Anyone who moves to Plympton hears it -the inevitable joke that there are more horses than people living there. Anyone who drives through a street or two will see enough evidence to think that may be true. Perhaps there is no town better equipped to house so many horses because in addition to being home to an impressive equestrian population, Plympton is also home to the renowned South Shore Equine Clinic and Diagnostic Center.
Founded in 2006 and run by Dr. Mark T. Reilly, D.V.M, Diplomate ABVP (Equine) and a team of six talented veterinary doctors, including his wife Dr. Linda J. Cimetti, South Shore Equine Clinic is a hub for the horse owning and loving community in Plympton and far beyond. As a young boy growing up in Abington, Reilly was exposed to horses through his father. “My father owned race horses,” Reilly says, “but he never touched them. He was just a huge fan of the sport. I rode at Briggs and rode a bit as a kid, but growing up I never had a horse of my own.” That is certainly not the case anymore as not only does Reilly have his own horse, Luche, who is referred to as the “babysitter” of the clinic, but Reilly is surrounded by horses every day and often nights, too.
Reilly worked at the horse racing tracks in his youth as a groom and later as a veterinary assistant. He states, “Horses just came easy to me.” A growing passion for working with animals took him to the University of New Hampshire where Reilly earned a B.S. in Animal Science. He then attended Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine and graduated in 1991. Upon graduation, Dr. Reilly set off to work on the East coast horse racing circuit with Dr. Richard Kester. He divided his time between working on the East coast and spending winters in southern Florida before moving to work at Delaware Park with racing thoroughbreds and racing Arabian horses. Reilly then settled on Cape Cod where he established a large animal ambulatory practice in 1995 that serviced both Cape Cod and the Islands and then spread northward to the South Shore. In 1997, Reilly combined his equine practice with a small animal practice, forming Mid-Cape Animal Hospital.
With the combined veterinary establishment, it became apparent that Reilly needed to expand in order to tend to his growing patients and this would require a lot of space and land. While seeing to some horses in Plympton one day, Reilly was explaining his plight to the horse owner who jumped in and said, “I know a place!” That place was the current location on Palmer Road. “We pulled up and it was a shell of a house in major disrepair and the ‘For Sale’ sign was hanging off the hinges,” Reilly recalls. Still, the outbuildings and land offered the perfect site that Reilly envisioned for an equine hospital and the land was purchased. The main house was unsalvageable and too close to the road so it was torn down, but construction began in 2005 and by 2006 South Shore Equine Clinic and Diagnostic Center opened to the public.
Now seeing approximately 1,500 horses a year, South Shore Equine Clinic and Diagnostic Center has become one of the most revered medical and diagnostic centers for the equestrian community not only on the South Shore but in the country. What started as a run-down but brimming with possibility farm is now a 7,000 square foot facility, with two six-stall barns, two ICU stalls, exercise areas, four different lameness surfaces for evaluation, an indoor trotting aisle, sand and grass paddocks, open field, standing MRI room, a laboratory and diagnostics center, a surgical suite, two induction and recovery rooms, and an outpatient area. With state of the art technology and services offered that can’t be found anywhere else in the area, Reilly has made South Shore Equine Clinic an invaluable part of the community.
Stepping inside the welcoming reception area it is easy to see that order and cleanliness are standard as is the love of all things horse with pictures and décor of the equestrian nature covering the walls. Beyond the reception area is a trotting hall -a nine-foot wide, long hallway that not only allows the horses to move about the hospital but to also be observed by the team to evaluate their range of motion -especially in bad weather. The floor of the trotting area is a deep shade of red. “The floor is red because when, say, black surfaces are wet from snow or rain, the horses think it’s a body of water or a puddle and they will try to jump over it. The red doesn’t look like anything to the horses so they can move about without feeling like they need to jump when they are possibly injured,” Reilly explains.
Leading from the trotting hall is an induction room that is padded and equipped with a rope system to gently lower sedated horses to a resting position and be hoisted up into the adjacent surgery suite. The surgical suite offers the latest and most advanced veterinary technology such as a carbon dioxide laser, and is equipped to house 4-5 medical staff as well as manage almost any type of elective surgery such as castrations, tumor removals, orthopedic procedures, arthroscopy, and soft tissue procedures. Surgeries are available for viewing via a “birds eye view” television if the horse owners wish to watch the procedures. The procedures are often recorded and made available as instructional resources for veterinary students.
Another service that sets South Shore Equine Clinic apart from other veterinary centers is the open field, standing MRI facility. It is one of only eighteen open field units in the country. The open field design allows horses to stand in a semi-sedated but weight bearing stance to image all the areas needing evaluation on the horse. This way of conducting an MRI reduces risks to the patient as well as expense to the owner. Additionally, this technology allows highly detailed imaging. Reilly explains, “I can do 330 images in an hour and a half of 3mm slices of a six-inch area, so it’s just like human medicine -you can see everything. It has revolutionized especially how we deal with lower limb lameness.” Reilly also explains that because the imaging is digital now images can be manipulated to show layers and angles and can be emailed to anyone on the care team for the horse.
Maintaining this cutting-edge technology is hardly carefree, however. “The MRI room has its own HVAC and has to be maintained at 66 degrees -give or take a few degrees. The bigger the magnet the more important the stability temperature,” Reilly points out, “So if something is off -the humidity or temperature, an orange light goes off and notifies our on-call HVAC company and they have to come out and fix it right away. There are days I come in and they are already here adjusting things. They can also tap into the program and adjust things remotely sometimes.”
Further exploration of the large, well-maintained facility leads to an evaluation area with comfort ICU stalls that have 24-hour monitoring, a stock to examine horses, and easy access from the outdoor unloading and evaluation areas where owners drop off the horses. When it comes to comfort for his patients met with logic and efficiency for the staff, nothing is overlooked by Reilly. “We have padded floors in the comfort stalls with just the right level of softness to keep it safe for the horses but also soft enough that we don’t have to put down four bags of shavings every time that have to be changed multiple times and between patients. With these floors we only need a half a bag of shavings.” Reilly goes on to explain, “If the horse is on IV fluids, we have the IV bags up in the ceiling and the lines are fed from there to the horse. That way we don’t have lines getting stepped on or tagled and the fluids can be managed from above the stall so as not to disturb the horse. So it is much more efficient in terms of less mess and also the horses can rest.”
Outside South Shore Equine Clinic, the attention to detail carries through to various lameness surfaces in the unloading area. Here, Reilly often asks the owner to demonstrate the issue by riding the horse if possible and observing the horses movement and reactions on five different surfaces which help Reilly evaluate lameness or other possible issues. Across from the unloading and evaluation are four different size grass paddocks, one small sand turnout, a riding ring, a lunge area, and a deep sand round pen. Housed off to the side of those areas is a large barn with three of the six stalls equipped for IV fluids and 24-hour monitoring. There is also an isolation stall for horses exhibiting things like a fever or other symptoms of being contagious. “Usually, we try to keep horses with fevers at their own barns to control exposure, but if we have to keep them here this is where they will be treated,” says Reilly.
South Shore Equine Clinic is not only a standing facility, it is a mobile practice as well. With a fleet of mobile veterinary trucks equipped with drugs, ultrasound machines, endoscopes, and various medical materials and instruments tailored to each veterinarian’s preference or specialty services, South Shore Equine services can often be on site in the horses familiar surroundings. “On any given day there are at least three of our vet trucks on the road,” Reilly says.
Overseeing the whole operation is Reilly’s beloved horse, Luche, who lives at the clinic. Luche came to South Shore Equine Clinic as a two-year-old lame racing horse. The owner at that time was immediately uninterested in the horse once they found out treatment was needed. “The owner said ‘Well I don’t want him anymore,’ and I said, ‘Well I do!’” Reilly then performed surgery, after treatment, and rehabilitation to bring Luche back to full form and he made himself at home. Referred to by Reilly as the “babysitter” of the barn Luche is eager to welcome and interact with any patient or human who happens to be nearby.
Perhaps one of the most consuming endeavors available at South Shore Equine Clinic is the practice of foaling. A serene and well-equipped foaling barn allows Reilly and his team to safely and successfully foal out 18-20 foals a year. Reilly also says he performs artificial insemination for breeding on about 20-25 mares each year. The mares are monitored throughout the eleven-month gestation period and close to the expected time of delivery they are brought to the barn and kept comfortable and monitored. Once the foal is born there are 24-hour surveillance cameras with infrared camera for night vision observation without disturbing the protective mares and their foals.
Due to foaling, the busiest time at South Shore Equine clinic is in the spring. “Horses give birth in the spring months because mares instinctively don’t want their babies to be leaving and weaning in the middle of winter. They instinctively want to mate between February to June and give birth around that time a year later.” Reilly explains that the clinic foaling barn is run rather like a hotel reservation service and mares are booked to come in around the time of delivery -which means a full house -or barn, rather, for a few months each year. “This year we had eight mares ready to drop their foals all at once because some of them were kind of holding on and not delivering…that’s a little intimidating,” jokes Reilly, “It was like hot potato deciding who was going to be on call each night for that because we knew they would all go close together.”
With so many services and comforts available at South Shore Equine Clinic, Reilly has also managed to provide a fully functional and valuable laboratory on site. The full in-house laboratory is located in a former outbuilding that was converted. “It was our Covid project,” Reilly jests. In the past, when blood tests were ordered and cultures needed, it was all sent out for testing. The on-site lab now allows immediate blood test results as well as culture evaluations and other test results to be determined much quicker and at less of a cost. Reilly demonstrates, “It used to take about five days to get, say, a culture back. Now, I know in 18 hours what antibiotic to use. In 36 hours I can call a test negative. It means better treatment for the horse and less expense to the owner in making sure the right thing is done right away. Especially with regard to antibiotic resistance its important to be accurate.”
It is not all about horses, however, at South Shore Equine Clinic. Reilly understands that a horse is best cared for when the owners are educated and equipped to handle the huge responsibility of owning a horse. During the winter months, usually on Mondays, Reilly and his staff hold gatherings, lectures, and classes for the community on horse care. “We hold presentations on things like common maladies, hot topic issues -we survey our customers to see what they want to learn about. Sometimes there are sponsors for these events and door prizes and discounts are offered depending on the topic,” Reilly says. These presentations also offer the chance for people to ask questions in a non-stressful setting. Reilly points out, “When people are here with a problem they often aren’t thinking clearly. When they come to these classes they can ask better questions in a non-emergency event.”
Reilly also explains that this is his approach with passing on after care instructions to horse owners upon discharge of their animal. “The biggest cause for post treatment failure is non compliance with discharge orders,” Reilly says, “We make sure all the discharge information is clearly and thoroughly presented in the discharge area before they exit to the waiting room where the bill awaits them so they can focus on how to keep their horse from needing more treatment from failure to provide proper aftercare.”
Amidst all the complexities and hard work to run a state of the art center like South Shore Equine Clinic, the foremost mission of all who work there is the love of horses and the desire to care for them and give them the highest quality of life possible, and to provide owners and surrounding veterinary centers the ability and opportunities to do that. “We are here to give the best treatment and comfort we can to horses and to give the owners peace of mind,” Reilly assures, “We make sure each horse has treatment tailored specifically to them. You could have two horses with identical issues or illnesses and the treatments for both could be entirely different because we base it on what each horse needs.”
When asked about the demeanor of horses under duress or feeling ill Reilly says, “Horses are honest. Dogs and cats? Not so much. Dogs want you to think everything is fine even if their limb is falling off and cats mask symptoms, too -but horses give you instant feedback. Horses also respond to the tone and behavior of the owner, so if the owner is causing the horse anxiety we also help to calm the owner. A calm horse is a safer horse.” The staff at South Shore Equine Clinic share Reilly’s goals to make what could be a difficult experience as stress free and assuring as possible. “Not all of our staff ride or own horses,” Reilly points out, “But everyone here has a true love for them. Owning a horse is a passion, you have to want that responsibility and love it.”
When asked what Reilly would like the community to know about South Shore Equine Clinic he responds, “We are a partner in the care of your horse. We are available 24/7, 365 days a year. We want the best outcome for everyone and we work hard, around the clock to provide that for every patient and human that comes through the door.” After witnessing the nearly incomprehensible amount of work and dedication from Reilly and his staff in just one afternoon their love for horses is undeniable. Reilly and all at South Shore Equine Clinic have built more than a prestigious, well-outfitted medical practice, they have built a thoughtful, peaceful, healing center for horses to get them back home in the best condition and as soon as possible, because anyone who truly loves horses knows that home is where your horse is.