Author Archives: Amber Tennant

Black Cat Appreciation Day! (17 August)

Today is Black Cat Appreciation Day (17 August)!

If you’re looking to welcome a new pet into the family, have you considered adopting a black cat? For centuries black cats have faced suspicion as a result of the bad luck they are said to carry with them. They are often overlooked in rehoming centres and can take approximately 13% longer to find their new home than a more colourful cat. For many this means they will never experience life in a loving home – but you could change that.

Your local rescue organisation can talk you through all aspects of cat ownership and find a cat that is best suited to your circumstances. Alternatively, you can search for cats looking for a home in your local area on the Cats Protection website at http://www.cats.org.uk/adopt-a-cat

Take part in the SPVS Salary Survey 2017!

The Society of Practising Veterinary Surgeons (SPVS) is looking for veterinary professionals to complete the SPVS Salary Survey 2017.

The association aims to gather information from a wide range of practice employee. This includes veterinary nurses, practice managers, veterinary surgeons and receptionists.

VPMA and BVNA members will have access through their own association to the Managers and Nurses sections respectively.

To take part in the survey, visit the SPVS website.

Calling all vet nursing diploma students – Upcoming Paper 2 revision days!

Calling all vet nursing diploma students – don’t miss our next revision days at our Potters Bar centre on 23/24 August!

Perfect for students who are coming up to their exams, our targeted revision courses are intensive training and review sessions intended to help you identify your trouble spots and work on fixing them!

Wednesday 23 August – L3 Diploma Revision – Paper 2, Unit 302 (£95)

Delegates will review the theory of Anatomy and Physiology and other topics relevant to Unit 302/VN3.

Thursday 24 August – L3 Diploma Revision – Paper 2, Unit 304 (£95)

Delegates will review the theory of Animal Health and Husbandry and other topics relevant to Unit 304.

To book a place online, visit https://goo.gl/WVQBrv 

 

Vetnapp: The app putting an end to poorly written paper notes

An app which allows veterinary practitioners to record the vital details behind an anaesthetic procedure has been developed.

Developed by veterinary anaesthesia specialist Alastair Mair, the app aims to put an end to incomplete and poorly penned paper records of anaesthetic procedures. The app allows the digital entry of:

  • drugs administered
  • physiological parameters – such as heart rate, respiratory rate and blood pressure
  • complications occurring during an anaesthetic procedure

The final anaesthetic chart can be converted to a PDF and attached to patient records.

Mr Mair said: “My motivation for creating the app was borne of my frustration while working in Australia about how many handwritten anaesthetic records were incomplete and poorly filled in.” He added: “[The app] allows storage of thousands of records, therefore allows easy retrieval of records and prevents lost records, which is common with paper records.”

Vetnapp is available for download on Apple iOS devices. Further information can be found at https://goo.gl/Tcd4kv 

 

Turn your Love of Animals into a Career!

For those aspiring to an exciting career working with animals, there’s no better place to start than our annual Careers With Animals Day near Leeds on Saturday 14 October!

Running at our education and training centre in Tingley, the event offers the ideal opportunity to speak to exhibitors from some of the leading animal welfare and veterinary organisations, and gain key ideas and information needed to launch a new career. Whether you’re a school leaver working out what your next move is going to be, an adult looking for a career change, or unemployed and eager to get back to work – everyone is welcome. What’s more, entry is completely free of charge!

A jam packed timetable of careers talks will be held throughout the day, covering everything from veterinary nursing and dog grooming, to veterinary medicine and wildlife conservation. This year’s event boasts another great line up of exhibitors, including African Conservation Experience, Royal Veterinary College, Jerry Green Dog Rescue, PDSA, Cats Protection, SMJ Falconry, Northern Institute for Canine Professionals – and many more!

The event will be held at our education and training centre in Tingley, West Yorkshire (WF3 1DR). Doors are open from 10am until 3pm and entry is completely FREE! For more information please visit www.careerswithanimals.co.uk or call us on 01480 422060.

Turn your Love of Animals into a Career!

For those aspiring to an exciting career working with animals, there’s no better place to start than our annual Careers With Animals Day near Leeds on Saturday 14 October!

Running at our education and training centre in Tingley, the event offers the ideal opportunity to speak to exhibitors from some of the leading animal welfare and veterinary organisations, and gain key ideas and information needed to launch a new career. Whether you’re a school leaver working out what your next move is going to be, an adult looking for a career change, or unemployed and eager to get back to work – everyone is welcome. What’s more, entry is completely free of charge!

A jam packed timetable of careers talks will be held throughout the day, covering everything from veterinary nursing and dog grooming, to veterinary medicine and wildlife conservation. This year’s event boasts another great line up of exhibitors, including African Conservation Experience, Royal Veterinary College, Jerry Green Dog Rescue, PDSA, Cats Protection, SMJ Falconry, Northern Institute for Canine Professionals – and many more!

The event will be held at our education and training centre in Tingley, West Yorkshire (WF3 1DR). Doors are open from 10am until 3pm and entry is completely FREE! For more information please visit www.careerswithanimals.co.uk or call us on 01480 422060.

International Cat Day (8 August)

Today is International Cat Day!

Created by The International Fund for Animal Welfare, International Cat Day is a day to celebrate one of the world’s most cherished pets.

Here are some fun feline facts to purrrrfectly start your day:

  • A group of cats is called a Clowder.
  • A cat has five toes on his front paws, and four on the back, unless he’s a polydactyl.  Polydactyl cats are also referred to as “Hemingway cats” because the author was so fond of them.
  • Sir Isaac Newton, among his many achievements, invented the cat “flap” door.
  • A cat’s nose pad is ridged with a unique pattern, just like the fingerprint of a human.
  • The furry tufts on the inside of cats’ ears are called “ear furnishings”

Shaping the Dog Groomers of Tomorrow: CAW Grooming School one year on…

It has now been just over a year since we opened our dog grooming school at our education and training centre near Leeds. Having already successfully set up a grooming school at our head office in Cambridgeshire in 2009, the purchase of Leeds-based commercial pet centre, Campus Vets and Pets, in 2015 presented us with the ideal opportunity to offer City & Guilds accredited training to those looking to pursue a career in dog grooming in the north.

On Monday 18 April 2016, we welcomed our first two students, Jade and Victoria on the City & Guilds Level 2 Certificate for Dog Grooming Assistants intensive five week block course. Both Jade and Victoria passed their qualification with flying colours and returned a few weeks later to undertake the Level 3 Certificate in Introductory Dog Grooming; an indication of the success that has followed the grooming school ever since.

Of course, where there are students, there must be dogs… And so, alongside the launch of the grooming school, was the opening of the dog grooming salon at Campus Vets and Pets. The money generated from the grooming courses has allowed the cost of dog grooming services to be offered at an affordable level to dog owners throughout the local community; a combination that supports our ethos of raising standards of animal welfare. Initially, in order to build up the client base needed to run the grooming courses, the salon offered each dog a free groom for their first visit, with a further opportunity for a free groom if they recommended a friend. With local advertising, social media campaigns, and the excellent work of the dog grooming team and students, the word quickly spread; bringing us to today where there is a six week wait for an appointment. The low cost of grooming has encouraged owners to rebook visits to the salon on a more frequent basis, a win-win situation all around for the dogs, owners and students alike.

Dog Groomer and Practical Skills Trainer, Michelle Saunders, has been the lead trainer at the grooming school since its inception in early 2016. With over 25 years of experience in the industry prior to joining the College, Michelle was drawn to the role to share her grooming knowledge and inspire groomers of the future, ‘Dog grooming is a fundamentally practical profession and the training programme at the College reflects this; we use our facilities to help equip up and coming groomers with all the necessary skills needed to maintain and exceed industry standards’ She continued ‘Spending so much time working in the grooming salon with a wide variety of dogs makes the transition between training and work seamless’.

Opportunities to train with us are met with high competition, and demand shows little sign of slowing. The level 2 and 3 City & Guilds certificates are run on either a five week intensive block, or a six month day release basis. Students come from all walks of life; some wishing to train to change career or get back into employment, and others who are already working in the industry looking to gain formal recognition of their skills and experience.

One such student is Alisa Youngman. Alisa, owner of Alisa Lyn Youngman Dog Grooming Services based in Beverley, set up her own business post training. As well as modern facilities and supportive tutors, Alisa credits an emphasis on practical work as one of the many benefits of formal training with us. She said: I found [CAW Grooming School] such a great place to train, everyone was so welcoming and the staff were extremely knowledgeable and helpful. The course was perfect for me as it was a block course meaning I was hands on grooming full time for 10 weeks. Overall, I would qualify quickly and have a good amount of experience and knowledge behind me to confidently set my own business up – which I have and it’s really taken off! The intensity really aided my confidence and I felt I had a lot of opportunities to work with different breeds more regularly.”

The early success of the grooming school raises questions as to how the training provision will continue to grow in years to come. In response to the increasing need for varied, flexible learning opportunities; among many planned developments include the launch of the Level 3 Diploma in Professional Dog Grooming, to be run at the school on a day-release basis from September 2017. We are also looking for an additional Dog Groomer and Practical Skills Trainer to join our team in Summer 2017 to keep up with the expansion. See the vacancy 

Speaking about the future, Michelle is excited at the prospect of continuing to teach at the grooming school. “I have no doubt that we will continue to grow as awareness increases further and new services begin to open at the centre. Training has never been so important and accessible; through recognised training and experience, we can increase the recognition of the vital work that dog groomers do on a daily basis to members of the public and drive the profession forward’.

If this year acts as a benchmark for future success, then we can only expect good things to come from the grooming school. One thing is for sure: it is shaping the dog groomers of tomorrow: one paw at a time.

CAW Grooming School is based at Campus Vets and Pets (www.campusvetsandpets.co.uk), the ambitious expansion of animal welfare training provider The College of Animal Welfare. A new and modern animal welfare and training hub, the centre will eventually host a state-of-the-art veterinary practice, boarding kennels and cattery, animal physiotherapy, hydrotherapy and dog training classes. Further information on the College’s dog grooming courses delivered by CAW Grooming School can be found at www.caw.ac.uk/dg

Originally published in the July 2017 edition of Total Grooming Magazine.

Health and Fitness Tips of the Month: August

Health and Fitness Tips of the Month: August

Meditation

We have all heard that meditation reduces stress however it is now being recommended by doctors that it can help improve creativity, improve sleep, decrease anxiety, depression, eating disorders, and even addiction.

So how do we meditate?

  1. First, find a comfortable place where you can sit without distractions for at least 2 minutes and build up to 15 minutes.
  2. Sit comfortably with your back upright with head up.( Imagine your head is being pulled up to the sky)
  3. Close your eyes and focus within.
  4. Focus your attention on any one of the following.
    1. You can focus your attention on your breath and breathing. There is no need to regulate this. Let it be natural.
    2. You can repeat a positive statement about yourself and life.
    3. If you do use a statement to focus on, try to feel what it means to you.
    4. You can focus on your heartbeat.
    5. You can use any other method with which you feel comfortable.
  5. If you notice your mind drifting off onto other thoughts or stories , just bring your focus back to the technique you are using to focus on.
  6. When you have completed meditating, it is a good idea to give yourself a few minutes to adjust back into the activities of your day.

You are encouraged to meditate ideally at the same time every day. Most people will choose early in the morning or late at night. It does not matter when you meditate, as long as you can devote a period of time to your practice without being disturbed .Do not worry there is no perfect way to meditate . Just be pleased that you are doing it. Meditation is not always easy or even peaceful however it can have amazing benefits. Try it!


Having Pets

It has long been known that pets are great company and have been ‘man’s best friend’ for centuries. However, increasingly pets can help people of all ages with health problems. For example, recently an autistic child was helped with his communication skills by having a pet dog. It boosted his confidence and provided him with a non-judgemental companion.

Care homes often have pets visit on a regular basis for residents to stroke. People living on their own are often much calmer and feel less lonely if they have a pet. The stroking and caring has a positive effect on them and reduces anxiety.

If you do not have a pet yourself, you might have a friend or relative who would be happy for you to walk their dog. You might be able to volunteer at a pet charity or sanctuary to help look after the animals.

If you want to have a pet yourself think carefully about the costs involved and the time it takes to care for it properly but there are significant advantages in having company and something to fuss and look after.


Coping with Bereavement

Bereavement is the time we spend adjusting to loss. Losing a loved one is emotionally devastating and it is normal to find it hard to adjust to life without them. It is important to remember that there is no right or wrong way to feel when you’re grieving. Some people might lash out, others may withdraw into themselves; you might feel sorrow and longing, or guilt about what you did or didn’t say to someone. Bereavement is about learning to accept and cope with what has happened, rather than ‘recovering’ as this would suggest that you emerge the same as you were before.

There is no quick fix; you might experience grief every day for 12-18 months after a major loss. However there are practical things you can do to help yourself get through a period of grief or bereavement. Reaching out to others such as a friend, family member, health professional or counsellor can help you process your emotions.

Allowing yourself to experience the emotions associated with loss, as it is a healthy part of the grieving process. Keeping up routine where possible, even simple tasks such as going for a walk or visiting the shops can help. Avoiding things that “numb” pain such as alcohol, as it will only make you feel worse once the numbness wears away.

Where can you go for support?

Support, advice and information is available from Cruse Bereavement Care, the leading national charity for bereaved people in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. The Cruse Bereavement Care Freephone National Helpline (08088081677) is staffed by trained bereavement volunteers. They can offer emotional support to anyone affected by bereavement. The helpline is open Monday-Friday 9.30-5pm, excluding bank holidays; with extended hours on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings.

 

5 Ways to Make New Friends – International Day of Friendship (30 July)

Wondering how to make new friends?

There are a whole host of reasons why you might be looking to make some new friends. As people pack up and move on to wherever the next opportunity takes them, you might find yourself a victim of circumstance in a new area. You might feel you have grown apart from much of your social circle. You might have let your social life slip during a long-term relationship. Or you simply struggle to make friends and have always wished your social life was better.

We could all use more friends in our lives. The important role that friendship plays in health and happiness cannot be underestimated. Studies have shown that the odds of survival in people with a strong social network increase by 50% in comparison to the ‘Billy No Mates’ of the world*, due to suffering from less stress and depression.

If you’re struggling to make friends, don’t despair!

It is easy to feel disheartened and retreat into isolation, but there are plenty of ways you can reach out to new people. There will be many others in the same position as you!

  1. Use technology to your advantage! It is said that our increasing reliance on technology is making it harder to maintain real life connections, but you can use the internet to your advantage. Social apps and websites are not just for dating! There are tons of apps and websites dedicated to finding friends. These include: Bumble BFF, Skout, Hey! VINA, Girlfriend Social and Forever Friends. (Please remember to be sensible when communicating and meeting people online. Make sure you know who you’re speaking to, and tell a friend/family member where you are going when meeting someone for the first time.)
  2. Join a local group! It will help to have a shared interest, hobby or activity you can talk about with new people – MeetUp is an excellent website to find local activity groups.
  3. Take on voluntary work/weekend work! Not only will you provide much needed support to organisations in need, you will also meet new people! Do-it.org is the UKs national volunteering database, and the perfect place to start if you’re looking for volunteering opportunities in your area.
  4. Go back to school! Taking a night, weekend or even online class can put you in touch with a new group of people who are interested in learning the same skill.
  5. Use your existing connections! Sometimes it’s a case of being upfront about wanting to meet new people; ask people you are already familiar with to introduce you to people in their circles.

Remember – don’t give up on past friends! You shouldn’t abandon efforts to keep in contact when you can. If you miss someone, you should do something about it. Additionally – don’t limit yourself to one particular crowd. Be open to forming new connections with people from all walks of life. You never know who you might hit it off with if you have enough in common!