equine veterinarian Louisiana

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Equine Health Problems: Horse Vets in Louisiana

 

Also includes listings for Health and Reproductive Centers

 

Find an Equine Veterinarian in Louisiana, Listed by City


BOSSIER CITY
EQUINE MEDICINE AND SURGERY; 7991 EAST TEXAS STREET SUITE 400; BOSSIER CITY, LA; phone: 318-746-7866

LAFAYETTE
ACADIANA EQUINE CLINIC; 121 EAST GLORIA SWITCH ROAD; LAFAYETTE, LA; phone: 337-235-9945

MINDEN
I 20 EQUINE ASSOCIATES; 5503 HIGHWAY 528; MINDEN, LA; phone: 318-382-0999

NEW ORLEANS
EQUINE MEDICINE AND SURGERY CENTER; 1751 GENTILLY BOULEVARD; NEW ORLEANS, LA; phone: 504-947-4942

WEST MONROE
EQUINE MOBILE MEDICINE; 9063 CYPRESS STREET; WEST MONROE, LA; phone: 318-397-9000

 
   
   
         
 
 
 

Equine Veterinarians in Louisiana, a nationwide listing of local vets from John Lyons Trainer Keith Hosman

© 2008 copyright Keith Hosman and horsemanship101.com

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Newsletter Sample:
From "I'm Scared of My Horse," Issue 19 of my FREE newsletter

Re: Ask A Horse Trainer

"This article is for people with a horse that "turned into a brat" since they've owned it. It concerns itself with ground manners and the like – it does not deal with riding issues (such as spooky or jiggy horses). It does not specifically address horses that "have always" been bratty. Rather, if your horse has taken a turn for the worse (manners-wise) since you began dealing with it, this is for you.

"Would you like to walk out to the barn, have your horse turn to you with a smile and just hang out, friends for life? Well, that's possible, but first...

"First the hard medicine: If your horse has developed poor ground manners (pushy, rude, especially dangerous vices such as kicking or biting) since you've been in charge... then you'll only fix it by realizing that you need to make a change yourself. Every contact we have with our horses teaches them something – and your behavior has "trained" him to walk all over you. When the horse came to live with you he saw you as a blank slate. Would you be in charge – or would he? He knows somebody's gotta be. Millions of years of "survival of the fittest" programmed him to believe that there's gotta be a boss. If you're not ready for the post, he'll assume it. But now, six months or years after moving in, the horse looks at you and sees a giant sucker, with the Tootsie Pop wrapper and everything...."

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