Warragul & Drouin Gazette

Scholarshi­p makes dream a reality

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Veterinary graduate Mitchell Dodds is on a steep learning curve during his first calving season.

2020 marks the beginning of the career Mitchell has aspired to since primary school.

He was the inaugural recipient of the Jakob Malmo Gardiner Foundation Tertiary Scholarshi­p in 2014 and after six years study is now a practising vet at West Gippsland Vet Care in Warragul.

“Calving is my favourite part of the job; I just find it very rewarding,” Mitchell said. “

My days generally consist of going from farm to farm assisting farmers with calvings, sick cows after calving, or lame cows. I’m getting a lot of variation because no two calvings are the same.”

From helping large-scale dairy farmers with complicate­d cases to supporting hobby farmers inexperien­ced in calving, Mitchell said he enjoyed the variety of cases and clients.

“No amount of prep in vet school can prepare you. You just need to do heaps of calvings,” he said.

In a recent case, Mitchell had to call his employer for on-farm assistance when a calf presented with the rare deformity, Schistosom­a Reflexus (internal organs on the outside).

“The dairy farmer calves 800 cows a year and has only seen a calf born inside-out twice in 50 years; I’ve seen it in my first eight months as a vet,” Mitchell said.

Mitchell had long aspired to work as a vet.

“In grade four, when I was nine or 10 years old, we had to write a paragraph about what we wanted to be,” he said. “I knew then that I wanted to be a vet, and I’ve never wavered from that.”

Mitchell also felt the call early to specialise in the dairy industry.

“I grew up on a mostly beef hobby farm at Boolarra in central Gippsland and spent a lot of time at my grandparen­ts’ 200-head beef property at San Remo; but a lot of my mates and the people I

played footy with were from dairy farms.

“Growing up in a region where dairy was so important, combined with my desire to be a veterinari­an and wanting to work in a mixed practice in regional Victoria, it just made sense to me to become a dairy veterinari­an.”

“From a financial point of view, the Gardiner Dairy Foundation scholarshi­p enabled me to really focus on my degree,” Mitchell said. “It’s difficult to work while studying Veterinary Medicine when you have 50 contact hours a week in the first two years.

Able to focus on study

“You also have to do placements in an animal-related industry in university breaks in the first two years, so we didn’t actually get a break.”

The link with Gardiner Dairy Foundation also provided Mitchell with valuable connection­s and insights into the dairy industry.

“The scholarshi­p was a great start, giving me the opportunit­y to integrate into the dairy industry and community,” he said. “I went to luncheons and conference­s, and chatted with like-minded people about the dairy industry.”

Fittingly, Mitchell was presented with his scholarshi­p by Jakob Malmo, a renowned dairy veterinari­an based in East Gippsland.

Dr Malmo retired recently after a distinguis­hed 58-year veterinary career. He coauthored the textbook Diseases of Cattle in Australasi­a.

“I find Jakob inspiring and think he is someone that we as young dairy vets could all aspire to,” Mitchell said.

Applicatio­ns for 2021 Gardiner Tertiary Scholarshi­ps are now open and close on December 2. For more informatio­n go to: https://www.gardinerfo­undation.com.au/ts/

 ??  ?? 2014 Gardiner Dairy Foundation Tertiary Scholar, Mitchell Dodds, is now working as a dairy veterinari­an in a mixed practice in Warragul.
2014 Gardiner Dairy Foundation Tertiary Scholar, Mitchell Dodds, is now working as a dairy veterinari­an in a mixed practice in Warragul.

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