Deep inside the is what looks like a rail yard — a room filled with curving-metal alleys and switching stations. But the commodity being herded is not boxcars of coal or corn but cattle and other large animals.
With a $1 million annual appropriation from the state beginning in fiscal 2014, the has purchased a new “squeeze chute,” which sits at the terminus of the metal-alley maze. Costing $25,000, the chute hugs an animal tightly and tips it on its side so veterinarians can more easily access the animal’s underside.
It’s a core piece of equipment in a hospital that treats 1,500 food animals a year. “There are days this is all I do all day,” says John Middleton, professor of food animal medicine, nodding at the contraption.
Common uses for the chute include examinations for lameness, routine foot trimming and reproductive-tract surgery.
The new, quieter chute is just one of several improvements the College of Veterinary Medicine has made or is considering making to its large-animal program. Other items include upgrading the teaching space at Middlebush Farm and replacing aging field service vehicles — a pickup or SUV that serves as a mobile clinic on house calls to far-flung farms. Also considered is a building to house the vehicles, which could also include additional teaching space, office space and a biosecure area to decontaminate vehicles, boots and other equipment.
Reviewed 2014-03-04