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Los Angeles Times
January 6, 1999
Pets on the Net
Animals: At Valley 'day care' center for dogs, camera
allows owners to
visit their pups at a Web site.
Studio City - Professional dog walker Barbra Waldare had
more work than she could manage. Her pet-sitting business
in the Hollywood Hills was booming. Having worked television
production herself, she understood the long hours many
of her entertainment-industry clients worked. Those half-hour
walks at $12 to $15 a pop filled (or relieved) a desperate
need.
She was bringing home $1,000 a week, which meant about
40 hours afoot with Fidos, plus driving time to clients'
homes.
But she was exhausted. Then she had an idea. A dog owner
herself, she thought she knew what others wanted and weren't
getting. Pets were surrogate children, she believed. Taking
a cue from the latest trend in child day care, she figured
she could bring digital camera surveillance to the dogs.
And why not post the pictures on the Internet where a worried
owner could check in all day, getting immediate assurance
that Bowser was merry, not moping.
That's what led her to open the Doggie View Day Care
Center, where for $25 per day - or slightly more than the
cost of child day care in some centers - pets can romp
with other dogs, breathe purified air, drink Sparkletts
water and be virtually a mouse click away from an anxious
owner's view at www.doggieview.com.
"What is good about the unique Internet feature is that it helps alleviate
separation anxiety for both the dog and the owner," said Waldare, who
lives in Studio City. "A lot of people are more upset about leaving their
dog than their dog is."
Waldare said she could not find any other Internet-monitor
dog care centers.
Neither could Michael Walters, spokesman for the American
Veterinary Medical Assn. "This is the first one I've
heard of," he said.
Joseph Sporn, who founded Yuppie Pu ppy Pet Care Inc.
in Manhattan in 1987, the first "day care" center
for dogs, said his Internet service is still in the works.
Opened two months ago, Waldare's center occupies a former
carpet store in a Studio City strip mall. Waldare has six
regular clients and hopes for more. She'll need to expand
to cover the $25,000 she figures it cost her to get started,
and her monthly overhead, which is $2,000 now but could
double when she starts adding staff.
"I could have done it for less," see said, "But
I went the extra mile with all the computer stuff."
The pampering of pets, once considered eccentric, has
gone mainstream, thanks to empty-nest, baby boomers and
younger couples with dual incomes and no children. The
U.S. pet industry is now estimated by industry sources
to be worth $21 billion, with consumers spending 33% more
on roughly the same number of pets in 1996 than they did
in 1994, the most recent figures available.
And day care for dogs is definitely a growth industry. "They're
just popping up all over the place," Funda Alp, a
spokeswoman for the American Pet Products Manufacturer's
Assn., told The Times in an interview last March. "It's
a great opportunity and it's great for the pets."
Although Waldare's operation incorporates cutting-edge
technology, she eschews some of the frills associated with
the doggie day care niche, such as television, "Lassie" videos
and New Age music.
After 18 years' experience with dogs, she's practical
in her approach. She still takes them out for an old-fashioned
stroll three or four times a day. She carries a pooper-scooper
on her jaunts.
Jackie Rowe, owner and operator of the comfortable, traditional
La Mesa Pet Hotel in San Diego for the past 39 years, says
that what dogs need is love and the certainty that they'll
be fed and cared for.
As for movies, swimming pools and organic biscotti, "that's
not for the dogs," she said, "That's for their
owners."
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