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Emergency Veterinary

Big Al's Towing & Recovery, LLC

6520 Hinesley Rd, Cheyenne, WY 82001, United States

4.9 (2,169 reviews)
Brand Independent
Property type Emergency Veterinary

About This Hospital

Towing service ·  · 6520 Hinesley Rd

About this hospital

Big Al's Towing & Recovery, LLC

Public sources list Big Al’s Towing & Recovery, LLC at 6520 Hinesley Rd in Cheyenne, WY, and describe it as a towing service. In this directory, it is categorized under Emergency Veterinary, which matters when you need urgent help and you’re sorting out how transport and emergency response connect. If you’re searching in Cheyenne for emergency veterinary support, start by confirming the current emergency operating setup and arrival instructions.

Cheyenne emergency vet context

In Cheyenne, emergency veterinary searches often pop up after-hours or during sudden problems like breathing trouble, severe bleeding, or injury from a fall or vehicle incident. Demand can be concentrated around residential routes and travel corridors, especially when people are away from home and need a nearby option. An emergency-focused facility (even when not 24/7) can help by handling triage and advising whether to come in right away or arrange transport. Calling first can clarify timing and next steps.

Independent-practice angle

Because Big Al’s is listed as independent rather than part of a chain, the experience may depend more on local staffing and day-to-day decisions than on a standardized corporate pathway. Independent emergency practices may still handle common urgent cases, but the exact scope can vary depending on what’s available at the moment—staffing, ability to stabilize, and whether follow-up planning requires referral. That can be useful when you want local context, while chains sometimes offer more uniform systems.

Emergency-focused operating model

Emergency Veterinary listings in this category may operate on a set emergency schedule rather than around-the-clock service. Many such hospitals run through triage when people call or arrive, sorting cases by urgency and immediate needs. If you’re unsure how fast to move, ask how they handle triage and whether they want you to come in now or wait for an opening. In serious situations—especially breathing issues, active bleeding, or suspected poisoning—calling ahead can still be the quickest way to get direction.

Reception signal

This listing shows a public rating of 4.9 across 2169 reviews. For pet owners, a rating in this range typically suggests front-desk interactions are fairly consistent, with communication and overall perceived value landing on the same side for many reviewers. That said, review volume and star averages cannot tell you what will happen in your specific case. It’s still wise to call for current intake and emergency instructions.

Reviewer pattern

With 2169 public reviews, you have a larger set of experiences to compare, including viewpoints from local residents and people passing through. That volume can help you see patterns that hold up over time instead of relying on a handful of comments. You may still want to treat review summaries cautiously for emergencies, because the outcome can depend on how quickly symptoms were addressed, the severity at presentation, and what care was needed. Reading a mix of recent comments may help.

Before visiting

Before you drive to 6520 Hinesley Rd, consider a few practical steps. First, call ahead and ask the current emergency intake and arrival process. Second, bring any useful records you have, such as vaccination history, medication lists, and a brief timeline of what happened and when. Third, plan for payment readiness on arrival or during intake, since emergency services often require faster decisions. If you have an injured pet, prepare for safe handling during transport.

Location

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Contact & Links

Editor’s note

Useful when an independently-operated emergency hospital fits the case better than a chain and the hospital's typical hours align with the situation. Confirm by phone for time-sensitive cases.

Common questions

Should I call ahead before bringing my pet?

Yes — calling first lets the team confirm a veterinarian is on-site, that the case fits the hospital's scope, and that walk-ins are being accepted at that hour. A 60-second call can avoid a wasted drive.

What other emergency vets are in Cheyenne?

Our directory lists additional emergency veterinary hospitals serving Cheyenne. Use the "Other emergency vets" link in the sidebar to see the full city listing.

Listing reviewed: May 2026