Many vet offices often advertise for receptionists and beginning vet techs. You could also volunteer at an animal shelter for experience to see if you really want to get into it.
Asking what surgeries you would get into is like asking what motherhood is like. You never know the full extent until you take that step and then there are still no guarantees. I'm a farm gal and have seen/heard enough horror stories that you would cringe and run screaming. Running and screaming does the animal no good. You have to be willing to get in there and help one way or another.
I think you need to get out and volunteer every place that has animals that will accept you. Clean pens/stables/operating rooms/whatever. In the down and dirty world of aniimals, they poop and mess and spew and it's a stinky, bloody mess sometimes. If you can handle that part, then keep your grades as high as possible. Becoming a vet is harder than becoming a doctor. Getting into vet school is harder than getting into med school. Frankly, from what vets have told me, large animal experience is a plus to entrance because then the vet school knows you are serious and know what you are getting into.
If you can handle both those parts and are still interested, it's a great rewarding career and many places in the country need veterinarians.
My daughter has done vet tech in San Antonio. I originally majored in pre-vet. Have been around vets all my life-- large and small.
Asking what surgeries you would get into is like asking what motherhood is like. You never know the full extent until you take that step and then there are still no guarantees. I'm a farm gal and have seen/heard enough horror stories that you would cringe and run screaming. Running and screaming does the animal no good. You have to be willing to get in there and help one way or another.
I think you need to get out and volunteer every place that has animals that will accept you. Clean pens/stables/operating rooms/whatever. In the down and dirty world of aniimals, they poop and mess and spew and it's a stinky, bloody mess sometimes. If you can handle that part, then keep your grades as high as possible. Becoming a vet is harder than becoming a doctor. Getting into vet school is harder than getting into med school. Frankly, from what vets have told me, large animal experience is a plus to entrance because then the vet school knows you are serious and know what you are getting into.
If you can handle both those parts and are still interested, it's a great rewarding career and many places in the country need veterinarians.
My daughter has done vet tech in San Antonio. I originally majored in pre-vet. Have been around vets all my life-- large and small.