Omgosh, I was so confused for a minute! I was thinking I had somehow not known that horses had blue blood, even though my logical brain knew that wasn't possible. Lol
I was wondering how you were going to show the procedures because I know UA-cam blurs out things like that out, but turning the blood blue, I've never seen! Genius! It took me a second to even realize what I was seeing, I thought at first she was flushing the hematoma with some blue solution! 😂
@thecrazypinkcatlady the creators blur it out because they get strikes from UA-cam. There used to be a Vet channel I watched all the time, but they had to stop filming procedures altogether because of UA-cam strikes.
Hi Jesse and Matt👋Really enjoying your new channel the content is very interesting and informative. I wish you all the very best in your new adventures and finding your new home. Very excited for you both and looking forward to future content 😁 Much love from the UK 🇬🇧
Okay I’ll take one for the team here. What was the deal with the blue liquid coming out of the horse? Was that edited to make for easier viewing? Or was that some form of medication that was injected first? I apologise in advance for my stupidity either way. This channel is absolutely amazing though omg. You guys have done incredible with this ❤️
What an amazing clinic! He made it sound like he just built but that's decades of investment, stress and accomplishments. I wonder if used for teaching too? That would be incredible to work as internship. Looking forward to you returning and good job turning blood's blue for viewing while enjoying morning coffee ❤
That was so interesting you guys … I definitely missed out on what I would have loved to have done for a career. But there’s a reason for everything. I assume the blue 🩸 was so it didn’t cause squeamish feelings for the viewers?!? I must say I actually wasn’t as upset watching because my brain wasn’t registering it as blood. Very clever who decided that … or maybe it was at UA-cam’s insistence. Hope all the horses recovered from their treatments/surgeries that we saw in today’s VLOG. Please thank the Veterinarian for allowing us to tag along and see his world. It’s an absolutely beautiful state of the art facility. Certainly different than what they are typically like! Must be an awesome place to work at and be able to successfully help so many horses! Thanks again you guys for the awesome VLOG! 🙏🙌❤️🇨🇦🐴🐎
This was so amazing to see. Wonderful the team working together and getting first hand experience. This man is a Blessing to all horses. I could feel his love and passion toward helping these animals. Caring for less tramas is important. THANK YOU for this video.
Amazing equine doctor and staff. Was sweet seeing Jesse petting the grey horses leg while the tumors were being removed. All the horses must have been blue bloods instead of warm bloods. 😅
Lol it is a filter on the camera. All horses have red blood but horseshoe crabs on the other hand actually have blue blood due to the copper in their blood instead of iron.
you both did well! I've seen more than a few people faint when confronted with less blood, even vet students :) Super interesting video, I wish I could've done an internship there in my practical year! Looks like a great team and amazing facilities!
I always wanted to see behind the scene's of a horse clinic, or any veterinarian clinic for that matter. Really fun, and I'd love to see more of this type of content really.
What an amazing facility! Such advanced levels of diagnostic strategies, incredible treatment plans, and exemplary follow-up care. Thank you for sharing this with us, your viewers. It brings me great joy to know that these horses are receiving the very best of care,
LOVE IT!! I am obsessed with veterinary hospitals. Praying my horses and everyone else that they never have to go to one but to see such craftsmanship precision and care. Please keep throwing in a few of these please guys. 🤩🤩👏👏👏🇦🇺🇦🇺
do any of you train small 26 inch to 30 inch tall miniature horses as guide animals for people who are blind as an alternative to guide dogs? Because guide horses can live and work a lot longer than a guide dog can. I am very interested in either training, my own guide horse or having a small miniature horse trained as a guide animal for me. please look up the panda project for more information.
Amazing content. Thank you Matt and Jesse, but also special thanks to the team of the clinic. Extremely interesting insights. And who ever came up with this blue filter - thanks for this level of considerate empathy 💙
This is just getting better and better - it was so educational - and I appreciate the colour change you put in as well - thankyou. The facility is amazing, and the people that work there are amazing. Respect to everyone involved in the video! Thanks Matt and Jessie.
An incredible facility and a sweet,thoughtful, talented vet. I can’t imagine the cost of going to this place!! We have nothing like this in Idaho! Great video. Thanks!
I was just thinking as well it's almost like these vets have done double study because I'm sure they learned in their native language and now also practice in English for all their clients!!
All I can say is WOW!!! As a RRT I've been called to the OR many times to work on humans, but this was so amazing. I'm sure we may have a clinic in the USA similar, but I've never seen one. Isn't it amazing how far medicine has come. Even in the last 30 years. Again thank you.
Several in Lexington area. Rood and Riddle has hospitals in Lexington, Ocala and Saratoga Springs. Many other and several universities have them. Google Rood and Riddle to be amazed.
Absolutely amazing, equine medicine has advanced leaps and bounds in the past 30 years. What once would have been a death sentence (the hock repair), is now a daily surgery with a six-month recovery period. Astounding. Thank you.
Wonderful to know that there is this kind of care available! I'm sure all of these horses would have been put down before. Nice to know there are now solutions!
That was fantastic 👏. I had an incapculated haematoma after a cycling accident, the doctors just left mine to resolve itself. It wasn't as massive as the horses, but it was pretty bloody big. I had to wear skirts for a year because my haematoma didn't fit into my pants...lol 😅 Thank goodness I'm a woman.
This was excellent. I wanted to be a vet when I went to college. Got my BS in animal sciences pre vet and my MS in poultry pathology. I ended up preferring veterinary vaccine R&D. I’m now retired but wished I was right there with the vets and techs. Please visit other vet hospitals for close up care of horses. 🥰
"Gray horse melanoma." Seems like something I should have heard of, but hadn't until now. Interesting! The Texas A&M School of Veterinary Medicine has a fresh article about this issue, 'Navigating The Mysteries of Gray Horse Melanoma.' The equine hospital is an amazing facility - more than well thought out and equipped, the craftsmanship is beautiful.
Who knew horses had turquoise blood!??? LOL I like the gore personally, but it probably helped the sqeamish. Wow what a beautiful place; helps make you feel you got your money's worth I would think
Incredible video. Thank you for using blue on the areas of blood. Those were such interesting surgeries, I really enjoyed watching it all and hearing him explain things as it occurred. Awesome clinic. ❤❤
The blue color threw me off until I realized what was happening. I admit I had to read some of the comments to realize it was the use of a filter. My one question is why the surgeons weren’t wearing a mask during the tumor removal on the gray horse?? It kind of defeats the purpose of all the sterile scrubbing, wearing sterile gown & gloves, draping in, etc if you don’t cover your mouth & nose with a mask as well! I found it ironic that Matt & Jesse had on a mask (even though Jesse’s wasn’t covering his nose) yet the surgeons did not.
That poor poor horse.can someone please, explain to me.why do they got the horse just dangling like that upside down?! I know a very small amount about horses nothing much.i just couldn't understand why they got it hanging by the feet in the air.and then the nurse is pulling on his tail.why don't they just move the horses with gerneys I know wrong spelling.but aka hospital beds on wheels? Thank you
Wow that was absolutely fascinating! I’ve always loved medicine, especially veterinary medicine, and now that I have a horse of my own, I want to learn as much as I can.
I don’t own horses just large dogs.When my latest German shepherd was ready to spayed I asked him if I could watch. He just laughed and said sure. It was so cool to watch and to learn more about my dogs body and the workings of it. Animal surgery is just fascinating to me.Looking back on my life I wish I had gone to vet school but at 70 its a little late for that…
Why is the fluid coming out of the hematoma blue? Oh! I saw! I guess it's colored in the video so as not to look so much like blood. And why are melanomas common in grey horses? Is it because the grey hair provides less protection from the sun?
I love seeing the veterinary side of horses, i went to equine school for stablemanagement but my knees ruined my career, so Thanks for bringing us along.
in Canada, Windfield Farms, the home of Northern Dancer, was quite the place to see! A friend went on tour there....he said that when they turned down the lane to drive up to the place, he thought it was a hotel!
I have attended open heart bypass graft surgeries and I would LOVE to spend a day observing here. Thank you so much for sharing this amazing facility and talented veterinary staff. Fantastic to hear he is expanding and doing virtual education. My daughter and I thoroughly enjoyed this video.
Thank you for making this video ! I loved it and making the blood blue was a great idea ! I am so happy a high quality hospital for horses like this can exist !
To watch more videos like this become a member on our HorseWorldTV UA-cam Channel
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For those wondering, horses don’t actually have blue blood its just a filter for anyone who’s squeamish towards the red stuff 😂
Thank you! I was so confused. 😂❤
I figured that was the case! 😂
Omgosh, I was so confused for a minute! I was thinking I had somehow not known that horses had blue blood, even though my logical brain knew that wasn't possible. Lol
I never knew that was a thing! At first I was wondering if they injected some kind of dye 😅 but now I know better
Thanks! Was wondering, what the heck? 😆
I was wondering how you were going to show the procedures because I know UA-cam blurs out things like that out, but turning the blood blue, I've never seen! Genius! It took me a second to even realize what I was seeing, I thought at first she was flushing the hematoma with some blue solution! 😂
I feel so confused. I do not like if.
I thought the same until I saw the blue again in the tumor case. But that was really a lot of blood coming out of the hematoma!
And i Googled of Horses have Blue blood 😂🙈
YT doesn't blur blood or surgery, I watch it all the time.
@thecrazypinkcatlady the creators blur it out because they get strikes from UA-cam. There used to be a Vet channel I watched all the time, but they had to stop filming procedures altogether because of UA-cam strikes.
Hi Jesse and Matt👋Really enjoying your new channel the content is very interesting and informative. I wish you all the very best in your new adventures and finding your new home. Very excited for you both and looking forward to future content 😁 Much love from the UK 🇬🇧
This is a fabulous program subject. Please do more like this.
Impressive facilities! So so interesting! Thanks for producing this type of content.
Okay I’ll take one for the team here.
What was the deal with the blue liquid coming out of the horse? Was that edited to make for easier viewing? Or was that some form of medication that was injected first?
I apologise in advance for my stupidity either way.
This channel is absolutely amazing though omg. You guys have done incredible with this ❤️
Not a stupid question, i believe it's been edited for easier viewing :)
Just what I was thinking🤪😊
It's edited, it's common way to kind of "censor" blood so it doesn't get flagged and/or upset people :) It's funny how the brain works haha
@@tayk702aw thank you so much ☺️, I was so nervous about getting hate for asking this. People can be so mean on here 🥴💕
UA-cam and Instagram do that automatically for viewing censorship.
Great job, guys. Very impressive and amazing that a facility like this exists.
AMAZING VIDEO ! thank you Matt and Jesse
What an amazing clinic!
He made it sound like he just built but that's decades of investment, stress and accomplishments.
I wonder if used for teaching too? That would be incredible to work as internship.
Looking forward to you returning and good job turning blood's blue for viewing while enjoying morning coffee ❤
That was so interesting you guys … I definitely missed out on what I would have loved to have done for a career. But there’s a reason for everything.
I assume the blue 🩸 was so it didn’t cause squeamish feelings for the viewers?!? I must say I actually wasn’t as upset watching because my brain wasn’t registering it as blood. Very clever who decided that … or maybe it was at UA-cam’s insistence.
Hope all the horses recovered from their treatments/surgeries that we saw in today’s VLOG.
Please thank the Veterinarian for allowing us to tag along and see his world. It’s an absolutely beautiful state of the art facility. Certainly different than what they are typically like! Must be an awesome place to work at and be able to successfully help so many horses!
Thanks again you guys for the awesome VLOG! 🙏🙌❤️🇨🇦🐴🐎
L
This was so amazing to see.
Wonderful the team working together and getting first hand experience.
This man is a Blessing to all horses. I could feel his love and passion toward helping these animals. Caring for less tramas is important.
THANK YOU for this video.
Great video. Love seeing content of all varieties to do with horses and horse care. Total respect for all those involved in vet care of all animals.
Amazing equine doctor and staff. Was sweet seeing Jesse petting the grey horses leg while the tumors were being removed. All the horses must have been blue bloods instead of warm bloods. 😅
Lol it is a filter on the camera. All horses have red blood but horseshoe crabs on the other hand actually have blue blood due to the copper in their blood instead of iron.
My comment was a joke - never thought horses had blue blood - but there are warm blood horses. hence the joke...@@CaylaFenton-Reeder
The blue blood had me confused at first, LOL. Wish they explained why in the description.
We unfortunately can't keep the original color, the video would get banned from UA-cam! :)
This was an amazing show and facility, thank you for sharing this experience.
I loved the surgery! I wish UA-cam wasn't so squeamish!
you both did well! I've seen more than a few people faint when confronted with less blood, even vet students :)
Super interesting video, I wish I could've done an internship there in my practical year! Looks like a great team and amazing facilities!
I always wanted to see behind the scene's of a horse clinic, or any veterinarian clinic for that matter. Really fun, and I'd love to see more of this type of content really.
Thank you, as a retired horsewoman, I found this to be most interesting. I hope to see more videos like this.
Impressive and wonderful expertise. Thanks for sharing.
Hopefully someone will come up with a solution to keep light colored horses from getting melanomas from the sun.
Super interessant! Moet wel gezegd; de reden dat ik kon blijven kijken kwam door het blauwe bloed! 👍👍
What an amazing facility! Such advanced levels of diagnostic strategies, incredible treatment plans, and exemplary follow-up care. Thank you for sharing this with us, your viewers. It brings me great joy to know that these horses are receiving the very best of care,
LOVE IT!! I am obsessed with veterinary hospitals. Praying my horses and everyone else that they never have to go to one but to see such craftsmanship precision and care. Please keep throwing in a few of these please guys. 🤩🤩👏👏👏🇦🇺🇦🇺
Wow the relief from that heamo must have been immense. We have all had a small blood blister or fluid filled bruise etc. And it can b agony
Blue blood makes it a breeze to watch. So interesting. Class Act Vet❤
Equitome altso has their own facebook channel where they sometimes share surgery videos
do any of you train small 26 inch to 30 inch tall miniature horses as guide animals for people who are blind as an alternative to guide dogs? Because guide horses can live and work a lot longer than a guide dog can. I am very interested in either training, my own guide horse or having a small miniature horse trained as a guide animal for me. please look up the panda project for more information.
This was incredible to watch. love this new channel.
This is so cool to see!! Incredibly fascinating, wonderful, and gross at the same time!
Amazing content. Thank you Matt and Jesse, but also special thanks to the team of the clinic. Extremely interesting insights. And who ever came up with this blue filter - thanks for this level of considerate empathy 💙
not sure why this was on my recommended but very much enjoyed watching this.
great video, so much youtube is pure junk, this was amazing thanks
So interesting thanks for sharing,
This is just getting better and better - it was so educational - and I appreciate the colour change you put in as well - thankyou. The facility is amazing, and the people that work there are amazing. Respect to everyone involved in the video! Thanks Matt and Jessie.
Awesome video idea, was really interesting, thanks!!
An incredible facility and a sweet,thoughtful, talented vet. I can’t imagine the cost of going to this place!! We have nothing like this in Idaho! Great video. Thanks!
These are things very few of us will ever get to see. Thanks for a FASCINATING episode!
I was just thinking as well it's almost like these vets have done double study because I'm sure they learned in their native language and now also practice in English for all their clients!!
Brilliant video. Loved the content. Thank you
All I can say is WOW!!! As a RRT I've been called to the OR many times to work on humans, but this was so amazing. I'm sure we may have a clinic in the USA similar, but I've never seen one. Isn't it amazing how far medicine has come. Even in the last 30 years. Again thank you.
Several in Lexington area. Rood and Riddle has hospitals in Lexington, Ocala and Saratoga Springs. Many other and several universities have them. Google Rood and Riddle to be amazed.
Much respect to the doctor and everyone involved , thanks for sharing .❤
Absolutely amazing, equine medicine has advanced leaps and bounds in the past 30 years. What once would have been a death sentence (the hock repair), is now a daily surgery with a six-month recovery period. Astounding. Thank you.
poor thinhg.
This was an incredible video. Thank you
Wonderful to know that there is this kind of care available! I'm sure all of these horses would have been put down before. Nice to know there are now solutions!
I loved this
That was fantastic 👏. I had an incapculated haematoma after a cycling accident, the doctors just left mine to resolve itself. It wasn't as massive as the horses, but it was pretty bloody big. I had to wear skirts for a year because my haematoma didn't fit into my pants...lol 😅 Thank goodness I'm a woman.
That was a very informative bideo- very nice, gentlemen!
WOW. ❤
When the vet is dressed in Dior 😅
That video was outstanding, very interesting. Beautiful clinic!
Great video. Love how you changed the color to make it viewable for many. Great video.
WHY is the blood from the hematoma BLUE??? Am I tripping or is it really blue??? 😅😅😅
This was excellent. I wanted to be a vet when I went to college. Got my BS in animal sciences pre vet and my MS in poultry pathology. I ended up preferring veterinary vaccine R&D. I’m now retired but wished I was right there with the vets and techs. Please visit other vet hospitals for close up care of horses. 🥰
This was really interesting!
Awesome on how you changed the color of the blood, it took me till the melanoma surgery on the grey horse. What a pristine facility!
We unfortunately can't keep the original color, the video would get banned from UA-cam! :)
Excellent! Loved the surgeon’s explanations through out the video. Thank you.
Amazing! Thanks to everyone in the video 🙏
Not nearly as difficult to watch when it's blue.
"Gray horse melanoma." Seems like something I should have heard of, but hadn't until now. Interesting! The Texas A&M School of Veterinary Medicine has a fresh article about this issue, 'Navigating The Mysteries of Gray Horse Melanoma.'
The equine hospital is an amazing facility - more than well thought out and equipped, the craftsmanship is beautiful.
Wow! If I need surgery can I come here? Such beautiful facilities and what a lovely surgeon/owner. ❤❤❤❤❤
Super interesting. Thank you Team. ❤
That horrible carotid tumor will probably grow back. Gray horses have a challenge. What an amazing hospital!
Thank you! Greetings from Baudette Minnesota USA
This was so interesting!!
Who knew horses had turquoise blood!??? LOL I like the gore personally, but it probably helped the sqeamish. Wow what a beautiful place; helps make you feel you got your money's worth I would think
Incredible video. Thank you for using blue on the areas of blood. Those were such interesting surgeries, I really enjoyed watching it all and hearing him explain things as it occurred. Awesome clinic. ❤❤
That was absolutely fascinating. Brilliant video. Thank you
Very good video, well explained. Shame about the filter turning the blood blue, it looked very weird!!
We unfortunately can't keep the original color, the video would get banned from UA-cam! :)
That was so cool. I'm looking forward to the videos of the surgery. Thanks
The blue color threw me off until I realized what was happening. I admit I had to read some of the comments to realize it was the use of a filter.
My one question is why the surgeons weren’t wearing a mask during the tumor removal on the gray horse?? It kind of defeats the purpose of all the sterile scrubbing, wearing sterile gown & gloves, draping in, etc if you don’t cover your mouth & nose with a mask as well! I found it ironic that Matt & Jesse had on a mask (even though Jesse’s wasn’t covering his nose) yet the surgeons did not.
That poor poor horse.can someone please, explain to me.why do they got the horse just dangling like that upside down?! I know a very small amount about horses nothing much.i just couldn't understand why they got it hanging by the feet in the air.and then the nurse is pulling on his tail.why don't they just move the horses with gerneys I know wrong spelling.but aka hospital beds on wheels? Thank you
Wow that was absolutely fascinating! I’ve always loved medicine, especially veterinary medicine, and now that I have a horse of my own, I want to learn as much as I can.
Why is the serous fluid blue ? 😆😆
The video will get banned if you show the real color :)
I don’t own horses just large dogs.When my latest German shepherd was ready to spayed I asked him if I could watch. He just laughed and said sure. It was so cool to watch and to learn more about my dogs body and the workings of it. Animal surgery is just fascinating to me.Looking back on my life I wish I had gone to vet school but at 70 its a little late for that…
Why is the fluid coming out of the hematoma blue?
Oh! I saw! I guess it's colored in the video so as not to look so much like blood.
And why are melanomas common in grey horses? Is it because the grey hair provides less protection from the sun?
Why is it blueueueuee!!!!🤯😱 that’s more disturbing lmao😅
Thank you for showing this video. It shows how far veterinarian medicine has come for horses very informative. Keep showing more videos like this.
What a great topic you covered...so interesting!
Very interesting. A whole field of science that I knew nothing at all about.
I love seeing the veterinary side of horses, i went to equine school for stablemanagement but my knees ruined my career, so Thanks for bringing us along.
in Canada, Windfield Farms, the home of Northern Dancer, was quite the place to see! A friend went on tour there....he said that when they turned down the lane to drive up to the place, he thought it was a hotel!
Jesse and Matt this was eye opening. I even detected a small surprise in your all's reaction to the depth of their procedures.
What an incredible video. Thank you for sharing, and thank you for the facility for opening their doors to you.
When I grow up I wanted to be an Equine vet. But more of an Rehab and Recovery nurse. Not really a surgeon so this was interesting to see.
Wondering why the surgeons not wearing masks during surgery with the last horse
Very interesting! Why did you make blood blue though?
Fascinating! Thank you!
Very educational thank you for sharing 😊
The blue blood takes away from the fun of watching it..
I've heard of bluebloods before, but this is the first time i have actually seen one.😁
I have attended open heart bypass graft surgeries and I would LOVE to spend a day observing here. Thank you so much for sharing this amazing facility and talented veterinary staff. Fantastic to hear he is expanding and doing virtual education. My daughter and I thoroughly enjoyed this video.
Really, blue blood!?? Lol 😂
We sadly do not have other opportunities - if we don't change the color, the video will get banned on UA-cam :)
Thank you for making this video ! I loved it and making the blood blue was a great idea !
I am so happy a high quality hospital for horses like this can exist !
Wow that was amazing to see. Thanks for showing us🤩
Loved this, great video ❤
Yes ❤🙌🏽
Absolutely brilliant- loved it 😊