April 2019 by Ashley G.
I recently went here worth my husband and our 13 year old dog. This vet is more focused on selling you extra procedures and pills than caring for your pet, I'm doubting they've actually done any procedures we've paid for once they removed the animal from us. .............................. We waited in the room for about 20 minutes before being seen, and directly after meeting the vet the sales tactics began. He tried selling us hormone spray. "You only need one squirt, it's a mothers hormone they release to tell their pups it's going to be ok. Its only $20 for a small bottle..." After getting our dog on the table he weighed it, and started aimlessly looking around our dogs body (she was very compliant), he didn't bother to go over specifics of why we were visiting, he picked up on things he could sell us stuff for - he tried selling us fatty tumor removals, skin tag removals, a vaginal hood lift "Because it could cause problems...", then he found our dog was anxious and told us she might have dementia, so he went and got 3 bottles of crap pills to sell us, he tired selling us prozac, Senalife (an herbal pill "for dementia"), the spray again, and some calming milk pills. All with different sales pitches. He then started discussing part of what we came in for (bladder infection), and went out after 10 minutes of babbling to get "kidney stones" from other pets to then try to validate selling ANOTHER procedure to us - all the while mocking other vets who follow pets around with cups to catch urine - "We don't do that." So I offered to catch the urine, to which he responded multiple times "We don't do that, we do all or nothing" Give me a break. So now they want to put our dog out, shave her and put a needle into her urethra to her bladder (at $100 some dollars) - SHES 13. After he (a vet) couldn't see past his own nose, to simply test an animals urine because he has to make money off of you, we left. These folks will never get another cent of my money. Lastly, while we were in an appointment he angrily and adamantly refused to be apart of the BBB, he didn't want to "get caught up on the racket" - which is comical.