Born to Heal
Dr. Marty Ivey’s journey from the farming fields of El Pase to the cutting edge of equine sports medicine
Raised as one of 14 children on a family farm in El Paso, Texas, Dr. Marty Ivey’s destiny as a veterinarian seems almost preordained. It was the influence of his deep family roots, an early introduction to Quarter Horses, and an education at Texas A&M University that set him on a course that now finds him as one of the founding partners, along with Dr. Mike Fox and Dr. Steve Hurlbert in Equine Sports Medicine and Surgery in Weatherford, Texas.
Surrounded by animals and the rhythms of rural life growing up shaped Ivey’s deep-seated passion for animal care.
“I grew up in El Paso in a large family. My father farmed, his father farmed, and his six brothers farmed,” Ivey shared. “Oddly enough, my father came from where I’m at now, this area around Weatherford, Texas. He was born here in 1920 and it’s odd that back in 1991, I moved here. There are 14 children in my family. I was the 12th child and the 11th boy. I had 10 older brothers, so needless to say, I had a lot of fun as a young man.
“We didn’t’ have much,” Ivey continued. “We learned to do a lot on the farm and had livestock as well. My dad was strictly a farmer, though. He wasn’t a rancher or a big animal guy. Some of my brothers were. They got into everything from showing animals through school to horses and team roping.”
Long before he was a partner at ESMS, Ivey learned the ropes of horsemanship firsthand through his family’s involvement in racing.
“I first got into the equine industry when I was 14 or 15 years old,” Ivey explained. “I bought my first registered Quarter Horse. He was a 2-year-old off a ranch in New Mexico. He was just as green as he could be. I broke him and trained him. That was my first real involvement in doing everything myself. As I grew and developed with horses, I got into team roping, along with my brothers. It wasn’t competitive. It was more social and local. Then my oldest brothers got involved in racing Quarter Horses around that time. Later in high school I would go on the backside at the racetrack and see their horses.
“Eventually, as they would turn their horses out and bring them home, I got to leg them back up and started riding them through the riverbeds, the arroyos, they called them. So, I started…



