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Showing posts with label Career In Veterinary Medicine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Career In Veterinary Medicine. Show all posts

Friday, December 9, 2011

Camel song

The campgrounds of the hamlet Pushkar swarm every year in November with thousands of tourists from all over the world visiting the place to witness the fair of the ship of the desert. From just 14,000 people, the crowd swells to a huge 200,000 during the months of the Pushkar camel fair. The advent of the kartik purnima month marks the vibrant colours all over the place. This increases the craze of tourists in the fair even more as such bright colours are generally not found in the western countries. The magnanimity of Rajasthan is thereby unparallel to any other place and is reflected perfectly in these colours.

Camels are dressed in the best attires and accessories that bestow a magical charm to the complete scenario, which attract tourists. As the tourists discover and enjoy the different aspects of desert life, memories are etched inside their hearts with the desire to revisit the Pushkar camel fair again. 

Visiting the holy place of Pushkar at this time offers an exclusive experience to all. What adds more to the enjoyment of the fair is the pleasant weather of the place with the beginning of winters. Around 50,000 camels participate in the fair. They are decorated and sold to visitors. Many also take part in races that are held every year. The rustic element adds charm to the place. Tourists are enthralled by the innocence and generousness of the natives. Locals also indulge in dance and song for the entertainment of the visitors and show the true culture of Rajasthan. 

There are also craftsmen who exhibit innumerable beautiful souvenirs. Visitors purchase these exquisite pieces for their friends and family members as a memorabilia of the Pushkar camel fair. Apart from the fun and the religious factor, the cultural part of Pushkar is also equally interesting. Traders set up innumerable shops. Woolen blankets from Merta, textiles from Jodhpur, broad necklaces from Nagpur and brassware of Jaipur are all displayed for sale by these traders. Ropes, saddlers and many such items can also be purchased. 

After witnessing the vibrant fair, tourists may take a small leisure trip of the Rajasthan state. Temple of Lord Brahma located in the vicinity is also very famous. An interaction with the tribal folk is also an interesting experience. 

So, if you are also looking forward to catch the charm of the Pushkar camel fair and witness the camel race and the culture of Rajasthan, make sure that you have made all your accommodation arrangements beforehand. With people flocking from all over the world, it can be really difficult to find a suitable place to stay in Pushkar during the fair. 

Do not forget to carry a camera to capture the colors, fun and the tradition of the fair. Visiting the Pushkar camel fair will surely be an experience of a lifetime. Prior arrangements are necessary to ensure that it is a pleasurable one. So, what are you waiting for? Make your bookings for Pushkar before it is too late!

Article Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com

Bactrian camels


Jerking frantically, our jeep climbed up a dirt-road that snaked across an alpine slope covered with sparse vegetation. We were on a quest to understand the conservation issues related to the Bactrian camel in the Nubra valley of Ladakh. Soon the Khardung La, the highest motorable pass in the world, came into view. Prayer flags, hallmark of a high pass in this part of the world, fluttered incessantly on a spur.

Once at the top, we staggered around taking pictures of signboards with 'World's Highest Motorable Road (18, 380 ft)' emblazoned on them. The height soon affected us, and we quickly squeezed into the jeep and continued. After a relatively smooth drive on a macadamized road we reached at Khardung village. The bright green agricultural fields around the village were in stark contrast to the dark brown slopes surrounding them.
Hundreds of nature lovers visit Nubra valley every year. It is popularly known as the Valley of Flowers, and is located at about 100 km north of Leh, the capital city of Ladakh and the erstwhile Indian gateway to central Asia. The landscape is adorned with wild flowers, sand dunes, jagged mountains and sea-buckthorn thickets that teem with birds and mammals.
Sumur village was our first stop, and we stayed at the Stakrey Guest House with a beautiful garden in full bloom. Apart from delightful flowers, the owner had grown vegetables such as potatoes, cabbage, cauliflower, carrots, tomatoes, etc. Next day we ventured into a side-valley to look for wildlife, but after plodding for a while the trail faded into a vertical cliff, and we needed to retrace our path.
The afternoon was spent in the Tirit village, learning about the history of camel in Nubra. "Camels in the valley are the descendents of a group of about 15 individuals bequeathed by the central Asian traders" said Wangdus Norbu. The Kalon families of Tirit and Sumur, who ran a caravanserai during the heyday of trade on the Silk Route, were the first to raise camels as draught animals. But as the road infrastructure in the valley improved, thanks to the Indian Army, they were abandoned.
"The trade on the Silk Route was made possible only by these hardy animals" added Mr. Norbu. Bactrian camels can live several days without water, a feature well recognized by the central Asian traders. "An adult camel can carry three times more load than that carried by a horse" remarked another villager. The most important commodities the Yarkandi traders brought included silk, bullion, pearl and Persian rugs, which they bartered in Leh for spices and clothes from the plains of India. The trade ended in the late 1960s following the Sino-Indian war.
After a pleasant stay at Sumur, we continued our journey up the valley and found a small oasis for camping. We pitched tents amongst Hippophae bushes, laden heavily with luscious berries. An effort was made to spot camels before having a dinner of Spaghetti.
A golden light had bathed the surrounding peaks, when a roaring helicopter woke me up the next day. One more machine flew across before I got up. Perhaps they were carrying fresh supplies to the frontier post at the Siachen glacier, the biggest outside the polar region and the highest battleground in the world. After morning ablutions we headed toward Panamik village, a much coveted destination in the valley because of its hot springs. People from all over Ladakh come here to take a shower, as they believe that the sulphur water is a panacea for all diseases.
After a few days at Panamik, we went to Diskit, the headquarters of Nubra. On arrival we explored the small market with shops selling trinkets. We were told that camels are found in the scrub forest below the village, so Mark and I ventured into it. After a great deal of searching, we saw a pair of camels feeding on leaves of stunted willow trees. Soon they joined a group of thirty animals. It was a grand sighting indeed; our efforts finally paid off.
Although the domesticated Bactrian camels are abundant in central Asia, the wild form is one of the most endangered mammals on the planet with less than 1000 individuals surviving. They are distributed in the Gobi desert of Mongolia, and Xinjiang and Gansu provinces of China. Despite concerted conservation efforts, its population continues to dwindle due to competition with livestock and poaching.
The feral camels in Nubra has long remained isolated from the larger population in the aforementioned central Asian countries, and perhaps represent a genetically distinct population. Thus they need immediate attention from conservationists, as they are in conflict with the people. "They enter the fenced orchards and destroy trees" said Abdul Razaq, a villager of Hundar. "People throw axe in retaliation and the animals succumb to the injuries" he added while sipping a traditional Ladakhi tea.
Furthermore, some agitated villagers drown the foals by driving them into the high currents of the Shayok river. "People urged the district administration to appoint temporary guards to prevent the animals from entering private properties, but to no avail" said another villager. The situation is worsening with the soaring needs and aspirations of the people.
Fortunately, the opening of the valley to tourists a decade ago gave new economic opportunities. Camel Safari is a recent initiative and is increasingly becoming popular in the area. Young entrepreneurs are fascinated by this new prospect, and are increasingly taming the feral camels. However, since the animals have been left untended for a long time, it is often difficult to recognize them in the wild. This sometimes leads to scuffle amongst the alleged owners.
One day, we joined a group of tourists riding camels on the sand dunes near Hundar. As I sat astride and rocked on a camel trudging across the sand dunes, the guide told me about this newfound business. Although Camel Safari enhances the income of the locals, the animals seemed stressed and emaciated. The ones we rode were certainly weaker than those we had seen earlier in the thicket. But perhaps enhancing the economic value is the only way to conserve them in the long run.
"People also take a few camels to Leh every year to participate in the week-long Ladakh Festival in September, and earn some additional income" snapped the guide. With this increasing business prospect, the people of Nubra are becoming possessive about their camels. According Abdul Razaq, people were up in arms when four Bactrian camels were taken for breeding in Pushkar, Rajasthan, home to the Dromedary in India. They contend that if tourists see the Bactrian in Rajasthan, they (tourists) will not make an effort to come to a remote place like Nubra to see them. "Fortunately, the animals did not survive in Rajasthan due to the intense heat and were brought back" informed a villager.
We set out on the last leg of our journey to Hundar, where we camped at Nyerchung Resort located in a gorgeous orchard in the middle of the village. We pitched our tents below an apple tree that shed its fruits day and night. After a couple of memorable days at Hundar, we bid adieu to Nubra and drove back with the fond memories of Bactrian camels, hoping that they survive the negative impacts of modern development and continue to be the cynosure of the valley for centuries to come.

Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Online Veterinary Practice


Veterinary software today comes in many flavors and sold on many platforms and technologies. Though Windows-based solutions are the most common there are a number of other other software solutions. There a number of downsides to non-hosted software that is not web-based. The world of computers is rapidly evolving and software systems that are closed and tied to a single platform are becoming increasingly obsolete when stacked against online veterinary software solution.The most common vet software program is a windows-based solution that either resides on a single machine or is networked and resides on both a PC and a server. The PC will host the software and the server will host the database.

The first biggest disadvantage becomes immediately apparent: the hardware requirement. Veterinary software vendors typically require the veterinarian to purchase and maintain expensive hardware. The networked server costs at least $2000 and almost as much to maintain on a yearly basis. The PCs that host the system might be cheaper, but by no means are they cheap to maintain, patch and upgrade to the latest software standards. Before purchasing any solution from a software vendor it is important that vet clinics research and understand what and how much hardware is required to operate the software.
A second, even more pressing concern that can't be expressed in dollars, is security. On-premise systems that reside on users machines or a practice's database server are typically woefully insecure. Software vendors will promise "automated backups" and "password protected" logins but typically these vendors are small or medium size businesses with little understand of the more sophisticated security vulnerabilities. Automated backups do not protect against the loss or theft of a machine nor from a hard drive crash. Password-protected logins do not protect from weak password policies or brute force password hackers. A veterinary software systems security will only be as powerful as the people coding the software and typically vet software vendors do not having the man power and expertise to make their systems very sophisticated.
The last and probably most pressing disadvantage of most of today's software offerings is the lack of portability. We live in the age of iPads and Blackberries, where data is expected to be always on the go like the rest of us. These software systems were never designed or programmed to work on many different platforms, let alone the software be accessed from somewhere outside the office. As long as the solution is secure, there is simply no concrete disadvantage to having a solution that works inside and outside the clinic than having one that works strictly in the clinic. Software today is meant to move and vets shouldn't have to settle for less. Online veterinary practice management software has none of these distinct disadvantages. If you choose the right provider, the software system will sit on one of the major "cloud infrastructures" that guarantees 99.99% uptime and enterprise-level security. The advantage of cloud hosted solutions are many:
  1. No hardware requirement: you can use the existing machines in your office or even your home. And not be tied down to a single software platform like Windows.
  2. Enterprise-grade security: A few online software vendors will offer their applications on existing, ultra-secure cloud infrastructures that are used by banks and other industries where security and privacy are paramount. Veterinary software shouldn't suffer from poor security simply because the vet market may be smaller than the bank industry.
  3. Portability: When software is hosted on the web it means that any web-enabled device can access it, anytime and anywhere: at work, home, at a cafe, a bookstore or on vacation.
A powerful veterinary software solution I recommend is called VetBlue http://www.eveterinarysoftware.com and has all the advantages of online software we discussed in this article and suffers from none of the setbacks of on-premise, windows-based solutions since it is hosted and available 24/7 from any web enabled PC, Mac or smartphone.

Veterinary Practice


Another frequently asked question on How To Grow Your Veterinary Practice Is:
How Can I Track If My Marketing Is Working Within My Veterinary Practice?
This is a very good question because the key to any successful marketing campaign is tracking. This is also the difference between the sort of advertising that comes out of Madison Avenue and the sort that actually works for small businesses including veterinary practices.
So how do you go about tracking?

Here are four ways you can track if your marketing is working:
1. Campaign Specific Telephone Numbers
Did you know that it is possible to rent tracking telephone numbers? These are telephone numbers that you can put on your adverts, letters and web pages that when dialed will ring in your office but will be also be logged. For example, say you were running an identical promotion in two different local newspapers at the same time at the ad generated 50 new clients for your practice. If you used the same telephone number on both then you wouldn't know which newspaper had generated the most new clients. You might then be tempted to run the same ad again in both newspapers the following week when, in fact, one of the newspapers had generated 45 new clients and the other one had only generated 5! However, if each ad used a different tracking telephone number then you would know exactly how many had come from each.
2. Campaign Specific Codes
An alternative to using telephone numbers is to use different codes for each campaign. For example, you could specify in your ads or letters: Please mention offer code XYZ345 when making an appointment. This is a cheaper than telephone numbers but also not as reliable as you are relying on the client remembering to give the code and your reception staff remembering to keep track of it.
3. Campaign Specific Vouchers
Another well used tracking method is to include a voucher/coupon on your ad that the client has to bring with them to qualify for the promotion. Again not as good as telephone numbers but still a lot more than the majority of veterinary practice do.
4. Campaign Specific Web Pages
If you want to track clients that have come as a result of visiting your website then you could use different "landing pages" for different campaigns which could include any of the above tracking methods. You can also have Internet only offers so you know could only have been found on your website.
Use a simple spreadsheet which lists each campaign and the total cost of the campaign i.e. postage, paper, advertising costs etc. Then have columns for the number of responders (leads), the number of conversions (sales), the Cost Per Lead (total cost/leads), the Cost Per Sale (total cost/sales) and the value of the sales made. By doing this you can track if you are getting a return on your investment and determine if it is worth running the campaign again.
So don't waste money on advertising and marketing that doesn't work. Track your campaigns and focus on the ones that actually give you a positive return on investment.
Dean Biggs is co-founder of Veterinary Practice Profits based in Heathrow, FL. The aim of Veterinary Practice Profits is to teach veterinary practice owners the practice building and marketing strategies they were never taught at Veterinary school.
To get 20 FREE videos on 10 Frequently Asked Questions and 10 Questions You Should Be Asking about growing your veterinary practice plus a FREE book and CD on How To Consistently Grow Your Practice Every Year just click the following link http://www.FreeVetVideos.com

Veterinary Practice


Ok, you have just bought your lovely new kitten and are all excited. Now it's time to consider trying to find a local veterinary or vet practice that is the best one to suit you and your kitten.

Hopefully there won't be many frequent visits, however when you do, you have to feel happy that they can treat your kitten as and when he requires care.
Before I start, it is worth mentioning that you should not be afraid to ask your vet questions while they are examining your kitten. They will only be too happy to explain what they are checking for.
So here are the seven tips or facts you should consider when choosing a vet..
1. How do other cat owners in your area feel about their vet?
2. Are their requirements the same as yours?
3. What are the practice consultation times and will they be convenient for you?
4. What services and facilities does the practice offer? And what range of animal species are normally treated? For instance you may own a Siberian Kitten, have they had any experiences with that breed before?
5. What are the routine treatment costs? There could be a variation in costs, depending on location, facilities offered and overheads.
6. Where is the practice located and is it near any transport links? Does it have a car par, and are there any branch practices which may be nearer to your home?
7. Is the practice accredited with a recognised Veterinary body or organization?
Keep a note of these tips and facts to consider and wish you all the best with your carefully considered choice.
Leo is an avid researcher and enjoys writing articles online and has been for a while now. This author covers a broad spectrum of topics however he specializes in fitness, dieting and weight loss, you can also check out his informative website at http://www.antioxidants-guide.com/ this is where you can discover the all about the baobab health benefits, its the superfruit everyone's talking about!

Sunday, December 4, 2011

Veterinary Technician

There is always something new about veterinary medicine every now and then. The changes that took place in the profession are always good and makes them more competent in there chosen field. Their efforts have certainly made a great difference in all of our lives. 

Even with all the recent advancements of medicines, prescription and non-prescription veterinary diets and behavior modification training, there are always new and improved ways and techniques to better the animal's quality of life.

That being said, veterinary technicians have been a big part of these medical and non-medical improvements. They are now given more duties and privileges and are finally being properly recognized. Jobs, specific trainings, and continuing education are now being offered by vet tech schools. They certainly have more options this time. 

These privileges and responsibilities given to the vet techs make them a valuable member of the pet health team. They play a very important role in almost all animal care scenarios. Vet techs a needed in vet clinics, research institutions, animal shelters and zoos. They are practically everywhere. 

The veterinary technician's help to a veterinarian has lessened their workload and has improved an animal's health. Their partnership is now a must.

Veterinary technicians are now demanded in all veterinary institutions. It is expected that the demand will be increasing in the years to come. This paved way for more vet tech schools to open and be accredited. This would mean more opportunities for more people. 

As an animal lover, you should choose to get a formal vet tech education since it is needed nowadays. This is going to be a very wise decision to a something you love for a living.

So start the journey by deciding to be a happy veterinary technician. It's going to be a bright future!
Article Source: http://www.articlesnatch.com

Career In Veterinary Medicine


Veterinary Surgeons or Vets are doctors for animals, since similar to human beings animals will have a number of illnesses which need care and treatment. In order to become a Vet it's important first of all to have a passion for animal welfare. Even though earning a decent living from this job must also be your concern, this must not be your main reason for starting a career in this field.
The skills necessary to become a veterinarian are much like the ones essential to a pediatrician. Basically, animals much like kids are unable to communicate symptoms to you and so you will rely on the testimony of the owners in addition to your own skills to test and diagnose the condition of your patients and give the right treatment.

If you need to become a veterinarian you are required to get a veterinary degree, often known as a Doctor of Veterinary Medicine, from one of the reputable establishments and also obtain the required license to have a practice. This type of certification will not just enable you to treat animals that have regular complaints, but in addition to concentrate on animal healthcare niche markets. Needless to say, the regulations and rules for veterinary doctors are different in all countries and so you have to seek advice from your local licensing boards while doing your research.
Many people once certified decide to treat domestic pets because there is always a greater demand in this area and newly qualified vets will have many opportunities available. This will also be a good path to take for people who want to start their own practice in the future.
Normally it takes as much as 8 years to get the qualifications in order to become a veterinarian surgeon after leaving secondary institution. On top of that, the competition to get into the Universities which provide degrees in this medicine will be intense, but for individuals who are able to get a spot and then graduate the benefits will be great in both remuneration and job satisfaction.
For more great tips on how to become a vet visit http://www.becomeavet.org/.