Famous in a small australian town

Famous in a small australian town

Sunday, March 13, 2011

I had a good 10 days off and then got really busy. Sorry for delay

   I had a great visit with my cousin and attempted to try and surf again not much success. Ayres rock was cool but about as in the middle of nowhere as you can get ever. Took a few pics meet some nice people from all over. Attached are some pics. My work days are ending after easter. They get 5 days off for easter seriously how fair is that. But  the good news for me is lamb for easter (if thats your tradition) the lamb here is twice as good as the best lamb in the states.  Anyway here a few pics of my travels sort of didnt get too many photos of perth sorry.

Normal
sunset

Friday, February 11, 2011

I am looking forward to a great week in two weeks. Heading to Perth

 Wow crazy last week with emergencies. Currently in the clininc today I am treating three snake bite dogs, one dog hit by a car, and one dog with pneumonia. I have been very busy but got rewarded with a cool suprise yesterday. I was given an old tranquilizer gun darts and drugs included how awesome is that. I will post more pics soon especially when I head to Ayres Rock to visit my monument and visit my cousin in Perth.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

I know I have been slacking on posts

 Well I have had a chance to do some traveling last few weeks which is good. I went ot the australian open, met a bunch of really drunk scots who got kicked out of open before murray even lost the first set, went to a bar in a town mooney population less than one hundred, went to a town called goondawindi and played golf, went fishing, and getting ready for the famous every two year festival here called melon fest.

Pictures are to follow a few ata time. First I have found some interesting things while here. First what we call hurricanes they call cyclones becaus ethe rotation in hte storm is in opposite direction. That makes no sense to me they are basicall y the same. Also have had many questions about the restrooms here. I will show in pictures. And I cant tell big change with toilet flushing going the opposite direction here.

These are very narrow urinals and australian's wear sandals not a good combination

Now what are the chances you pee on your feet

Am I missing out on an australian pasttime? These boxes I have seen in multiple locations in restrooms

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Well Isnt this typical for me. OFF TO THE OPEN

 I am off to melbourne to enjoy some tennis and what do I get neither nadal nor federer and some chinese chick in women's final. Oh well at least I don't have to swim my way out of chinchilla this time.

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

I have had interviews on tv, abc radio, and other newspapers now over a cattle dog

Canine airlift saves flood-stranded kelpie

19:28 AEST Mon Jan 17 2011
1 day 11 hours 23 minutes ago
Gabrielle Dunlevy
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| FLOCKS: 0
| comments0 comments so far
In the southeast Queensland town of Chinchilla, a little red working dog is embodying the spirit of Queenslanders enduring the state's worst ever floods, and that old saying - you can't keep a good dog down.
Carrie the red Kelpie went missing amid last week's flooding, only to return home at the height of the emergency with a gash in her chest where she was most likely kicked by a kangaroo.
Her owner, David Winfield, desperately needed a vet for his favourite dog, but his property 20 kilometres out of town was cut off by floodwaters.
Chinchilla vet Ryan Ayres did his best to give Mr Winfield directions to care for Carrie over the phone on Wednesday, but the situation was dire.
Mr Winfield tried and failed to have Carrie ferried to town on a SES boat, and eventually talked a helicopter pilot who was moving cattle into a canine airlift on Thursday.
"We were getting a little bit worried about her at that stage," he told AAP.
"We could stick four fingers into her lungs."
Dr Ayres said when Carrie finally reached him, he was shocked to see she was surviving despite a wound as big as two fists.
"It was the biggest chest wound I've ever seen that didn't involve broken ribs," he said.
"We could hear the dog's lungs hitting the sides of her ribs when she was breathing."
Surgery was successful, and Carrie will be allowed to go home when the floodwaters around her property have receded, in about a week.
Dr Ayres said the seven-year-old dog was one of the toughest he had seen.
"But I'm glad they got her to me because I don't think she would have made it another day," he said.
It has been an intriguing time for the Tennessee vet, who started a six-month stint at Chinchilla in November.
He expects his next big emergency will be a wave of footrot in cattle that have spent weeks standing in flooded paddocks.
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Monday, January 17, 2011

Craziness again Getting to be celebrity status 4th time in paper now

   This flood time had a dog helicoptered (is that a word?) to me due to flooding. I had to carry it to my vehicle then drive it to clinic for emergency surgery. Apparantley people are looking for feel good stories with pets in the crisis. The australian vet organization wants to publish an article about it. Then the chinchilla news called to do a story. Then the abc radio called on phone to do a story on it. A got another reporter call as well and talked to them. Dog is doing well and survived but is a very difficult patient not friendly or grateful for what we did. Anyway has not rained for 5 days now roads looking better so cross your fingers and knock on wood for me looks like I am on schedule for australian open finals in melbourne. I'll send more photos soon.