First-Class, Hands-On Continuing Education Workshops

Our workshops are designed to support clinicians as they refine diagnostic reasoning, adopt evidence-based techniques, and navigate the evolving clinical and welfare challenges of modern equine practice.

4-DAY IN PERSON Equine Lameness Workshop

With Dr. Sue Dyson MA Vet MB PhD

🗓️ Dates: 5-6-7-8 June 2026
📍 Location: Queensland, Australia

Gain practical experience, personalised guidance, and expert feedback in a small-group, immersive learning environment designed to elevate your diagnostic confidence and precision.

You’ll learn how to:

  • Apply systematic, evidence-based approaches to complex lameness cases
  • Refine diagnostic accuracy through supervised case assessment
  • Strengthen your clinical reasoning and practical examination skills
Suitable for: Veterinarians wanting to enhance their lameness diagnosis skills and confidently assess and manage complex cases in an in-person workshop environment.

3-DAY IN PERSON Equine Ophthalmology Workshop

With Dr. Dennis Brooks DVM PhD DACVO

🗓️ Dates: 12-13-14 June 2026
📍 Location: Brisbane, Australia

Gain direct experience diagnosing and managing complex eye conditions while refining your practical examination and treatment techniques under expert supervision.

You’ll learn how to:

  • Confidently recognise, assess, and treat urgent ocular emergencies
  • Perform advanced diagnostic and surgical procedures safely and effectively
  • Apply practical techniques to improve visual outcomes and client confidence
Suitable for: Veterinarians wanting to enhance their ophthalmology skills and deliver advanced care for eye cases with confidence in a hands-on workshop environment.

Our workshops are known for world-class teaching delivered through practical, small-group learning – giving you skills you can apply immediately in practice.

In Australia, this level of hands-on veterinary training is rare, and clinicians typically need to travel overseas to access it. Each workshop is led by a world-renowned expert and combines open, clinically relevant discussions with hours of supported practical training, with just 2–4 veterinarians per workstation.