There are two charities that provide excellent support for pet health care and welfare,
and encourage the human-animal bond.
Please consider supporting these two charities that we proudly support and donate to on a regular basis.
and encourage the human-animal bond.
Please consider supporting these two charities that we proudly support and donate to on a regular basis.
Tails of Help is a volunteer-driven registered charity focused on helping Albertans in need. Approved by the Alberta Veterinary Medical Association, we help fund essential veterinary care for ill or injured pets of owners who are experiencing financial hardship. Our goal is to help keep pets healthy and with their loving families.
University of Saskatchewan - Western College of Veterinary Medicine (WCVM) Companion Animal Health Fund
Donations from individual pet owners, veterinarians, breed and sport organizations and pet health companies have helped to train companion animal health specialists, have supported dozens of research investigations and have transformed the WCVM into a centre of excellence for companion animal health research and education.
Donations from individual pet owners, veterinarians, breed and sport organizations and pet health companies have helped to train companion animal health specialists, have supported dozens of research investigations and have transformed the WCVM into a centre of excellence for companion animal health research and education.
We also support the Vintage Veterinary Exhibit Association.
The people involved with Vintage Veterinary Exhibit Association help preserve thinly scattered remnants of the early veterinary history in Western Canada. They believe that conserving history provides an understanding of how historic cultures shaped our modern world. A museum quality venue at an appropriate public site will capture the role of horses in powering ranching and agriculture, the Canadian war effort, and the march West of the North West Mounted Police, noting early veterinarians on the scene. The exhibit will showcase the development of the veterinary profession in western Canada during the 1900-1915 period.
The exhibit will include a working office with a collection of artifacts that depict the tools of a veterinarian’s practice.
It will also include live enactments of a practicing veterinarian working from a horse-drawn carriage, travelling through the historical village of Heritage Park.
The people involved with Vintage Veterinary Exhibit Association help preserve thinly scattered remnants of the early veterinary history in Western Canada. They believe that conserving history provides an understanding of how historic cultures shaped our modern world. A museum quality venue at an appropriate public site will capture the role of horses in powering ranching and agriculture, the Canadian war effort, and the march West of the North West Mounted Police, noting early veterinarians on the scene. The exhibit will showcase the development of the veterinary profession in western Canada during the 1900-1915 period.
The exhibit will include a working office with a collection of artifacts that depict the tools of a veterinarian’s practice.
It will also include live enactments of a practicing veterinarian working from a horse-drawn carriage, travelling through the historical village of Heritage Park.