Summer Surge Barrel SeriesRepeating Event
FeaturedThe Expo At Glenrose
202 E Bo Gibbs Dr Glen Rose , TX 76043
The Expo At Glenrose
202 E Bo Gibbs Dr Glen Rose , TX 76043
Marshall City Arena
3310 Popular Street Marshall, TX 75671
(JCSP) Johnson County Sheriff's Posse Indoor & Outdoor Arena
1315 North Main Street, Cleburne, TX 76033
M7 Arena
8001 FM3136, Alvarado, TX 76009
Northcrest Equestrian Center
3900 CR 805 B Cleburne , TX 76301
Parker County Arena
1010 Farm to Market Road 1885, Weatherford, TX 76088
T8 Arena
837 Lumas Rd, DeRidder, LA 70634
Extraco Events Center
4601 Bosque Boulevard, Waco, TX 76710
Nolan County Expo Center
220 Coliseum, Sweetwater, TX 79556
Schaumburg, IL — What would you do with your dog, cat, bird, horse or livestock if your area was hit with a flood, earthquake or forest fire? National Animal Preparedness Day, May 8, reminds everyone to be prepared. The Federal Emergency Management Agency’s Citizen’s Corp declared May 8 as a special day to remind pet and livestock owners to think about how they can help keep their animals out of harm’s way. During the event, veterinarians and kennel operators are encouraged to offer tips and information on how pet and animal owners can prepare for disasters. The
Gov. Charlie Crist has vetoed a pair of bills that would have expanded a tax break on agricultural land and exempted farms from local environmental laws. Crist over the weekend also signed bills putting additional restrictions on horse meat consumption (HB 765) Read more…
SPRING HILL — Many in the area have experienced tough times recently, and Spirit Horse Stables is no exception. In fact, the business has gone through the worst tragedy in its history. The Spring Hill riding stables lost four of its horses to a rare form of botulism poisoning last week and another six are hospitalized. “I can’t even tell you how absolutely devastated we are,” manager Nancy Haines said. “These horses were and are greatly loved. Some of them the owners had since we opened in 1996.” The often-lethal botulism is the result of bacteria in decaying
Franck’s Pharmacy Inc. has decided to voluntarily suspend all veterinary drug compounding pending the outcome of discussions with the Food and Drug Administration. This latest move, announced Monday afternoon, is a sharp departure from the company’s earlier position. Just last month it vowed to defend an FDA request for an injunction that would prevent the Ocala-based pharmacy from compounding animal drugs using bulk ingredients that are not FDA-approved. “Most of our customers will be unaffected by this change as we will continue to compound all human medicines,” Franck’s said in its Monday statement. “We are working with