Search Site   
Current News Stories
Butter exports, domestic usage down in February
Heavy rain stalls 2024 spring planting season for Midwest
Obituary: Guy Dean Jackson
Painted Mail Pouch barns going, going, but not gone
Versatile tractor harvests a $232,000 bid at Wendt
US farms increasingly reliant on contract workers 
Tomahawk throwing added to Ladies’ Sports Day in Ohio
Jepsen and Sonnenbert honored for being Ohio Master Farmers
High oleic soybeans can provide fat, protein to dairy cows
PSR and SGD enter into an agreement 
Fish & wildlife plans stream trout opener
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
Veterinarian still making house calls after 50 years
 
By Stan Maddux
Indiana Correspondent

LA PORTE, Ind. – He’s like an old-fashioned doctor making house calls but his patients are cows and other animals on farms.
Dr. Larry W. Smith, a veterinarian from Indiana for close to a half century, has no plans to retire. “I like doing what I do and I like doing it for the people I do it for,” said Smith, who turns 71 at the end of this month.
The owner of New Prairie Large Animal Practice in La Porte also remains fascinated by the science and medicine involved in his line of work and keeping up with the advancements in the field.
Unlike medical physicians whose relationships with patients are more about business, Smith said he’s developed lasting friendships with many of the families whose farm animals he treats. There’s a personal touch shared in their interactions.
He’s even attended weddings and other special events for the children and grandchildren of his clients at their invitation.
“That’s really nice when you’ve been around long enough to be involved in multiple generations of families. That’s always good,” Smith said.
Smith said growing up on a farm raising chickens and beef cows near Richmond in eastern Indiana is what led him to Purdue University, where he earned his degree in veterinary medicine in 1974.
His first two years as a veterinarian were spent in Wisconsin and Ohio, then opportunity presented itself in LaPorte about 20 miles from the southern tip of Lake Michigan.
Most of the farm animals he treated back then were dairy cows. However, Smith said the number of local dairies vanishing from the landscape resulted in horses now representing about half of his calls for service followed by dairy and beef cows, goats and sheep.
He also sees a limited number of swine mostly for children entering the animals in 4-H related contests.
Smith said he travels about 50,000 miles a year to farms within a 40 mile radius of the city.
Much of his work involves vaccinations, blood work and delivering calves but he’s stitched up more than his share of animals like horses badly cut from doing things like trying to jump fences or running into sharp objects.
His surgical procedures include cesarean sections for cattle having difficulty with natural birth. He’s also used a scalpel in situations like cows needing twisted stomachs corrected and infected sores taken out.
Smith said he’s also found himself in very unusual situations with happy and tragic endings like delivering live triplets from a herd of cattle and four stillborn calves.
He once removed the handle of a wheel barrel from a horse whose life he saved. 
He said the handle penetrated then broke off beneath the hide of the animal trying to jump over the wheel barrel.
Smith also doesn’t seem to mind the broken bones and other injuries he’s suffered from large animals whose behavior can be unpredictable especially while being treated. He once had several ribs broken when slammed into a wall by a cow and an injury from another cow resulted in hip replacements years later.
Smith said being in a profession that allows him to work outside especially in an agriculture setting also helps keep him going.
“I’ll be 71 at the end of this month. My health is good. I have aches and pains like everybody else my age. As I age I may have to limit some of what I do from a physical standpoint but I do not have any plans on retirement,” he said. “My family jokingly says I won’t retire and I might just end up dropping dead in a barn somewhere which is OK.”
1/11/2021