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🐾 Mobile Vet in Lochgelly, Fife

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For Mobile Vets

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  • Only one Mobile Vet spot in Lochgelly
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  • £40/month - cancel anytime
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About Mobile Vets

A mobile vet visits your home to treat, vaccinate and check up on your pets - removing the stress of car journeys and waiting rooms for both you and your animal.

Home visits are especially valuable for elderly pets, nervous animals or households with multiple pets that would be difficult to transport to a surgery.

A good local mobile vet builds a relationship with your animals in their own environment, often spotting things that a stressed pet in a clinic might not show.

About Lochgelly

Lochgelly is a small town in west-central Fife, named after the loch on its western edge and historically associated with coal mining and iron production.

The town is perhaps best known - somewhat reluctantly - for the Lochgelly tawse, the leather strap once used in Scottish schools, which was manufactured here by John Dick and Sons.

Lochgelly has the award-winning Lochgelly Centre, a community and arts venue that has become a focal point for cultural activity in mid-Fife.

The town has local shops, a primary school and bus connections to Dunfermline and Kirkcaldy, with the M90 accessible via Cowdenbeath.

About Fife

Fife coat of arms(opens in new tab)

Fife is a large peninsula in eastern Scotland, bounded by the Firth of Forth to the south and the Firth of Tay to the north - a geography that has given it a distinct identity and earned it the traditional title of 'The Kingdom of Fife'.

Dunfermline is the largest town and a former capital of Scotland, while Glenrothes serves as the administrative centre and St Andrews is known worldwide as the home of golf and Scotland's oldest university.

The south-west of Fife has a strong industrial heritage - coal mining and shipbuilding shaped towns like Cowdenbeath, Lochgelly and Rosyth - while the East Neuk coastline is defined by a string of picturesque fishing villages: Anstruther, Crail, Pittenweem and St Monans.

Inland, the Howe of Fife is fertile agricultural land dotted with market towns like Cupar, Auchtermuchty and Falkland, the last of these home to a beautifully preserved Renaissance palace.

Fife is well connected to Edinburgh via the Forth Road Bridge and Queensferry Crossing and to Dundee via the Tay Road Bridge, making much of the region practical for commuters while retaining a strong sense of local identity.

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