By Lindsay Berreth/Jump Media
Meghan Duncan of Ocala, FL, has worked at the Palm Beach Equine Clinic (PBEC) in Wellington, FL, since 2021. Since 2022, she’s been Dr. Paul Wollenman’s technician, traveling to Wyoming in the summer and based at PBEC in the winter, where she assists clients with polo ponies.
What is your background with horses?
I rode and showed Western pleasure as a kid. As I grew older, I got out of horses and became more involved with school and sports, so horses kind of took a back seat. I always had a love and interest for it, but I just didn’t have the resources and the time to make it happen.
I moved to South Florida in 2008 for college, and around 2020, with COVID going on and big changes happening for a lot of people, I found myself in a position where I was no longer able to work my job in hospitality, which I had been doing since I was 15.
After some personal life events had happened, I needed something to get me out of the house. My mom mentioned an animal rescue that always needed volunteers. The couple who ran the rescue were elderly, so it was difficult for them to take care of the horses. I fell in love with being around the horses again.
What brought you to PBEC?
When I was a kid, I always wanted to be an equine vet. That was my dream. It just never happened, but one night, while I was volunteering at the rescue, one of the horses was colicking. They called me to see if I could help the vet, who was coming without a technician. I got to meet the emergency vet and see how that whole process worked for the first time. I was really intrigued.
The vet came out again the next day to recheck the horse and asked me if I wanted a job. I told him, yeah, that’d be great! He needed help on the weekends. He was a large animal vet, so he did horses, cows, goats, and sheep.
I wanted to work with horses specifically, and PBEC had a job post for a hospital technician, and the rest is history. I was hired in March 2021 by Dr. Kathleen Timmins and Holly Hall.
What does your job involve?
In 2022, I had the opportunity to work with Dr. Paul Wollenman, who founded the clinic in 1981. He worked in Florida in the winter and traveled to Wyoming in the summer to continue practicing. It sounded like a dream. I really wanted to take the opportunity to start traveling again.
We go to Big Horn, WY, in the summer and come back to Florida for the winter and spring. We work on polo ponies 99% of the time. There are some clients in Wyoming who have rodeo or ranch horses we work on.
Day to day, we see a lot of lamenesses and small wounds on the polo ponies — we do a lot of ultrasounding and regenerative therapy like PRP or stem cell injections. My job is to jog the horse, to keep the horse as still and quiet as possible while being treated, and I’ll help with scrubbing joints for joint injections, bandaging, keeping the inventory up to date, keeping the truck clean and stocked, uploading information to patient files, and handling some client communications.
What’s the most interesting thing about your job?
I like any kind of emergency care just because it’s something different. You don’t know what you’re going to walk into. It’s unpredictable, and you have to think on your feet.
What do you do in your free time?
When I’m in Wyoming, I love to go trail riding with a couple of friends or hiking with my dog. Our schedule is kind of crazy in Florida, but I like to spend time with my dog, go on long adventure walks, and find somewhere to hike or trail. I also like to go to the gym, work out, and do Crossfit.