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#1
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![]() I had to take my Lhasa Apso to the emergency vet on Friday night. $600 later I was told "I think he was stung by a wasp."
![]() He went to his regular vet today: for his shots and a second opinion on his teeth. The bill was $135.88. $68 for distemper-parvovirus. $30 for rabies. $21.40 for antibiotics for his gums. And, I bought a toothbrush and toothpaste. Then there was GST. She spent 20 minutes scraping his teeth, and she didn't charge me for it. In all fairness to the emergency vet, he does have two teeth that might require extraction, and his gums are in pretty bad shape. He'll go in for a thorough cleaning when the antibiotics have settled his gums down a bit. That will cost me a couple hundred bucks. If the teeth do need to be extracted, I'm probably looking at another $500 or so. So, actual "worse case scenario" dental fees will be approximately 50% of the other vet's "low end." Dr. Pytka (McLeod Trail Animal Hospital) has been our vet for years. I know she's a great vet, but being reminded doesn't hurt on occasion. ![]() |
#2
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![]() Sounds familiar. We got one of our dogs from the SPCA several years ago, he was an abused farm dog and had very bad (dirty) teeth, he wouldn't eat hard dog kibble when we first got him and every time we turned our back he was into the garbage eating whatever was in there. Our regular vet was on vacation at the time so we took him into another vet to get checked out. Same story, "you need to get his teeth cleaned...it will be about $1500ish..." thanx but no, we opted to wait until our reg vet was back. In the end I think we paid about $500 for the cleaning and that included the anesthesiologist as he wasn't willing to cooperate awake...
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Glass box with stoney stuff and fisches... Last edited by cale262; 09-08-2012 at 10:28 PM. Reason: typo |
#3
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![]() Before I found Dr. Pytka I would drive my animals to my parents' vet in Kamloops. A couple hundred bucks in fuel, a day off work, and it was significantly cheaper: with care that was at least equal to what my animals had been recieving in Calgary. It is so nice to get a good vet locally, though. Good vets, who don't milk wallets, are a dying breed I think.
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#4
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![]() Unfortunately, there are few rules regulating how much a vet can charge for any service, pill or anything vet related. When I was working at a pet shop in the late 80s, one of my reg. customers came in fuming. She had picked up a cat that was hit by a car (not her cat) and brought it to the nearest vet. That vet then told her it would be $1500-2000 to fix the leg. She was like "What? This isn't even my cat!" and the vet's reply was "Well, I just got all this new expensive equipment and somebody has to pay for it!"
I don't know exactly what happened after (she didn't elaborate) but I have a feeling she stormed out of there. This was at a time when $2000 was more than two terms' tuition at the University of British Columbia.
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If you see it, can take care of it, better get it or put it on hold. Otherwise, it'll be gone & you'll regret it! |
#5
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![]() you never can tell,
my cat got his leg caught in my old computer chair, 600 dollars to take him to an emergency vet on Christmas eve, He needed a cone and some pain killers....
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There’s two fish in a tank. One turns to the other and says 'You man the cannons, I’ll drive’ |
#6
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![]() Let me guess, it was the 4th st animal hospital in the NW?
since the new owners and the renos of that place there has been a lot of horror stories about quality of care and vet bills. Ive had my own experiences with them and so have my parents. Ill drive across the city in a snowstorm in the middle of the night before taking one of my animals to them. ![]()
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Lynn 75 gal Starphire front and sides with a 43 gal sump/refuge reef. |