cptrayes
Well-Known Member
If I was in your situation and had asked the same questions, then I would be asking the same question as you and I would expect the Vet to waiver to cost.
I think it is unacceptable for a Vet to 'mis diagnose' whether a horse had been castrated or not. They are the professionals, which you are paying for, so they should foot the bill, in this case.
I have very good Vets myself, but sometimes they push me to the limit ......
First, I wonder how easy you think it is to tell an expertly done castration of a very young horse, where the scar will have been very small and healed with no trace, a very common thing and a two year old with undescended testicles, a rare occurrence.
Second, I completely fail to see your logic that making that very easy to make mistake results in the vet being liable to pay for a castration that would have had to be done anyway and has caused no additional expense.
The scan is debatable, but even that I think the OP should pay for, given that the horse is (I think?) not fertile until his balls drop, and who owns a male horse without realising that it has balls? Do they never groom the insides of his back legs or pick up his tail? ESPECIALLY after being told he is behaving coltishly?
OP do you realise that if you do not pay this bill that the vet can come after your horse? I once bought one at auction that had been seized by my own vets in non-payment of their bill.
PAY UP!
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