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🐾 Mobile Vet in Tarbolton, South Ayrshire

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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 Tarbolton

Tarbolton is a village in South Ayrshire, sitting about seven miles north-east of Ayr in open farmland on the edge of the Carrick hills. It has a population of around 1,700 and a history closely bound up with Robert Burns, who lived in the surrounding area during his late teens and twenties.

Burns attended dancing lessons in Tarbolton in 1779 - much against his father's wishes - and in 1780 helped to found the Bachelors' Club, a debating society that met in a thatched house on Sandgate Street. Burns was elected the club's first president and the building, now a National Trust for Scotland museum, still stands as a remarkably intact example of a late 18th-century working-class interior. Burns was also initiated into Freemasonry in Tarbolton in 1781.

The village was made a burgh of barony in 1671 and the nearby Fail Monastery, founded by the Trinitarian order in the 13th century, was an important institution before the Reformation. Agriculture and handloom weaving were the main occupations through the 18th and 19th centuries and the village retains something of that older rural character today.

Tarbolton is a quiet residential village with a church, a primary school and a handful of local amenities. It is within easy commuting distance of Ayr and Kilmarnock and forms part of the wider Burns Country trail that draws visitors to the Ayrshire countryside.

About South Ayrshire

South Ayrshire coat of arms(opens in new tab)

South Ayrshire is a council area in south-west Scotland, stretching from the coast at Troon south along the Firth of Clyde to Girvan and Ballantrae and inland across the hills of Carrick to the fringes of Galloway.

Ayr is the administrative centre and largest town, a traditional county town on the River Ayr with a long sandy beach, a racecourse and a busy high street. Prestwick, immediately to the north, is home to Glasgow Prestwick Airport. Troon is known for its championship golf links and harbour, while Girvan and Maybole serve the quieter southern half of the area.

The area is closely associated with Robert Burns, Scotland's national poet, who was born at Alloway on the outskirts of Ayr in 1759. Burns Cottage, the Burns Monument and the Robert Burns Birthplace Museum make Alloway one of Scotland's most visited literary landmarks. The Burns connection extends across the wider area through the villages and farms he knew and wrote about.

South Ayrshire's coastline is one of its greatest assets. Long sandy beaches stretch from Troon to Ayr, the views across the Firth of Clyde take in Arran, Ailsa Craig and the Kintyre peninsula and the Carrick coast south of Girvan is rugged and dramatic. Inland, the landscape rises to rolling farmland and the moorland hills that border Dumfries and Galloway.

Transport links are strong along the coast. The A77 connects Ayr and Prestwick to Glasgow, the Ayrshire Coast railway line runs regular services to Glasgow Central and Glasgow Prestwick Airport provides flights to European destinations. The A77 continues south through Girvan toward Stranraer and the ferry port for Northern Ireland.

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