How exciting! This will be a great experience for you as a future equine vet. Racehorse trainers have to be incredibly knowledgeable about the way horses are built anatomically, and how they move, in order to select the best racers. I'm sure you'll learn loads - wish I was coming with you! Do let us know how it goes.







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. Take lots of pictures if they'll let you and share all the details with us! Being an equine science major is probably a lot like what I'm doing.


At least I'll have about a month to think.

Everything you see, do, and are told, and don't ever be afraid of it sounding silly. Yep, it's essential to know stuff about vet schools and how to get into them. However, everyone tries to find the answers to those questions.
I know it's a bit different becoming a vet in the States compared to here - do you have an interview for pre-vet/vetmed? If you do, you want to impress them with not only what you've seen and been prepared for, but what you've learned.
It was nothing horrendously technical or something I'd revised. You apply to vet school to learn how to be a vet, not the other way around, so I didn't have anything much to do with anatomy, or clinical terms. I just simply outlined a scenario I had witnessed whilst working at a farm, in which a mystery infection had broken out amongst the piglets. I had seen the vet instigate an immediate antibiotic shot for all remaining piglets, and watched her carry out a post mortem and collect samples for the lab. All throughout, I was questioning why she was doing what she was doing, and this gave me the detail to 'bulk out' my explanation. 
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