So I Herd

So I Herd

s1e4: The art of the pivot: The aglife remix

20 min · 29. Juni 2025
Episode s1e4: The art of the pivot: The aglife remix Cover

Beschreibung

In this episode, Dr. Jill Kelly shares her bold leap from a secure government role to launching her own livestock consultancy—complete with a subscription model, paid newsletters, and a thriving online presence as “Miss Vet.” Jill talks candidly about building a business from scratch, charging for conversations vets often give away for free, and balancing her work with side hustles in art and cattle trading. It’s a story of reinvention, resilience, and redefining what a vet career can look like.

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Episode S2e2: From Wild Horse to WA: Enoch Bergman on risk, resilience and reinventing Cattle Vet Practice Cover

S2e2: From Wild Horse to WA: Enoch Bergman on risk, resilience and reinventing Cattle Vet Practice

In this energetic and wide-ranging episode, host Prue Adams sits down with veterinarian and innovator Enoch Bergman, whose journey from a tiny Colorado town of just 12 people to rural Western Australia is anything but ordinary. Enoch shares how a chance conversation led him “just for a year” to Esperance - only for it to become home, business, and community. Now a partner in a thriving multi-vet practice, he reflects on the power of saying yes, taking risks, and “having a crack.” A leader in Bovine Viral Diarrhoea Virus (BVDV) control, Enoch unpacks his pioneering work establishing Australia’s first commercial PI diagnostic lab and the real-world impact of BVDV on herd productivity. He explains why vets must move beyond the “fire engine” model into consultancy roles - acting as connectors, innovators, and trusted advisors for producers. The conversation dives into: * The evolving role of cattle veterinarians and the pressure from non-veterinary service providers. * Why pregnancy diagnosis remains critical to veterinary practice viability. * The importance of on-farm veterinary presence for biosecurity and disease surveillance. * Communicating the livestock industry’s value to a wider, often disconnected public. Enoch also shares his growing reach as “Enoch the Cow Vet” on YouTube, using storytelling to bridge the gap between producers and consumers, and advocating for a more proactive narrative around animal welfare and agriculture. Packed with humour, honesty, and hard-won insight, this episode is a compelling call for vets and producers alike to embrace opportunity, communicate their value, and stay curious.

Gestern28 min
Episode s2e1: At a crossroads: How Australia’s Cattle Vets are shaping a new future Cover

s2e1: At a crossroads: How Australia’s Cattle Vets are shaping a new future

Australia’s cattle veterinary profession is at a pivotal moment, grappling with workforce shortages, changing client expectations, rapid technological advances and the growing impact of corporatisation. In this first episode of Season 2, Prue speaks with three ACV past Presidents Professor Paul Cusack, Dr Scott Parry and Dr Stacey Rae who span the decades of 1970s through to now, as they paint a revealing picture of a sector in transition - and one full of opportunity. With traditional mixed practice evolving from individual animal care to whole-of-production system management, vets are increasingly acting as advisers across nutrition, reproduction and herd health. While this shift creates exciting consultancy pathways, it also exposes gaps in structured postgraduate education and clear career progression for early and mid‑career vets. Listen as the panel highlights the need for strong mentorship, flexible work models and better support for a workforce that is becoming increasingly female and family-focused. The rise of AI and real-time data analysis promises to transform decision‑making, yet also demands new skills to manage an ever-growing “data tsunami”. Against this backdrop, corporatisation continues to reshape rural practice - bringing capital and scale, but sometimes at the cost of continuity, local knowledge and mentorship. Encouragingly, renewed interest in locally owned practices shows the enduring value of trusted relationships in rural communities. And finally, for students, early career vets and industry leaders, the message is clear: adaptability, broad experience and lifelong learning will be key to securing a sustainable and rewarding future in cattle veterinary practice.

30. Apr. 202630 min