equine vet
Any school of veterinary medicine will give you the basics towards becoming an equine veterinarian; if the school doesn't have a strong equine program there you can supplement your time in vet school with externships and experiences at other schools or at private equine facilities. Once you get out of vet school, the important thing is to work with a good established equine veterinarian to hone your technical skills.
An equine vet.
an equestrian vet is known as an 'equine vet'. They study large animals, then specialize into horses.
An equine veterinarian.
Equine are horses, donkeys, mules or zebras so equine vet only treats animals of those types. If you mean the number of client animals, it would vary by vet, location, specialty.
A vet can technically treat any animal but they may choose to specialize in one species. An equine vet specializes in equines (horses, ponies and donkeys) but can treat other animals if they choose to. My equine vet has also treated our cows and goats mainly as a favor to me, and I know that he treats his own dogs unless they require specialist care
All of them: Math, Calculus, Biology, Physics, Chemistry, English, and Social Studies. You must finish all of your Grade 12 classes and pass the exams with at least 70% to 75% to be able to enroll in the Pre-Vet program or Animal Sciences Pre-Vet program to start your way on becoming an equine vet.
yes ther is, Somtimes they get a Equine vet (like me(horse vet)) To fix the elephants problems. Yours truly: Summer Erics Quine Vet.
Trainer, Vet, Professional Rider, Equine Vet, the options go on...... Hope this helps! Large Animal Vet., Breeder, Groomer.
biology, physics, chemistry, maths
roughly 8 billion dollars a second