Showing 21-23 of 23 clinics
Barry Judge Veterinary is a mixed-practice clinic treating companion animals, farm animals, and horses, and it also sells a range of large and small animal products via an on-site shop (per the clinic website). The website lists in-house diagnostics including X‑rays and ultrasound, alongside routine and surgical care such as spay/castration, vaccinations, microchipping, and blood tests. In reviews, owners often describe the service as efficient and helpful, including one review that specifically praises handling of horses (“nothing phases Barry”). One review describes a negative vaccination/worming visit, alleging a different worm treatment was given than requested and reporting a disrespectful comment and attempted overcharge.
Barry Judge Veterinary is a mixed-practice clinic treating companion animals, farm animals, and horses, and it also sells a range of large and small animal products via an on-site shop (per the clinic website). The website lists in-house diagnostics including X‑rays and ultrasound, alongside routine and surgical care such as spay/castration, vaccinations, microchipping, and blood tests. In reviews, owners often describe the service as efficient and helpful, including one review that specifically praises handling of horses (“nothing phases Barry”). One review describes a negative vaccination/worming visit, alleging a different worm treatment was given than requested and reporting a disrespectful comment and attempted overcharge.
Forte Healthcare describes itself on its website as a niche global distributor of animal healthcare solutions, with a product-focused setup (including a trade login and product/brand catalogues) rather than a pet-owner veterinary clinic. The site navigation highlights product lines for companion animals, equine, large animals and pigs, plus testing kits. The only review text available is about “fast and efficient loading,” which fits a distribution/warehouse operation rather than clinical consultations.
Forte Healthcare describes itself on its website as a niche global distributor of animal healthcare solutions, with a product-focused setup (including a trade login and product/brand catalogues) rather than a pet-owner veterinary clinic. The site navigation highlights product lines for companion animals, equine, large animals and pigs, plus testing kits. The only review text available is about “fast and efficient loading,” which fits a distribution/warehouse operation rather than clinical consultations.
Diarmuid Ryan has a Google rating of 4.6 stars from 5 reviews, but the latest written review content available to us doesn’t describe veterinary care or specific services. The only detailed comment we can see focuses on the premises being “beautifully laid out” with “great kerb appeal,” rather than anything about treatment, pricing, or how pets are handled.
Diarmuid Ryan has a Google rating of 4.6 stars from 5 reviews, but the latest written review content available to us doesn’t describe veterinary care or specific services. The only detailed comment we can see focuses on the premises being “beautifully laid out” with “great kerb appeal,” rather than anything about treatment, pricing, or how pets are handled.
