western Scotland.

Our first destination was the Isle of Skye.  We drove through the Glencoe area which was incredibly spectacular on the way to Skye.


We also stopped at the Glenfinnan Viaduct.  For Harry Potter fans, that is the train bridge that Ron and Harry fly the car through in the Chamber of Secrets movie.  The viaduct was built in just a little over a year at a cost of £18,904 in 1897.



We took a ferry from Mallaig to Skye.  And in perfect Scottish fashion,  it was raining.  But it made the ferry crossing quite spectacular with the hills and cliffs of Skye covered in a mist.  We stayed on Skye for two nights and went from picturesque site to picturesque site and it even was sunny!

The fairy pools

Following some Scottish Blackface sheep back from Talisker beach

Neist Point

Looking at the Outer Hebrides from Neist Point

Cows crashing a party


From Skye we went to the Outer Hebrides.  Our first destination was the Isle of Lewis and the Isle of Harris (They are named as two islands but they are really one island... figure that one out).  They were the land of beautiful beaches.  And even more incredible was the weather that went along with the beaches, it continued to be sunny!


Cow out for a stroll on Europie beach

The Callanish Standing Stones (built between 2900 and 2600 BC)



Luskentyre Beach

Then it was off to North Uist followed by South Uist.  Now the Uists were my least favourite part of the trip.  But I got my absolute favourite picture from the entire trip on North Uist (and yes it does involve a highland cow!  Can you tell I am a vet student with all the animals featuring in my pictures?)

She posed so beautifully for me!

Then it was off to the Isle of Barra.  Barra has quite a unique airport.  The airport has limited times when planes can land because it is a beach.  So for half of the day the airport is unusable because the tide comes in and covers the runway!  It is the only beach airport in the world with regularly scheduled commercial flights.



"Keep off the beach while the windsock is flying, and the airport is active"

"Beware of sand blast during aircraft movements"

Hoof prints on a beach

After Barra it was time to head back to Edinburgh.  My parents helped me get fully settled in my new flat (pictures in the next post!).  Since then I have been trying to get back into the groove of vet school.  This semester I have Pathology and Clinical Foundations Course (which include Pharmacology, Oncology, Diagnostic Imaging, Anaesthesia and Critical Care and Surgery).  I am looking forward to it but the amount of material we have been given is already starting to pile up!

Friday, 7 August 2015

Summer Blogging Hiatus

Since arriving home to Canada after my placement in Jersey I have been keeping busy.  So blogging sort of slipped my mind.

I completed my two final husbandry EMS placements.  The first was my small mammal placement.  I went back to my old university to work at the Central Animal Facility at the University of Guelph.  The central animal facility is responsible for caring for all research animals used at the university.  I was sort of dreading this placement because I didn't think it would be interesting.  But I was pleasantly surprised I was wrong.  Learning the measures required to ensure the welfare of the lab animals was really interesting.  And I got to work with lots of different animals including mice, rats, a rabbit, shrews, turkeys, chickens, frogs and calves.

My second placement was my poultry placement.  I went to a layer farm near Ottawa.  I unfortunately timed my visit with very hot weather.  In the morning I would help in the egg packing station.  I would put cartons on the conveyor belts for the automatic egg packer, and put the eggs that had been collected by hand on the conveyor belt to go to the washing station.  But my main job was collecting eggs from the barns.  They had just received new birds so the birds hadn't all figured out that they were supposed to lay their eggs in the nests.  On my second day I spent 4 hours in the 30 degree barn collecting over 3500 eggs by hand.  Although interesting to learn about the egg production industry, the poultry placement was definitely not my favourite.  The highlight of my placement was getting to visit lots of family in the Ottawa area.

I have also been enjoying my summer break and doing some non-school related stuff.  Toronto hosted the Pan Am Games.  I got to go watch the Canadian women's field hockey team play Argentina.  The Canadians lost but it was still a great time.




A couple weekends ago I toured around Toronto with a couple friends.  I also went up the CN tower for the first time.  Since I have lived about an hour away for my entire life I figured it was time to finally go up.  The view from the tower was beautiful.





Looking down through the glass floor

The PanAm Games Torch

Panamania (free cultural shows from PanAm countries in Nathan Phillips Square)




It's hard to believe that in just under a month I will be heading back to Edinburgh and in a month and a half I will be starting my second year of vet school.

Tuesday, 16 June 2015

Maybe The Best EMS Week Yet

Time for another post from an airport.  I am in Southampton for my layover flying home from Jersey. I had an incredible time in Jersey.

My placement week unofficially started Sunday evening with feeding the calves.  I discovered that Jerseys make very cute calves.



Monday I officially started working.  They had me start by feeding the heifers that were going to be shown on the weekend.  The heifers were tethered in a small fields so that they could get used to wearing a halter and being restrained.

This young girl was in the under 12 month class

After feeding heifers I started taking them for walks.  Those girls had never been led before so they had to be taught how to walk.  This involved a lot of tugging on their halter ropes and periodically some input from another person pushing them from behind.  But it was amazing how quickly they learned.  By the end of each of their sessions they would walk without much, if any struggle.  The next walking sessions with them involved trying to make them walk more like a show animal and less like a young animal excited to be out and about on a walk.

Next up was walking the cows.  Most of the cows had been shown before so it was just reminding them how to walk properly.  They generally walked really well and it was just like walking a very slow 450kg dog!

On a walk with the cow that I think had the best personality


Over the next few days I continued walking heifers and cows and did some other tasks around the farm.  One of the days I fore milk stripped every cow during the milking.  (Foremilk stripping is done to clear teat canal and also allows you to check if the milk is healthy and the cow doesn't have any infection in their udder.  In the perfect world you would do it every milking but it is time consuming.  The perfect thing for free labour like me to do!)

Towards the end of the week it was time to start prepping the cows for the show.  This involved giving them a summer shave all over their body and also shaving their udders to make the milk veins look more prominent.  The young heifers have more fur than the older cows, so they leave a strip of fur along their spine.  They then shape it and cut it into a sort of mohawk to make it look like their spines are perfectly straight.

The weekend rolled around and it was time for the show.  Saturday was the cows.  We loaded up the cows into the trailer and took them to the show ground.  When we got the cows there, it was time for a good scrub to make them perfectly clean.  After their cleaning everyone was on the lookout for any cows pooping.  If a cow pooped, the poop was scraped up right away (to prevent them stepping in it) and their bottoms were wiped with a baby wipe.  I have to admit, when I signed up for a dairy placement I did not expect to be wiping cows' bums with baby wipes!  Then it was time to grease them up.  They sprayed their fur with WD40 to make them look shiny and keep any fly away hairs down.  After that they sprayed their hooves with black spray paint to make them look perfectly black, and their tails were back brushed to make them nice and fluffy (I was in charge of that).  

In the first class (Heifers in Milk) the farm I was working for had 5 cows to show.  Not having five people to show them they asked me to show one.  So about 2 minutes before their class I got a 30 second run down on how to show a cow.  My cow placed 9th of 14.  But my farm won the class which was fantastic.  They went on to win every subsequent class except for mature cow.  And when it came to the championship, the were both Supreme Champion (what a great title name!) and Reserve Champion.  In non show terms it means they finished first and second overall which is incredible.

Ansom May Anemone, the supreme champion over Jersey June 2015

Sunday was the heifer show.  The farm didn't do as well but still had a very respectable day.  The show was such a fun experience.  I had never even seen a cow show before so to be involved in one was incredible.

When booking my flights I decided to stay an extra day to be able to be a tourist for the day.  I started by taking a walk along the cliff path close to the farm.


On a clear day you would be able to see France in the distance

Next I went to a Museum called La Hougue Bie.  Throughout history La Hougue Bie has been many things.  It was a neolithic site of worship 6000 years ago, has a medieval chapel on the mound and during World War II was a bunker for a German Labour Camp.

The Medieval Chapel

I finished the day off by going to Gorey, a small village on the Eastern Coast.  There I visited Mont Orgueil Castle.  It was first mentioned in history in 1204, but most of the modifications and buildings that remain today were built starting in the 1500s.  Its location was strategically chosen to protect Jersey from French invasion.  After the castle I spent a little time walking through the village and along the beach.

Looking toward France


Mont Orgueil from Gorey Beach




My week in Jersey is definitely up there in the rankings of my best EMS placements.  I would go back in a heartbeat!


PS:  I made the Jersey Paper!


You can see a gallery of pictures from the Jersey Summer fair here http://jerseyeveningpost.com/news/2015/06/15/gallery-thousands-enjoy-a-flavour-of-the-islands-country-life/


Sunday, 7 June 2015

I had no idea what they were saying

With nothing I had to do this last week I did a bit more exploring around town.

I went to Dean Village and walked along the water of Leith with a friend.  Dean Village is just a few minutes walk from downtown but it is a whole different world.  The village used to be the centre of water mills and the buildings that are there still reflect that today.



The water of Leith


Then Wednesday two of my classmates and I went to Stirling for the day.  As part of our Husbandry Extra-Mural Studies, we had to attend a livestock market.  So we went to United Auctions in Stirling.  It was quite an experience!  We watched both cattle and sheep sales.  I have been to an auction in Canada before. I had trouble understanding the auctioneer there because they talked so fast.  Well add a Scottish accent into the mix and it was pretty much hopeless.  I could usually understand the final price that the animal would sell for, but anything said before that, I usually had no idea what they were saying.

Once we had finished at the market we toured around Stirling for the afternoon.  We visited a sweet shop that was unbelievable.  I have never seen so many different types of chocolate and fudge.  So naturally I had to try some.  

Clotted Cream Fudge, Irish Cream Fudge and Bailey's Creme Brûlée Chocolate


We then walked around and looked at Stirling Castle and the Church of Holy Rude.  


Wallace Monument (The same Wallace that the movie Braveheart is about)

Stirling Castle
Stirling Castle
The Church of Holy Rude

The Church of Holy Rude


Finally as we were leaving we spotted a milkshake shop.  They advertised 150 different flavours.  There were so many choices!  I settled on a double decker milkshake.  (Double decker if s british chocolate bar that I can best describe as a cross of mars and twix bars).


Now I am off on an adventure.  I am currently in the Edinburgh Airport waiting to board my flight to Jersey.  I am going to spend a week doing a placement at a jersey cow dairy farm.  I am really looking forward to the experience!