2011年3月24日 星期四

Lompoc man a military veterinary and local veterinarian

A man of Lompoc is a military veterinarian and a local veterinarian. Dr. Raghavan Sampathkumaran, Dr. Sam for short, has returned to the West Valley Vet Clinic after a deployment of the army of reserve of seven months.


It is of the Kuwait and Kyrgyzstan in December where he helped to a different class of the canines, dogs of the army and was only a part of his work.


Dr. Sam has a passion for pets. Laurie Litwiler, working with Dr. Sam, said: "his accent is animals, it is the most important thing. I am always really impressed with what it will do to the animals and the lengths he'll go. »


The Lompoc vet also has a passion to serve our country. He joined the army reserve in 2004. Litwiler said: "I think it's pretty cool." I like the reasons why it is in the army back to the country. I think that many people in Lompoc, and thus meets. "Dr. Sam said:"I think it is very rewarding and you feel that you are contributing to a small path. "


Dr. Sam performed surgery on a dog named Edy rescue. The military canine is a Afghanistan six-month deployment. Dr. Sam said, "they are our first line of defence in terms of detecting potentially explosive." Litwiler said: "they are a very important part of the army, they save many lives."


During her deployment, Dr. Sam has also worked on the inspection of food for you ensure that the army's food supply was safe and never poisoned. "You see all the people go in and out of the two wars and meet you some incredible people, stated Dr. Sam." He continued by saying, "they have something most of us experience in our lives never screw".


Some of the dogs that Dr. Sam was involved in the included guard and the Customs canine bomb dogs. They have military dogs who worked in areas of fighting alongside the soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan.


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