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Experienced East Bay Dog Walkers Needed

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Here’s the ad we put up on Craigslist and sent to approximately 300 of our best friends. Please get in touch if you know someone looking for a job who would be a good fit.

Jack and his crew today

About Doggy Lama Pet Care
People like us. We were voted “Best High-Tech Doggie Care” by the East Bay Express in 2007. San Francisco magazine voted us one of the “Top 5 Places to Board Your Dog” in 2008. We have twenty 5-star reviews on Yelp.com and clients love our Flickr site, where we post new pictures daily of Doggy Lama dogs out on the trails and beaches.

Our main services are dog walking and in-home dog boarding although we also do some drop-in visits for pets. We have six dog walkers who walk dogs in Oakland, Emeryville, Berkeley, Albany, El Cerrito, and Richmond. We have an unusual style of dog boarding—we board 2-4 dogs each in 5 East Bay homes, where we keep the dogs with us constantly and don’t crate them unless they come with their own crates. We exercise boarding dogs for a minimum of an hour/day out on the trails.

We are looking for 1-2 dog walkers to join our team. The primary need is for group dog walks, although if our new dog walkers are interested in boarding, drop-in visits, or individual dog walks, those are options, too.

You can find out more information about Doggy Lama Pet Care here:
Web site: http://www.doggylamapetcare.com (It is visible through Safari and Firefox browsers currently—sorry you can’t see it through Internet Explorer—we had code problems recently and a new version of the site will be up in a couple weeks.)
Daily photo updates: http://www.flickr.com/photos/doggylama/
Yelp reviews: http://www.yelp.com/biz/7oPSx23J1EKQ1pavqcYsWw

About the position
We will train you to walk dogs for us and, if you haven’t already gone to the Dog Walking Academy, we will partially subsidize you to get trained through that program on dog behavior, body language, and pack management, as well as Pet CPR and Pet First Aid. We will continue to support you as you become more confident walking groups of dogs. The eventual goal will be for you to walk up to two groups of dogs per day. The maximum number of dogs in each group is six.
You will be an independent contractor (IC), so you will be responsible for your own health insurance, vehicle, dog leashes, etc.
One of the strengths of Doggy Lama is that we’re a team. If you need help with your dogs at the last minute because you have car problems or you want to take a vacation, we’re here to help you.

Requirements
You must be available between 9am-4pm Monday through Friday.
You have a reliable car or truck that can accommodate 4-6 medium to large dogs.
You have a good driving record and insurance.
You can walk dogs rain or shine. (When it’s raining out, our clients need us more than ever!)
You can pass a criminal/background check.
You have some comfort and familiarity with computers and the Internet (We send regular email updates and use Google Calendar for your schedule.)
You have a cell phone that you can leave on during working hours.
You have excellent references.
You have extensive experience working with dogs—this can be in the professional, personal, or volunteer realm.
You must be at least 18 years old.
You must be able to make a minimum commitment of 1 year.
You live in the East Bay.
You are very responsible. Our clients consider their pets to be important family members—this is not a “slacker” job in any way.

Compensation
—Group dog walks
We pay 60% of the gross of what the clients pay us. For hour-long group walks, the clients pay $25/walk if the dog gets walked Monday through Friday and $27/walk if the dog gets walked fewer than 5x/week. This comes out to be $15-$16.20 per dog for up to six dogs. For a full group of six dogs, it usually takes an hour to pick them up, an hour out on the trails, and an hour to drop them off. We care about the environment and your time and stress level, so we will try to make your driving distance as small as possible.
Here’s another way to think about it:

# of dogs in group:/Pay range for group:/Approximate time needed:
3—$45 to 49.50—2.5 hours
4—$60 to $66—2.75 hours
5—$75 to $82.50—3 hours
6—$90 to $97.20—3 hours

If you have the energy, skills, and interest, we can build you up to two groups of dogs per day, but unless you already have experience as a professional dog walker, you should expect to walk only one group per day for at least a couple months.

—Drop-in visits
We charge $35/half-hour for a drop-in visit or individual dog walk. You would make 60% of that, or $21. Please do not apply to do drop-in visits only—our primary need right now is for dog walkers and drop-ins are something the walker could do only in addition to dog walking.

—Boarding
We charge $50-$55/dog/day for in-home boarding. You would make 60% of that, or $30-33/dog. Please do not apply for boarding position only—our primary need is for dog walkers. Boarding is something we can talk about doing with the new dog walker to supplement his or her income.

How to Apply
Please send your resume, at least 3 references, and a cover letter that tells us about your experience with dogs to the manager of Doggy Lama, Nicki Horne, at and cc: the owner, Molly Kenefick, at . Nicki works 2-6 PM on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays (she is off on Wednesdays and weekends). She will get back to you during her work days. Please tell us whether you come to us through a friend or acquaintance, or through Craigslist.

We hope to hear from you!

Thanks,

Nicki and Molly

Posted by Mollissima! on 10/18 at 03:00 AM
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The Cat Training Revolution

Friday, October 17, 2008

I had absolutely no idea this was possible. Very cool.

http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/g/a/2008/09/30/petscol.DTL

This is from the “Your Whole Pet” column by Christie Keith, on SFGate.com.

Posted by Mollissima! on 10/17 at 05:42 AM
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Winged Fury: Dog Sculpture

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

This is “Winged Furry,” a bronze sculpture by Jean Van Keuren on the Davis, CA Greenway. There are three in the series, installed along the Davis Greenway. The other two don’t do much for me, but I love this one. It’s about 3.5 feet high. Dexter was pretty freaked when we walked up to this sculpture!

"Winged Furry" bronze sculpture by Jean Van Keuren on the Davis Greenway

 

Posted by Mollissima! on 10/14 at 03:27 AM
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Not Impressed

Sunday, October 12, 2008

Dexter was not impressed that “Kitty was here.”

Dexter was not impressed that "Kitty was here."

He said, "Whatever."

Posted by Mollissima! on 10/12 at 03:36 AM
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Rest in peace, Dakota.

Friday, October 03, 2008

I put my girl, Dakota, down on Sunday, September 28, 2008. Dakota had been having some bad days interspersed with OK days. She was 18+ years old—battling cancer and severe arthritis. That morning she sat in a pool of urine on the floor that was pink from blood—she didn’t have the strength in her hind legs to get up. I called a wonderful vet whose practice is entirely devoted to at-home euthanasia and asked him to please come as soon as he could. Dakota passed at about 3:30 PM.

My wonderful holistic vets helped us have a good last few years. I am so grateful to them and to my friends and family for their support.

Thank you, Dakota, for being my best friend and partner. You were the best dog I could ever ask for. I love you so much. You changed my life and made me a better person. Thank you, my friend.

Rest in peace.

Rest in peace, Dakota.

Notes from Monday, September 29, 2008 11:43:48 PM

I’m doing ok. Life feels weird but I am glad I am just feeling my feelings… I want to be mostly by myself or be working.

These are some of the things notice:

• I keep seeing the French doors to the deck shut and panicking that they got closed and Dakota must need to pee. (They were left open 24/7 for months.)
• I took most her meds and supplements (a couple dozen of them) off the counter and now there’s a lot of space there.
• I picked her raised bowls off the floor—now there’s space there for me to walk comfortably around the dining table, which feels luxurious. I walked around that double bowl-holder for so long.
• I see Dexter lying on “her bed” under the stairs and worry that Dakota’s uncomfortable somewhere else.
• I slept upstairs last night and it felt so odd (I had slept downstairs on a twin bed for the last few months to be with her). My cat Blue Blue slept on my chest and was happy I was back in the master bedroom.
• Feeding the dogs only took a couple minutes instead of half an hour.
• I drove back home after the morning’s hike and as I turned off 35th Ave. I thought, “I’ll see Dakota in a minute.” Then I remembered that I wouldn’t.
• The postal worked handed me a package that contained $100 of Dakota medicine. I looked at it and said, “My dog’s dead so I don’t need this medicine. Do I have to take this?” She took it back from me and said, “No, I’ll write ‘refused’ on it and it will go back.” I was shocked that I spoke about her death matter-of-factly. Dakota’s death seems totally dramatic and sometimes completely banal.
• Sometimes I think to myself, “That was weird—I thought Dakota was dead but of course she’s not.” Then I remember that yeah, she really is dead.
• Life feels smaller without my dog and also larger when I think of possibilities of things I can do that I couldn’t do while she was alive and sick. I feel guilty for seeing some good things. But then I don’t.
• I knew this was coming but then it came and somehow it feels natural and unnatural at the same time.

It even oddly reminds me of the first time I was a labor assistant (at my friend Rebecca’s first child’s birth at her home in Berkeley). After over 2 days of helping her and her husband birth their baby, I walked outside and down the street. I felt like the whole world had changed because I had seen Merav’s birth. I wanted to stop people and say, “Hey—this is life and it is precious! Don’t take anything for granted.

People are being born every day and it is the most beautiful, miraculous thing in the world.” Of course Dakota’s death is not really miraculous, but having known her and now that I know she has died, it seems as if the world has changed. How can the world be going on about its worldly business? Part of me wants to stop people and tell them not to take anything for granted because there is beauty and incredible love in the world. Writing those words makes me cry.

I am crying a lot. Crying is good.

Mourning my dog I also mourn my (first) mother who died in ‘87, my dogs Dixie, Helen, and Raleigh, and the people I love(d) who died this year: my friend Rob Castle who died in February, my friend Beth Block who died in April, and my Uncle Kevin who died in July. 

One more thought—this thought more than any other:

Dakota was the dog of my life. The best. I have been so lucky.

Peace.

Molly

Posted by Mollissima! on 10/03 at 02:48 AM
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