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Freya Parker May 2026

Her transition to writing was accidental. In 2018, she began a simple blog called “The Barefoot Vet” to answer the same questions she heard daily from anxious farmers. A post titled “My Dog Ate a Sock: A Flowchart” went unexpectedly viral on social media. Pet owners weren’t just sharing it—they were printing it out and taping it to their refrigerators.

Parker is not without her critics. Some traditional vets argue that online advice, no matter how well-intentioned, can delay proper treatment. Parker agrees—to a point. “I never pretend to replace a hands-on exam,” she states clearly on her website’s disclaimer. “But the reality is that millions of people can’t afford an after-hours vet visit for every sneeze. My job is to help them make the least bad decision in a stressful moment.” freya parker

“In the city, a vet might prescribe a $200 diagnostic test without a second thought,” Parker once explained in a rare podcast interview. “On a farm, you have to ask: ‘Does the farmer have that money? Is the animal’s quality of life worth that intervention?’ That’s not cold economics—it’s compassionate realism.” Her transition to writing was accidental

In 2021, she left clinical practice to write full-time, but not for a glossy magazine. She joined and Cats.com as a lead contributor, where her evidence-based yet empathetic style found a massive audience. Her series on “Low-Cost Emergency Kits” became a lifeline during the cost-of-living crisis, and her deep-dive into feline dental health is cited by veterinarians in waiting rooms. Pet owners weren’t just sharing it—they were printing

Today, Freya Parker lives in Cornwall with her three rescue dogs (a three-legged lurcher, a deaf Jack Russell, and a “very opinionated” elderly cat named Toast). She still takes on a handful of farm clients each month—not for the money, she says, but to keep her hands in the soil and her advice grounded.