Now Open! Locust Trace Veterinary Clinic


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NOW OPEN!

Locust Trace Veterinary Clinic is Lexington’s Newest and Most Unique Animal Hospital

Located just three miles north of New Circle Road exit 7.
Call today for an appointment: 859-225-0303
(GPS Address: 3591 Leestown Road, Lexington, KY)

Our full-service animal clinic provides comprehensive care, an experienced staff, and a spacious new facility.  Located at the new Agriscience Center, our highly trained team provides excellent care to our clients while they inspire the next generation.  From routine exams to advanced surgical procedures, Locust Trace Veterinary Clinic is here for you.

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Frequently Asked Questions:
How is the clinic different from other clinics?
We are located on the campus of Fayette County School’s  AgriScience Center, and allow students to observe and learn from our doctors and staff. Ours is the first-ever animal hospital located where students with an interest in veterinary medicine are mentored by professionals and are a part of an animal hospital’s daily functions.

Will I be going in a school with my pet?
Nope.  The clinic is adjacent to the school but clients and their pets will enter our spacious lobby through the exclusive animal clinic entrance.  You’ll also find ample parking on a beautiful campus filled with animal lovers of all ages.

Will students be providing care or observing during my visit?
While our facility has a secondary purpose to inspire students in the fields of animal medicine, our primary purpose is providing excellent care to our patients.  Only experienced veterinarians and trained technicians will be providing medical care.  Students will be allowed to observe and assist when appropriate.

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Locust Trace Opens Doors to New Generation of Ag Science Education

Originally Published at bizlex.com

by Tim Thornberry

Lexington, KY - The role agriculture plays in society is extensive, to say the least, but that often goes unseen — or at the very least, it’s not a common topic of conversation.

However, with food, fuel and fiber at the center of the agriculture industry, especially the world’s food supply, the need for educating a new generation on agriculture is necessary — if not critical — to future human well-being.

The new Locust Trace AgriScience Farm located on 82 acres of rolling farmland along Leestown Road in Fayette County will give new meaning to what ag education is all about and what it will look like in the future.

The $18 million school, which serves as the agricultural component of the Eastside Technical Center, is preparing to open this year as a working farm with a strong emphasis on the equine sector, complete with a vet clinic and a classroom building not only for ag classes but for traditional math, English and science classes as well. The 82-acre campus is designed to accommodate up to 250 students.

Fayette County Public Schools received the land for the school at no cost from the federal government’s surplus property program. 
Joe Norman, principal at Eastside, said the new school represents a “re-thinking of ag ed” in many ways.

“We are trying to give students the best education we possibly can, and through the advances at this school, we are giving them the opportunity to go more in-depth with training at the high school level and to better prepare them for the college or postsecondary level,” he said.

Norman also said the school should open doors for students by helping them to better understand the number of different occupations that are tied to agriculture. The school will have the capacity to serve all of the public high schools in the county with five agriculture teachers on staff. Indeed, at the root of these educational needs are agriculture educators and the programs they teach or develop.

Matt Chaliff serves as the ag education program consultant for the Kentucky Department of Education (KDE) as well as executive secretary for the state’s FFA organization (also known as Future Farmers of America). In doing so, Chaliff works with the 250 agriculture educators in 145 agriculture programs across the state on issues related to curriculum, facilities and program development, just to name a few — or as he puts it, anything to make the local programs stronger.

“One of the neat things about agriculture education is we’re able to help students learn core academic content but learn it in an applied manner,” Chaliff said. “And they are able to apply that in a real-world setting. We think that is really valuable and helps students get their hands around what they’re doing and learn it a lot better.”

But ag educators are not just seeing farm kids come through their doors. Chaliff said more than half of those students come from a non-farming background. Add to that the different kinds of programs connected with agriculture, such as food science, environment science, agri-business and horticulture; today’s educators are teaching things not thought of 20 or 30 years ago.

Chaliff said these kinds of subjects may not lead students to production agriculture, but they are still very important to the industry, considering the fact that about 20 percent of Kentucky’s economy is made up of agricultural jobs.

“It’s important that we have folks prepared for those jobs,” he added.
And as the scope of fields that can benefit from agriculture education grows, including the renewable fuels industry, many opportunities are available to students who choose to make agriculture their vocation.
Chaliff pointed out that it is the network of ag educators that begin that process for countless students every year, through a three-circle model that includes classroom instruction, leadership development or FFA, and real-world experience, which is the Supervised Ag Experience (SAE) part of the program.

This model connects FFA directly with classroom learning. Students not only get instruction in varying environments depending on what is housed at each school, but they learn leadership skills directly related to those classroom experiences. Then they take that knowledge and incorporate it into a real-life setting through the SAE. Chaliff said FFA is intended to be an integral ingredient of the whole system and that one part doesn’t work without the other.

“They (the students) get some kind of real-world experience that is agriculture related, hopefully that is related to their career pathway, and they get to apply what they have learned in class and actually build on that,” said Chaliff. “There’s a lot of work outside the normal 8-a.m.-to-3-p.m. day in order to keep a good solid ag program running. The job of the ag educator is to keep all those plates in the air at once.”

But loving what they do is a driving force for the teachers and also the students. In fact, 80 to 90 percent of the current ag instructors Chaliff works with are former ag students and FFA members, he said. 
“Most ag teachers have come through the program and really enjoyed it and really got a lot out of it and wanted to do it themselves so they could give back and continue to make an impact on the kids,” Chaliff said.

Still with all the changes that have occurred in the ag field over the last few years, the image of traditional farming comes to mind when it comes to agriculture education. Chaliff said today’s ag-ed goes far beyond that.

“When you say agriculture, obviously most people immediately think of farming. Farmers are less than two percent of the total population, but even when you think about the production agriculture people, they are using apps on their smart phones to do their job every day and using high-tech computers and $300,000 pieces of equipment,” he said.

Today’s ag students can expect to choose from a wide variety of careers, from veterinarian assistants to pet groomers to mechanics to environmental sciences, and the list goes on.

Chaliff, who taught in the classroom himself before joining KDE, pointed out that one of his former students now works as an agronomist for the state’s highway department. He said that each district has an agronomist on staff to manage the right-of-way land along the thousands of miles of highways in Kentucky.
With so many opportunities available, Chaliff said agriculture education is a vital component of the overall educational picture in the state.

“It helps students get that context for their learning. It helps students get those 21st-century skills they need — things like communication, collaboration and critical thinking that we say every student needs to have. But in a traditional classroom setting, it’s so hard to get,” he said. “Through the different things in the ag classroom, FFA and the SAE programs, students are really getting those kinds of skills they need to be competitive in a global market.”

And as a way of leading and teaching by example, when Locust Trace opens its doors and switches on its array of solar photovoltaic panels, it will be home to Fayette County Public Schools’ first net-zero energy school. Its building operations will generate, over the course of a year, enough renewable energy to pay back the energy it takes from the utility company.

Locust Trace Construction Progress

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Photos of the current state of construction for the Locust Trace AgriScience Center in which the Veterinary Clinic will be located.

Helping Student and Animals – Sparing the Enviornment

Click the image below for a glimpse at the radical measures taken to ensure this massive facility makes a minimal impact on the environment.

"Green" to the Core

Construction Continues

Dr. Martin Examines construction progress (Click for larger image)

Informational PDF

Click here to view an informational PDF that details everything from the Locust Trace initial vision to future plans.

Locust Trace Buzz

New Fayette agriscience school inundated with interest from students, offers of livestock

By Jim Warren — jwarren@herald-leader.com

Posted: 12:00am on Feb 16, 2011; Modified: 3:54am on Feb 16, 2011

The new Locust Trace Agriscience Farm isn’t completed, but Fayette County student interest in the new school is running so high that district officials say they might not be able to accommodate everyone when it opens next fall.

Evening classes are a possibility as a way to meet demand, school officials said.

Locust Trace is being built on an 82-acre site off Leestown Road. It will be a working farm with livestock, pastures, orchards and gardens, where students will study veterinary science, equine science, horticulture and related subjects.

So far, 2,295 public school students now enrolled in grades 9 to 12 have expressed interest in careers that would include classes offered at Locust Trace.

“Interest is phenomenal,” said James Hardin, Fayette County Public Schools’ coordinator of career and technical education. “We’re just getting into the scheduling process, and the preliminary numbers from our high schools show we have 175 students right now saying they want to be in the program. Scheduling usually doesn’t end until early or mid-March, so it could be amazing to see what the total turns out to be.”

According to Harden, Locust Trace is designed for 250 students a day, 125 in the morning and 125 in the afternoon. Students in the program would spend half their day at the farm, the other half at their home schools.

There has been some preliminary talk but no decision about making Locust Trace a full-fledged technical high school capable of handling more students. Additional construction would be required.

In the short term, evening classes could serve additional students at the farm, Harden said. Officials are preparing a survey of students to identify how many might be interested in evening classes.

Meanwhile, so many people are offering to donate livestock for Locust Trace that the school system says it probably won’t have to buy any animals for the $18.2 million farm-school.

The school expects to have horses, cattle, sheep, goats and other animals on the Locust Trace site, but no livestock can be moved to the farm until construction is complete.

“With all the donations we don’t anticipate having to spend any money buying livestock,” Hardin said.

Reach Jim Warren at (85) 231-3255 or 1-800-950-6397, Ext. 3255.

Read more: http://www.kentucky.com/2011/02/16/1636575/new-fayette-agriscience-school.html#ixzz1NCOrrcsW

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