Showing 61-70 of 70 clinics
Our Score (63/100)
Langford Farm Animal Practice focuses on farm and smallholder species (including dairy/beef cattle, sheep, goats, camelids, pigs and poultry) and is part of the University of Bristol Vet School. The website states emergencies are accepted 24/7 with no out-of-hours surcharge, and the practice has on-site laboratory and post-mortem facilities. Reviews are brief but consistently describe the team as knowledgeable and professional, with multiple owners saying they trust the practice and that animals are treated with “respect”.
Langford Farm Animal Practice focuses on farm and smallholder species (including dairy/beef cattle, sheep, goats, camelids, pigs and poultry) and is part of the University of Bristol Vet School. The website states emergencies are accepted 24/7 with no out-of-hours surcharge, and the practice has on-site laboratory and post-mortem facilities. Reviews are brief but consistently describe the team as knowledgeable and professional, with multiple owners saying they trust the practice and that animals are treated with “respect”.
Animal House Vets is a multi-branch practice (the website describes four clinics) focused on cats and dogs, offering routine care alongside dentistry, surgery, and stated 24-hour emergency/out-of-hours arrangements. In reviews, owners describe being fitted in quickly for urgent situations (including end-of-life care) and getting frequent progress updates during short-term intensive treatment. However, there are also reviews describing a failure to be seen when emergency care was needed shortly after 5pm, with the owner reporting their cat died soon after. Concrete details mentioned include: - A “kitten package” that includes vaccinations, a microchip (inserted while under anaesthetic during neutering), and a bag of dry kitten food (neutering not included). - Updates “every few hours” during a week of repeat visits for a cat. - An instance where a vet returned early from lunch to see an unregistered cat needing urgent euthanasia.
Animal House Vets is a multi-branch practice (the website describes four clinics) focused on cats and dogs, offering routine care alongside dentistry, surgery, and stated 24-hour emergency/out-of-hours arrangements. In reviews, owners describe being fitted in quickly for urgent situations (including end-of-life care) and getting frequent progress updates during short-term intensive treatment. However, there are also reviews describing a failure to be seen when emergency care was needed shortly after 5pm, with the owner reporting their cat died soon after. Concrete details mentioned include: - A “kitten package” that includes vaccinations, a microchip (inserted while under anaesthetic during neutering), and a bag of dry kitten food (neutering not included). - Updates “every few hours” during a week of repeat visits for a cat. - An instance where a vet returned early from lunch to see an unregistered cat needing urgent euthanasia.
LLM Farm Vets appears set up primarily for farm-animal work (based on the clinic name and multiple reviews reacting to its involvement with the farming industry). The structured clinic data lists emergency veterinary services available around the clock. Review signals are mixed: several recent 1‑star reviews are protests about vets participating in farming, while older comments mention “support night and day” and a “super friendly” experience. A few reviews talk about “meals” and “good food,” which may not relate to veterinary care and could indicate some reviews are misattributed.
LLM Farm Vets appears set up primarily for farm-animal work (based on the clinic name and multiple reviews reacting to its involvement with the farming industry). The structured clinic data lists emergency veterinary services available around the clock. Review signals are mixed: several recent 1‑star reviews are protests about vets participating in farming, while older comments mention “support night and day” and a “super friendly” experience. A few reviews talk about “meals” and “good food,” which may not relate to veterinary care and could indicate some reviews are misattributed.
Pet Drugs Online is an accredited veterinary medicines internet retailer (2033874). Based on the information available, it functions as an online supplier that dispenses prescription medication from written prescriptions, and also sells other pet products (examples in reviews include flea/worm treatments, pet food, and canine toothpaste). Recent reviews show a clear split: some customers describe quick prescription processing and deliveries arriving in good condition with order updates, while others report missing items, damaged/crushed packaging (including controlled medication), slow delivery, and difficulty contacting customer service. Named staff members from recent feedback include Emma P (prescription team), who is thanked for fast help with a query, and Connie, who is criticised for an unsympathetic response to a damaged delivery complaint.
Pet Drugs Online is an accredited veterinary medicines internet retailer (2033874). Based on the information available, it functions as an online supplier that dispenses prescription medication from written prescriptions, and also sells other pet products (examples in reviews include flea/worm treatments, pet food, and canine toothpaste). Recent reviews show a clear split: some customers describe quick prescription processing and deliveries arriving in good condition with order updates, while others report missing items, damaged/crushed packaging (including controlled medication), slow delivery, and difficulty contacting customer service. Named staff members from recent feedback include Emma P (prescription team), who is thanked for fast help with a query, and Connie, who is criticised for an unsympathetic response to a damaged delivery complaint.
Williamson Vets appears to be connected with LLM Farm Vets (the clinic website source references “LLM Farm Vets” and “First Field in the livestock performance”). The limited website text points to a farm/livestock focus, including references to livestock performance, a pharmacy, and TB work. Reviews are mixed: some mention friendly staff and support “night and day,” while several recent reviews criticise the practice for being part of the farming industry or describe it simply as “disgraceful.” A few older reviews talk about meals/food, which may indicate some reviewer confusion about what’s being reviewed.
Williamson Vets appears to be connected with LLM Farm Vets (the clinic website source references “LLM Farm Vets” and “First Field in the livestock performance”). The limited website text points to a farm/livestock focus, including references to livestock performance, a pharmacy, and TB work. Reviews are mixed: some mention friendly staff and support “night and day,” while several recent reviews criticise the practice for being part of the farming industry or describe it simply as “disgraceful.” A few older reviews talk about meals/food, which may indicate some reviewer confusion about what’s being reviewed.
B&W Equine Group Ltd
Bristol
Our Score (57/100)
B&W Equine Group Ltd provides mobile equine veterinary work alongside clinic-based facilities and offers 24/7 emergency care. The website highlights diagnostic kit for field work (portable digital x‑ray, ultrasound and endoscopy), plus an examination/treatment room with stocks and rubberised flooring. In reviews, owners describe help with respiratory issues over an extended period, urgent call-outs for colic and abscesses, and supportive end-of-life care; one reviewer also notes a vet making a follow-up call a few days later to check progress.
B&W Equine Group Ltd provides mobile equine veterinary work alongside clinic-based facilities and offers 24/7 emergency care. The website highlights diagnostic kit for field work (portable digital x‑ray, ultrasound and endoscopy), plus an examination/treatment room with stocks and rubberised flooring. In reviews, owners describe help with respiratory issues over an extended period, urgent call-outs for colic and abscesses, and supportive end-of-life care; one reviewer also notes a vet making a follow-up call a few days later to check progress.
LLM Farm Vets is a farm-only veterinary practice established in 1999, focused on supporting livestock clients (dairy, beef and sheep) and describing its work in terms of improving livestock performance and profitability. The practice also references a pharmacy service on its site. Owner feedback is mixed and sometimes hard to interpret: some reviews mention “excellent support night and day” and a friendly team, while several 1‑star reviews criticise the practice on principle for being part of the farming industry rather than describing specific clinical care. A couple of reviews talk about “food/meals,” which may indicate some reviews are not about veterinary services.
LLM Farm Vets is a farm-only veterinary practice established in 1999, focused on supporting livestock clients (dairy, beef and sheep) and describing its work in terms of improving livestock performance and profitability. The practice also references a pharmacy service on its site. Owner feedback is mixed and sometimes hard to interpret: some reviews mention “excellent support night and day” and a friendly team, while several 1‑star reviews criticise the practice on principle for being part of the farming industry rather than describing specific clinical care. A couple of reviews talk about “food/meals,” which may indicate some reviews are not about veterinary services.
Animal Health Centre is a small-animal veterinary practice established in 2002. It handles a broad range of routine and medical needs for dogs, cats and small pets (including rabbits, ferrets, guinea pigs and hamsters), with facilities listed for an in-house lab plus X‑ray and ultrasound. The practice is accredited as an RCVS General Practice and a Cat Friendly Clinic (Silver). It is also described as a veterinary nurse training facility. Out-of-hours emergencies are provided by MiNightVet (with full-time night staff), rather than being handled in-house overnight.
Animal Health Centre is a small-animal veterinary practice established in 2002. It handles a broad range of routine and medical needs for dogs, cats and small pets (including rabbits, ferrets, guinea pigs and hamsters), with facilities listed for an in-house lab plus X‑ray and ultrasound. The practice is accredited as an RCVS General Practice and a Cat Friendly Clinic (Silver). It is also described as a veterinary nurse training facility. Out-of-hours emergencies are provided by MiNightVet (with full-time night staff), rather than being handled in-house overnight.
Horizon Dairy Vets describes itself as a dedicated dairy-focused veterinary practice, set up specifically to support dairy farms rather than general small-animal work. From the clinic’s own information, its emphasis is on “straight talking” veterinary input and on challenging both “what” is being done on farm and “how” it’s being done (a consultancy-style, management-focused approach rather than only treating individual cases). It also states it provides a 24-hour contact number for enquiries.
Horizon Dairy Vets describes itself as a dedicated dairy-focused veterinary practice, set up specifically to support dairy farms rather than general small-animal work. From the clinic’s own information, its emphasis is on “straight talking” veterinary input and on challenging both “what” is being done on farm and “how” it’s being done (a consultancy-style, management-focused approach rather than only treating individual cases). It also states it provides a 24-hour contact number for enquiries.
Peaceful Paws Home Vet Ltd is listed in the supplied data by name only; no website summary, service list, staff details, pricing, or review information was provided. The business name suggests a focus on veterinary care delivered at home, but specific services (e.g., vaccinations, euthanasia, chronic care checks) and how appointments are run can’t be confirmed from the inputs available. Corporate-group ownership (if any) is not stated in the provided data.
Peaceful Paws Home Vet Ltd is listed in the supplied data by name only; no website summary, service list, staff details, pricing, or review information was provided. The business name suggests a focus on veterinary care delivered at home, but specific services (e.g., vaccinations, euthanasia, chronic care checks) and how appointments are run can’t be confirmed from the inputs available. Corporate-group ownership (if any) is not stated in the provided data.
