The Northern Advocate

The life of a rural vet

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As he steps away from an industry he has been a part of profession­ally for about 50 years, Grant Macpherson shares an insight into life as a Northland rural vet with Jodi Bryant

GRANT MACPHERSON

DISCUSSING POLITICS and the state of Northland roads with his arm up a cow’s rectum has been a common occurrence for retiring Kamo veterinari­an Grant Macpherson, whose career spans nearly half a century.

After graduating from veterinary school in the 1970s and spending eight years working in-clinic with small animals, he gravitated towards the larger type, in particular dairy cattle, taking him to farflung farms around Northland. As a result, many friendship­s were formed with the rural folk.

“It’s a funny thing in this job, even though our relationsh­ip has been a profession­al one, it does feel that many of (the clients) have become friends. When you have the long jobs on the farms, you naturally have to talk about things and so you do talk about the business side … you might talk about the usual animal health issues, pasture, drought, production . . .

“Then you run out of things to say there so you might start talking about something else like the weather, government, local politics, state of the roads … Then it turns to family — the children growing up and what’s happening at the local school.

“Over the years, you almost follow the lives of the families and you naturally tell them about your life and it’s probably on those days when you have a long job on the farm.”

Long days on the farm could begin as early as 4am until mid-morning and include herds of up to 1000. Depending if the farm has an older herringbon­e milking shed or the modern rotary style, procedures, such as pregnancy testing are impacted.

The latter, with the cows standing in a circular formation, enables pregnancy testing to be carried out during milking, whereas the former — with the cows standing in a long line — means they are tested after. This makes the procedure slightly more difficult as the cows would rather return to their paddock than stand around for longer.

This is just one of the changes Macpherson has seen over the years since graduating in 1978. After working for one year in New Zealand, he worked in a number of countries and was based in the United Kingdom when he saw a job advert that would take him to Saudi Arabia.

“It was winter time and I saw a job advertisin­g to ‘come to the warmth in the sun’ but they didn’t mention it wasn’t just warmth, it was like living in an oven,” he laughs.

He spent two years there at the only veterinary clinic in the city of Jeddah where there were only two veterinari­ans to a million people. There, he treated all manner of creatures, including snakes, falcons and animals he still couldn’t identify to this day.

“There were thousands of princes in Saudi Arabia — very wealthy ones who used to have their own private zoos. One morning I got a call at about five o’clock to go out to one of the prince’s palaces and I didn’t understand what the chap was telling me but I got there and they had a shipment of everything you could think of — large cats, lions, even an elephant in a big cage that needed injecting and quarantini­ng.

“The only way to do it was to climb on top of the cage and reach down through a hole. Of course he didn’t like it and I think the elephant was trying to break the cage apart. I nearly fell through the hole in my haste to get away.”

‘Wonderful partnershi­p’

He met Sally, a British theatre sister, there. They married six weeks later and moved to New Zealand in 1985 where they joined Jim and Lynne Mortimer at their single vet practice on the corner of Kamo Rd and Carlton Crescent.

“We had a wonderful partnershi­p for many years,” Macpherson says.

Back then, Macpherson recalls the racing industry being prominent with several studs in Whangārei and many farmers had broodmares so a large part of their work was with horses.

“A number of people had thoroughbr­ed stallions and some of the memories that particular­ly stand out are the dangerous ones where you’re wondering if you’re going to survive,” he laughs.

“I remember, at times, going out in the middle of the night to suture up horses who had been out in a lightning storm and gone through a fence and some of those ones, you took your life into your hands — it was like those stallions wanted to kill you! It was pretty dangerous but they were just stallions being stallions, they have lots of

There’s been lots of tragic situations that don’t sit easily on your mind . . . You distance yourself and look to what’s best for the animal and the owner.

testostero­ne.

“The racing industry was big in the ‘80s but I suppose Lotto came along and killed off the gambling through horses and lots of that work for us started to diminish.”

So too did performing surgeries, which Macpherson and his colleagues would carry out regularly, including extensive horse surgery. Nowadays, there are more referral clinics.

Macpherson steered towards dairy cattle and, for the remainder of his career, spent about 95 per cent of his time on farms covering areas such as Whangārei Heads, Pakotai and Kerikeri.

After Jim Mortimer retired, Macpherson and Sally took over ownership, with Sally managing the clinic, and fellow vets Luke (Lurch) Goodin and Ben Irwin later bought into the business, by then named Kamo Vets. In 2019, the practice moved to its current site at Springs Flat Rd and now has 11 vets and 11 nurses.

While clinic work hasn’t changed a lot with animal bites and routine vaccinatio­ns still common visits, these days there are more preventati­ve procedures, with new vaccinatio­ns and informatio­n, rather than ambulance-at-the-bottom-of-the-cliff work.

“The small animal work is similar but farm work has changed a lot over the years. Some jobs have disappeare­d. We used to do a lot of TB testing. Then there’s the equipment and devices that’s evolved making jobs easier, such as checking for uterine infection and helping with reproducti­on.”

Though 90 per cent of pregnancy testing is conducted with a scanner today, if visibility

After around 50 years vet Grant Macpherson is retiring.

Macpherson kitted up for cow pregnancy testing.

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