Every kiss on the nose
story by Alyssa Pointer
It’s 10 minutes to closing on a warm autumn afternoon when a frantic mother and her two daughters rush into the Animal Medical Clinic, carrying their wounded dog.
Dr. Carrie Darnaby and vet technician Katie Price are cleaning and preparing to lock up for the day. However, without hesitation, Carrie puts down her mop and motions the family to the exam room. There she gives Katie a list of procedures and assures the family that Chopper, 13, their dog, will live to see another day.
“The vet life is like no other beast,” says Carrie, whose passion for animals is exhibited with every kiss on the nose that she offers to her four-legged clients.
Carrie, 37, started her veterinarian career by volunteering at a Lawrenceburg clinic and has never thought twice of changing her path.
Pets "are part of the family, too," she says. My work "is for the animals, but most animals have owners, who I'm affecting directly as well. So I am working with people. I am also solving their problems."
Days at the clinic can be rewarding as well as heartbreaking.
A simple day can start with a routine teeth cleaning or nail clipping and end with euthanizing a battered stray cat.
“It can get hectic," Carrie says. However "seeing the client happy, that is satisfaction for me. That’s all I am looking for."
Bonnie Smith brought Mozzi, 15-month old Australian shepherd to Carrie, after she did research on the staff and discovered their caring nature.
"Other places are like a cattle herd," she says. "I mean who else will get down and love on him like this?"