• Could CBD Help Your Cat or Dog Feel Better? Here’s the Truth.
    Sep 5 2025

    Summary

    In this episode of Tails of Truth, Dr. Angie and veterinary nurse, JoJo, approach one of their favorite topics...CBD for pets. They share clinical insights on how CBD can support cats and dogs with pain, arthritis, anxiety, seizures, inappetancde, and more — while clarifying what CBD is (and isn’t).

    You’ll learn the difference between CBD and THC, what makes a product trustworthy, and why concentration and transparency matter so much when choosing a CBD product. Dr. Angie also explains how CBD can safely fit alongside most medications, and where pet parents need to be cautious.

    If you’ve ever wondered whether CBD could help your cat or dog — or felt overwhelmed by the options on the market — this episode breaks it all down in a clear and concise way.

    👉 Explore Boulder Holistic Vet’s CBD Products:

    • HempRx Feline Drops

    • HempRx

    • HempRx Forte

    • HempRx Soft Chewz for Cats and Small Dogs

    • HempRx Soft Chewz for Dogs

    📌 Key Takeaways

    • CBD can be life-changing for senior cats with arthritis.
    • CBD can help improve quality of life.
    • Not all CBD products are created equal — concentration and sourcing matter.
    • CBD is not the same as THC and does not cause a high.
    • Product transparency is critical for safety.

    🗣️ Sound Bites

    “All cats over 12 should be on CBD.” — Dr. Angie

    “CBD is not THC.” — Dr. Angie

    “It looks tiny, but there's 450 doses in here.” — JoJo

    “Most of the products are not concentrated enough. And so people buy them because they're less expensive, but they're not equal.” — Dr. Angie

    • Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and YouTube
    • Schedule your personalized one-on-one consultation with Dr. Angie
    • Shop my favorite CBD.

    Please subscribe and review! xoxo Dr. Angie & JoJo


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    27 mins
  • From Our Inbox: Questions from Cat Parents
    Aug 29 2025

    📖 Summary

    In this episode of Tails of Truth, Dr. Angie Krause and JoJo answer listener questions all about cats. They discuss managing chronic conditions like asthma, IBD, and hyperesthesia, dive into flea and tapeworm control, and share advice on reintroducing cats after conflicts. They also cover tricky issues like recurring cysts, feline acne, and over-grooming—exploring both physical and mental causes. Rounding out the conversation, they offer practical guidance on outdoor access, cat behavior, and helping pet parents get a good night’s sleep. With warmth and honesty, Dr. Angie and JoJo emphasize a holistic, individualized approach to feline health and behavior.

    📌 Key Takeaways

    • Hyperesthesia can improve with CBD, body work, and sometimes Gabapentin.
    • Steroids remain an important tool for managing asthma and IBD in cats.
    • Tapeworms always mean fleas—prevention is key, and safe treatments are available.
    • Reintroducing cats after a conflict can be challenging and may require a behavior expert.
    • Recurring cysts may require surgical removal, otherwise “let it be.”
    • Over-grooming can be medical, behavioral, or pain-related; Prozac can sometimes help.
    • Outdoor access needs boundaries—catios or adjusting routines can help preserve sleep.
    • Holistic care and individualized veterinary advice can make a big difference in feline well-being.

    🎧 Sound Bites

    “If there are tapeworms, there are fleas.” ~Dr. Angie

    “I release you.” (on leaving a benign cyst alone) ~ Dr. Angie

    “Catios are the answer to everything.” ~Dr. Angie

    “Did I create a monster?” (on outdoor bathroom habits) ~JoJo

    • Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and YouTube
    • Schedule your personalized one-on-one consultation with Dr. Angie
    • Shop my favorite CBD.

    Please subscribe and review! xoxo Dr. Angie & JoJo


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    22 mins
  • The Rise of Mid-Level Practitioners in Veterinary Medicine: Concerns & Consequences
    Aug 22 2025

    📖 Summary

    In this episode of Tails of Truth, Dr. Angie and JoJo dive into Colorado’s Proposition 129, which introduces the Veterinary Professional Associate (VPA)—also called mid-level practitioners. They unpack what this new role means for veterinarians, veterinary nurses, and pet parents, and share concerns about the adequacy of training, increased liability, and corporate influence in veterinary medicine. With real talk and candid reflections, they emphasize why pet parents must ask more questions than ever about who is providing care for their animals. This conversation highlights both the challenges and the unknowns ahead as Colorado becomes the testing ground for a controversial shift in veterinary care.

    Learn more about the VPA program launching at CSU here.

    📌 Key Takeaways

    • Proposition 129 introduces mid-level practitioners (VPAs) into veterinary care in Colorado.
    • VPAs will have significantly less training than veterinarians but may still perform surgeries.
    • Veterinary nurses fear being sidelined, further straining an already burned-out workforce.
    • Corporate veterinary practices may benefit more than small, independent clinics.
    • Pet parents must advocate for their animals by asking who is overseeing their pet’s care.
    • Liability concerns for veterinarians will likely increase with VPAs practicing under their licenses.
    • The curriculum raises red flags with heavy online coursework and limited hands-on training.
    • The veterinary profession is already in crisis, and this law does not address root problems.
    • Other states may use Colorado as a case study before adopting (or rejecting) similar laws.
    • The future of veterinary care may look drastically different as these roles are implemented.

    🎧 Sound Bites

    “No one’s happy about it.” ~Dr. Angie~

    “I don’t want someone else to spay a dog or a cat under my license. I’m so uncomfortable with that.” ~Dr. Angie~

    “As a veterinary nurse, I feel underutilized in my role. And this makes it worse.” ~JoJo~

    “Instead of elevating veterinary nurses, this just left them behind.” ~Dr. Angie~

    “Maybe it will benefit rural clinics… but right now, I’m concerned for pet parents.” ~JoJo~

    • Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and YouTube
    • Schedule your personalized one-on-one consultation with Dr. Angie
    • Shop my favorite CBD.

    Please subscribe and review! xoxo Dr. Angie & JoJo


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    24 mins
  • Coffee Chat: Just Us, No Agenda
    Aug 15 2025

    ✏️ Summary

    In this unplanned, unscripted episode of Tails of Truth, Dr. Angie and JoJo ditch the veterinary agenda (sort of...there's still quite a bit of veterinary talk) and just… chat. From surprise pet stories to what’s happening in their personal lives, this one’s full of laughter, tangents, and those “oh my gosh, same” moments.

    You’ll hear about what’s been going on in their lives, what’s unfolding in the business, and a few comical detours along the way. You’ll also hear a few behind-the-scenes confessions and the kind of everyday moments that don’t usually make it into polished veterinary content.

    If you’ve ever wanted to feel like you’re sitting in on the breakroom conversation at your vet’s office, this is the episode to queue up. Whether you’re here for the veterinary talk, the laughs, or just to feel like you’re part of the conversation, this episode is a cozy one. Grab your coffee or matcha and join us.

    Key Takeaways

    • Dr. Angie is genuinely happy at Boulder's Natural Animal — aligned values and a team she trusts, which shows how practice culture matters for clinician well-being.
    • JoJo’s role has evolved from hands-on nursing to e-commerce + management, giving her more flexibility
    • Foxtail injuries can become an urgent, expensive ordeal — JoJo’s Bodhi needed sedation and extraction
    • Website/e-commerce matters — their old site (WooCommerce/WordPress) was clunky; migrating to Shopify is an investment in accessibility and better client experience.
    • Corporate clinic expansion (e.g., Chewy) is real and visible — Gen Z brand trust and integrated online/offline services make corporate clinics attractive; there’s room for both corporate and independent models if independents emphasize relationship and client-centered care.
    • Market pivots toward affordability are happening (Blue Pearl example reducing prices) — some systems are adjusting pricing to regain accessibility.
    • Government communications around animal health felt political — Dr Angie and JoJo were unsettled by messaging about avian influenza and the lack of clear, consistent data.
    • Student borrowing limits may worsen the veterinary shortage — less borrowing capacity could make veterinary school inaccessible for some and reduce diversity in the profession.
    • Small, unscripted conversations matter — hearing the humanity of the veterinary team builds trust and shows the complexity of decisions veterinarians make

    🔊 Sound Bites

    And it's reasonable and I love all the people there so much. — Dr. Angie

    Love this for you. And I think our clients are really happy too. — JoJo

    I just feel like I hit the jackpot in terms of roles. — JoJo

    “It's gonna be like a $3,000 ordeal by the time it's done.” — JoJo

    It's clunky and we're sorry and we're making it better. — Dr. Angie

    That's a shift in corporate veterinary medicine, in my opinion. — Dr. Angie

    • Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and YouTube
    • Schedule your personalized one-on-one consultation with Dr. Angie
    • Shop my favorite CBD.

    Please subscribe and review! xoxo Dr. Angie & JoJo


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    38 mins
  • From Our Inbox: Questions from Dog Parents
    Aug 8 2025

    Summary

    In this heartfelt and information-packed episode of Tails of Truth, Dr. Angie Krause and co-host JoJo respond to listener questions on everything from vet visit anxiety to separation anxiety, colitis, and navigating alternative veterinary treatments. They explore the challenges of managing anxious dogs, especially those who require chemical restraint, and discuss how holistic and pharmaceutical interventions can coexist. The episode closes with a candid discussion about vaccine hesitancy, integrative care access, and how pet parents can confidently advocate for their animal companions.

    🔖 Course + Discount Code

    🎓 Want to learn more about holistic parasite prevention, vaccines, or GI health?
    Dr. Angie's recorded courses are available now.
    Use code: TRUTHTAILS or TRUTHTALES to get a free course.
    👉 boulderholisticvet.com

    🎯 Key Takeaways

    • Chemical restraint can provide safe and smooth visits for anxious dogs.
    • Separation anxiety is diffcult, especially in pandemic-era puppies. Medications can help calm the nervous system and support training success.
    • Colitis and chronic diarrhea most often require deeper diagnostics.
    • Dogs who growl or bark are telling us they’re scared — and that’s something to respect, not suppress.
    • Alternative therapies are valid but often dismissed due to lack of vet training.
    • Vaccine protocols should be tailored and discussed
    • Holistic medicine is gaining traction, with herbs like Yunnan Baiyao now found in mainstream hospitals.
    • Telehealth consultations give pet parents access to integrative care no matter where they live.

    🔊 Sound Bites

    "Let your dog growl. Please. That's how they keep us safe." – Dr. Angie

    " We're asking dogs to do hard things, and it's okay to support them with medication." - Dr. Angie

    "I owe so many clinics cookies and bagels and apologies." -JoJo

    "Stack your care. Do all the things while they're sedated. Get it all done." - JoJo

    "It's not all quackery, but some of it is.I help people figure out the difference." Dr. Angie

    "You have a right to advocate for what you want for your pet." - JoJo

    • Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and YouTube
    • Schedule your personalized one-on-one consultation with Dr. Angie
    • Shop my favorite CBD.

    Please subscribe and review! xoxo Dr. Angie & JoJo


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    30 mins
  • Rethinking Heartworm Prevention: A Fresh Take on Heartworm Protocols
    Aug 1 2025

    ✏️ Podcast Summary

    In this episode of Tails of Truth, Dr. Angie breaks down everything you thought you knew about heartworm prevention and invites you to rethink the one-size-fits-all approach many clinics follow. She and JoJo explore common veterinary practices around annual testing, year-round prevention, and how geography, travel, and climate play a bigger role than most pet parents realize.

    They also tackle the realities of holistic care: what it means to balance low-toxicity living with real disease prevention, why heartworm treatment is more dangerous than prevention, and how to empower pet parents with information — not pressure.

    Plus, Dr. Angie shares a free resource to help you navigate parasite prevention with more confidence. Visit boulderholisticvet.com and use code TRUTHTAILS to access her Parasite Prevention course for free.

    Key Takeaways

    • Testing isn’t always necessary to dispense prevention. In low-risk areas, annual testing may not make sense.
    • Access to prevention should be simple. Withholding medication due to skipped testing can be counterproductive.
    • Prevention is safer than treatment. The heartworm treatment protocol is highly toxic; prevention is a micro-dose of ivermectin.
    • Seasonal prevention can be appropriate. In places like Boulder, Colorado, heartworm risk is seasonal due to mosquito activity.
    • Pet travel matters. If your pet leaves your local area, even briefly, prevention should be timed to cover that exposure window.
    • Heartworm affects cats, too. Though less common, cats can still get heartworm.
    • “Natural” doesn’t mean skipping prevention. A holistic approach still includes smart, low-risk prevention strategies.
    • Understanding transmission helps. Mosquitoes are the only vector — if they’re not present, the risk drops significantly.

    🔊 Sound Bites

    “Just give it to them. Like if you want to prevent this disease.” — Dr. Angie
    “Just do it. Just do it. I don’t want it to be your dog.” — Dr. Angie
    “Prevention is a holistic approach to heartworm.” — JoJo
    “It’s one of the least toxic things we do — it’s just ivermectin.” — Dr. Angie
    “We’re not saying don’t test. We’re saying don’t withhold care.” — Dr. Angie


    • Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and YouTube
    • Schedule your personalized one-on-one consultation with Dr. Angie
    • Shop my favorite CBD.

    Please subscribe and review! xoxo Dr. Angie & JoJo


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    24 mins
  • What We Love & Hate in Practice: Our Veterinary Confessions
    Jul 25 2025

    ✏️ Episode Summary

    In this laid-back, laughter-filled episode of Tails of Truth, Dr. Angie and veterinary nurse, JoJo, let you eavesdrop on one of their most candid chats yet — the real talk about what they love and what secretly grosses them out in vet medicine. From eyeball stories to the oddly satisfying world of pus (yes, really!), they spill the truth about daily icks, unexpected joys, and the moments that test their boundaries. It’s the kind of unfiltered back-and-forth that reminds you vet life is as much about people as it is about pets — and a lot about staying real. Grab your tea and laugh along as they prove it’s possible to take your work seriously without taking yourself too seriously.

    Key Takeaways

    • Every Yuck has a Yum: Even the “ickiest” parts of vet work (like pus and anal glands) can be weirdly satisfying for the right person.
    • Some tasks cross the line: Everyone has a boundary — for JoJo, it’s anythig eyeballs; for Dr. Angie, it’s removing them.
    • Client honesty matters: When pet parents come prepared (or over-prepared thanks to Google), it can actually help — not hurt — the appointment.
    • Communication beats perfection: It’s frustrating when you can’t find answers, but explaining why tests matter is part of good vet care.
    • Vet care is never just clinical: The relationships can be a huge "yum”
    • Balance over extremes: There’s room for holistic care and Western medicine — the goal is to choose what actually helps the animal.
    • Sometimes you bend the rules: Even holistic-minded folks will reach for the heavy-duty preventatives when bugs invade.
    • Consent & kindness matter: Using negative tools like shock collars is a hard yuck; building trust and respecting animals’ signals is a yum.

    🔊 Sound Bites

    “The very first yuck I can think of are eyeballs. I don't like anything to do with eyeballs. Like, none of it.” — JoJo

    “Men that love their cats. So great. — Dr. Angie

    “Don't yuck my yum.” — JoJo

    “Never will I ever. No, I cannot have bugs. I cannot do it.” — JoJo

    “Give me your vomiting cat and itchy dog and I'm gonna make it better.” — Dr. Angie

    “Don't do tests that aren't going to change your plan.” — Dr. Angie

    “Electric collars are a yuck.” — JoJo


    • Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and YouTube
    • Schedule your personalized one-on-one consultation with Dr. Angie
    • Shop my favorite CBD.

    Please subscribe and review! xoxo Dr. Angie & JoJo


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    30 mins
  • How to Maximize Vet Visits for You and Your Pet
    Jul 18 2025

    📚 Summary

    In this episode of Tails of Truth, Dr. Angie and JoJo chat about simple ways to get more out of every vet visit. From jotting down your questions and knowing your pet’s vaccine needs, to saying “no thanks” when something doesn’t feel right — they share real, practical tips to help you feel more confident and keep your pet comfortable. Plus, they break down how good communication and a supportive vet team can make all the difference. Dr. Angie and JoJo offer practical advice to help every visit be more efficient, supportive, and aligned with your pet’s well-being.

    📌 Key Takeaways

    • Come prepared: know what your pet needs and what you want.
    • It’s okay to say “no” or “I’m not sure” during your visit.
    • Understand your “vaccine personality” so you can make choices that fit your pet and your comfort level.
    • Write down your questions ahead of time — and bring them with you.
    • Always bring the primary caretaker to the appointment (or have them on the phone)
    • How you transport your pet matters — think ahead about stress, sedation, and comfort.
    • A good vet team supports you — there’s no place for pushy sales tactics.
    • Take your time — you never have to make decisions on the spot unless it’s truly urgent.

    🎧 Sound Bites

    • “It's okay to say no and I don't know.” — Dr. Angie
    • “Bring your pet and the poop.” — JoJo
    • “There should never be pressure to make that decision right then.” — JoJo
    • “We don’t do high-pressure sales in veterinary medicine.” — Dr. Angie
    • “How you get your pet to the vet matters.” — Dr. Angie
    • Follow us on Instagram, Facebook, TikTok and YouTube
    • Schedule your personalized one-on-one consultation with Dr. Angie
    • Shop my favorite CBD.

    Please subscribe and review! xoxo Dr. Angie & JoJo


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    21 mins