Matt Brash | |
---|---|
Born | Matthew Brash 1963 (age 60–61) Bonn, Germany |
Education | Royal Veterinary College |
Medical career | |
Profession | veterinarian |
Matthew Brash (born 1963) is a British veterinarian and television presenter. Brash began his career at the Flamingo Land zoo around 1991. He has been a TV presenter or star in the TV programmes Zoo Vet, Zoo Vet At Large, Vets to the Rescue, and Vets in the Country on BBC and ITV1. He wrote the book Zoo Vet about the situations he encountered as a veterinarian.
Brash was born in 1963 in Bonn in Germany. [1] He has three siblings and is the youngest. [1] [2] His parents were diplomats and moved with their family around the world. [1] When he was six years old, Brash lived in Canada and remembers trying to play with an infant brown bear. [1] His family next moved to Vietnam while the Vietnam War was being fought – Brash recalls hearing exploding bombs in the distance. [1] The family was protected by the Gurkhas. [1] While in Vietnam, Brash began studying lizards and insects and became interested in rare animals. [1]
Brash attended The King's School, Canterbury as a boarder while his parents served around the world. [3] He studied at the Royal Veterinary College between 1982 and 1987, [3] and while there met Clare, his future wife. [1] In 1991, he relocated to be closer to her. [1] Clare became an equestrian veterinarian. The couple have four children, Jack, Charlie, Alfie, and "Tiger". [1]
Brash began serving as a veterinarian at the Flamingo Land zoo (North Yorkshire) around 1991. [1] At the zoo, he once spent two days giving vasectomies to 27 baboons and took 10.5 hours to anaesthetise 99 flamingos to allow the zoo to identify each animal's sex. [4] In 1998, he joined the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals and HM Customs and Excise officials in an operation against a parrot smuggler. [1] [4] The raid, filmed for Undercover Police, was Brash's first television appearance, [4] and it was where he first met Katie Metcalfe, a television producer. As a result of that encounter, Brash came up with the concept for the TV show Zoo Vet At Large. [1] In 1998, he received television coverage of his work at the Flamingo Land zoo, [5] and, after the BBC noticed him, he appeared with the veterinarian Trude Mostue as co-star of the TV programme Vets to the Rescue. [4] [5] In 2002, he starred in the TV programme Vets in the Country which centred on his veterinary clinics near York, [5] and in 2003, he began starring in the ITV1 show Zoo Vet. [4] Brash treated the owls that appeared in the 2001 film Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone; [6] when the American owl trainers noticed that the owls were unwell during practices in Newcastle upon Tyne, their Hampshire veterinarian suggested that they seek Brash's help. [6] Brash, who had three days to treat them before filming began, determined that the owls had leukocytozoonosis and treated them. [6]
Brash had a veterinary clinic called Battle Flatts surgery in Pocklington that he started on 8 September 2001. [4] [7] He later opened three more practices in Stamford Bridge, Strensall, and Norton-on-Derwent, [1] [8] and began attending weekly at Flamingo Land zoo, though he saw the small animals from Flamingo Land at Pocklington to allow him to be at his practice more. [4] One of his most serious injuries as a veterinarian was caused when a white rabbit bit his wrist and opened an artery. [1] [4] In 2010, national veterinary chain CVS purchased Brash's four veterinary practices, which had nine veterinarians and 31 additional employees on their staff. [8] After the transaction, Brash departed from the Ark Alliance, his veterinary group that owned the clinics. [8] Between August 2008 and August 2009, the company had £1.8 million (US$2,804,090.95) in revenue and a before-tax profit of £141,000 (US$219,653.79). [8] Brash is a member of the British Veterinary Zoological Society and was vice president of the society in 2014. [9] [10]
Brash authored Zoo Vet for Shaffron Publishing in 2007 about his experiences as a veterinarian. [1] His publisher had asked him to write about 80,000 words and gave him 12 weeks to complete the book, so before going to his regular daily work, Brash would wake up by 4:00 am to write several thousand words while his family was still asleep. [6] He promoted the book at Great Yorkshire Show. [11]
Testifying in Hull Magistrates' Court, Brash in 2010 was a prosecution witness in a case involving three men who were found guilty of violating the Protection of Badgers Act 1992 when they were caught digging up a sett. [12] He testified that he believed the badgers had been living in the sett. [12] In 2015, Brash was a Burgess Pet Care veterinary adviser, [13] and in 2017, he was the resident veterinarian for Co-op Insurance. [14]
James Alfred Wight, better known by his pen name James Herriot, was a British veterinary surgeon and author.
A veterinarian (vet) is a medical professional who practices veterinary medicine. They manage a wide range of health conditions and injuries in non-human animals. Along with this, veterinarians also play a role in animal reproduction, health management, conservation, husbandry and breeding and preventive medicine like nutrition, vaccination and parasitic control as well as biosecurity and zoonotic disease surveillance and prevention.
Pocklington is a market town and civil parish at the foot of the Yorkshire Wolds in the East Riding of Yorkshire, England. At the 2021 Census, its population was 10,123. It lies 13 miles (21 km) east of York, and 22 miles (35 km) northwest of Hull.
Emergency Vets is a reality television series that aired on Animal Planet. First aired in 1998, it depicts the working and outside lives of the veterinarians at Alameda East Veterinary Hospital in Denver, Colorado, plus the animals that they treat. At its peak of popularity, Emergency Vets alternated with The Crocodile Hunter as Animal Planet's most popular show.
The European badger, also known as the Eurasian badger, is a badger species in the family Mustelidae native to Europe and West Asia and parts of Central Asia. It is classified as least concern on the IUCN Red List, as it has a wide range and a large, stable population size which is thought to be increasing in some regions. Several subspecies are recognized, with the nominate subspecies predominating in most of Europe. In Europe, where no other badger species commonly occurs, it is generally just called the "badger".
Flamingo Land is a theme park, zoo, and resort located in Kirby Misperton, North Yorkshire, England. Opened in 1959, it has been owned and operated by The Gibb Family since 1978.
David Conrad Taylor, BVMS, FRCVS, FZS, was a British veterinary surgeon. He was the first veterinary surgeon to specialise in zoo and wildlife medicine. Taylor worked with zoo and wild animals from 1957, acting as a consultant on the treatment of some of the rarest species on Earth. He was world-renowned as an expert in marine mammal medicine. From 1968, he was the vet in charge of Cuddles, the first captive orca to be kept in the UK, at Flamingo Park, North Yorkshire.
Bruce Fogle, is a vet and author of pet care books and travel narratives. Canadian by birth, he has lived and worked in London for over 40 years.
Wild Life is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Masato Fujisaki. It was serialized in Shogakukan's shōnen manga magazine Weekly Shōnen Sunday from December 2002 to January 2008, with its chapters collected in 27 tankōbon volumes. It follows a high school juvenile delinquent, Tesshō Iwashiro, working to become a veterinarian.
Stephen Leonard is a Northern Irish veterinarian and television personality.
Trude Mostue is a Norwegian veterinary surgeon and television presenter. She is best known for her appearances in the BBC documentary series Vet School in 1996, and later in the follow-up series Vets in Practice. She went on to present and co-present a number of television series. After leaving England, Mostue has returned to veterinary practice full-time in Norway.
Bondi Vet is an Australian factual television series. It follows the lives of veterinary surgeon Chris Brown at the Bondi Junction Veterinary Hospital, and emergency veterinarian Lisa Chimes at the Small Animal Specialist Hospital (SASH), in the Sydney suburb of North Ryde.
Chris Brown is an Australian veterinarian, television presenter and author. He is best known for the television series Bondi Vet, which began screening in 2009. He hosted The Open Road with Doctor Chris on CBS.
The Incredible Dr. Pol is an American reality television show on Nat Geo Wild that follows Dutch-American veterinarian Jan Pol and his family and employees at his practice in rural Weidman, Michigan. The series premiered October 29, 2011, and has two or three seasons every year.
Aloha Vet is an American factual television series that followed the late Dr. Scott Sims as he traveled Hawaii in the course of his veterinary career. Sims was in talks for a second season when he was diagnosed with bladder cancer, which he died of two months later on July 25, 2015.
Scott Sims DVM was an American veterinarian and television personality. He is best known for his factual television series Aloha Vet, which aired in 2015.
Vets in Practice is a BBC fly-on-the-wall documentary series that followed a group of trainee veterinary surgeons. The first episode, Animal Magic, aired at 8 pm on 26 August 1997. Series one attracted 8.09 million viewers. It made celebrities of Trude Mostue and Steve Leonard, who became TV presenters.
Julian Norton is a British veterinary surgeon, author and TV personality, best known for his appearances on thirteen series of The Yorkshire Vet, which has been broadcast on Channel 5 since 2015.
Patricia O’Connor Halloran was an American veterinarian and longtime head caretaker at New York's Staten Island Zoo.
Dr. T, Lone Star Vet is an American television series on the Nat Geo Wild network. It premiered on October 13, 2019, and follows Lauren Thielen, the titular Dr. T, and the veterinarians and staff of the Texas Avian & Exotic Animal Hospital located in Grapevine, Texas.