“You have very stiff and formal language to Xi Jinping on the occasion of what is actually an historically important event – the 75th anniversary of relations of the People’s Republic of China,” Mr Foster-Carter says.
"I graduated 10 years ago," said vet Elizabeth Harries."Like most people, I thought I'd be out and about doing all the fun things, but unfortunately there's a lot of paperwork and that has increased.
"We have to record all of our visits, our medications use, batch numbers. We also have to help our farmers with their farm health plans, so that can take up a lot of our time."In her surgery, she describes how she could easily spend two or three hours doing paperwork in an eight-hour day."Unfortunately our clinical work has to come first for obvious reasons," she added.
"It certainly contributes to the fact our job isn't a nine-to-five job."A lot of our paperwork is done in the evening when we've officially finished work."
Ms Harries is a regular visitor to a number of sites - including Blaenffynnon farm in Horeb near Llandysul in Ceredigion.
Such visits allow her to check on the cattle, with the relationship she forms with their owner crucial to keeping them healthy.Three babies - a boy and two girls - have been delivered since the return of the service at Dr Gray's in Elgin earlier this month.
The first was 8lb 7oz baby boy Lucas to parents Jacqui Law and Brian Laird, from Keith.Services at Dr Gray's were downgraded in 2018 due to staff shortages, forcing most expectant mothers in the area to travel to Aberdeen for births.
A Caesarean section, or C-section, is a surgical operation to deliver a baby through a cut made in the mother's tummy and womb.New mum Jacqui said she felt relaxed during the operation and staff took good care of her.