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Dog Walking

Will A Dog Walking Company Just "Close"?

  • Jan 29
  • 4 min read

Close-up of a dog with brown and white fur, licking its nose on a dark textured mat. The dog appears curious or playful.

For pet parents living in the dense, fast-paced neighborhoods of Seattle—from the modern lofts of South Lake Union to the historic brownstones of Capitol Hill—a dog walker is more than a luxury service. We are a vital gear in the clockwork of your daily life. When you head to the office or hop onto a marathon string of video calls, you aren't just paying for a stroll around the block; you are investing in a promise of consistency and peace of mind.

A question that often ripples through the professional pet care community (and weighs on the minds of owners) is: "Is it ever acceptable for a dog walking company to close for a day?"

At Trails and Tails Dog Walking, our internal culture is built around the idea that we are an essential service. We view our commitment to your pup with the same gravity a school views its schedule or a doctor views their clinic hours. We aggressively avoid closing. However, because we are a business powered by humans in a city known for its unpredictable hills and even more unpredictable weather, we believe in being 100% transparent about how we navigate the "what-ifs."

The Professional Benchmark: On RARE Occasion - Planned Closures with Respectful Notice

In any professional relationship, a "surprise" closure is a breach of trust. If a dog walking company treats their schedule like a casual hobby, the client is the one who suffers the logistical headache.

When Trails and Tails has a planned closure—which we limit to major federal holidays or rare, essential team-wide safety training—we provide a minimum of one month’s notice. Why such a long lead time? Because we know our clients in Madison Park and Columbia City have lives that require planning. A month of lead time allows you to:

  • Coordinate with your employer: Perhaps that is the day you choose to work from home.

  • Leverage your "Village": It gives you time to ask a trusted neighbor or a family member to pop in.

  • Maintain the Routine: It ensures your dog never experiences the stress of a missed "potty break" because you had time to find a backup solution.

We believe that providing this window of time is the baseline of professional respect in the pet care industry.

When the Unplanned Occurs: The "Life Happens" Protocol for Dog Walking Company

Even with the most rigorous systems in place, life in Seattle can be chaotic. A lead walker might wake up with a high fever; a sudden family emergency might take a team member offline; or, as we all know, a few years ago the Ice Attack turned the steep inclines of Capitol Hill into a no-fly zone for vehicles and pedestrians alike.

When "life happens," a professional company doesn't just send a mass "we're closed" text and turn off their phone. We shift into a high-level triage mode.

1. The Strategy of Client Intimacy

The better we know you, the better we can serve you during a pinch. When we face a sudden staffing shortage, we don't look at our schedule as a list of names; we look at it as a list of specific needs. We categorize our walks based on the dog's urgency and the owner's environment.

  • The Work-From-Home (WFH) Triage: Many of our clients in the South Lake Union tech corridor now work remotely. While these owners absolutely rely on us to provide the "brain drain" their high-energy Vizsla or Boxer needs to stay quiet during a board meeting, the dog isn't in physical distress if the walk is missed.

  • The Essential Worker Priority: We have a deep roster of clients who are nurses at Harborview, teachers, or first responders. These owners are often away from the home for 10 to 12 hours at a time. For their dogs, a midday break is a biological necessity. These pups are our absolute priority. If we only have one walker available, they are going to the homes where the owner truly cannot get back to the dog.

2. The Power of Radical Communication

In the rare event of an emergency, we start by "asking" rather than "telling." We reach out to our most flexible clients—those we know are home or have local family—and explain the situation: "We have a walker emergency today. Is there any way you can cover your pup's break today so we can prioritize a neighbor who is stuck at the hospital?"

The Seattle dog community is incredibly empathetic. By being honest about the "why," we find that our clients are almost always willing to step up and help us navigate a crisis. This collaborative approach ensures that the dogs with the greatest need never go without care.

Why "Reliability" is the Ultimate Service Feature

When you are interviewing potential walkers in Seattle, don't just ask about their love for dogs or their favorite trails in Seward Park. Ask them the hard questions about their infrastructure:

  • "What is your sub-walker policy if you get sick?"

  • "How do you handle walks when the Seattle hills are covered in ice?"

  • "If you have to cancel, how much notice do I get, and how do you decide which dogs get walked first?"

At Trails and Tails, we spend our "quiet time" building the very systems that prevent closures. We maintain buffer zones in our routes and keep a constant line of communication open so that we can be the most reliable part of your dog's day. Our goal is to be so consistent that you eventually forget that "closing for the day" was ever a possibility.




Disclaimer

Trails and Tails Dog Walking is committed to 100% schedule fulfillment. However, all services are provided contingent upon the safety of our human walkers and the dogs in our care. Our services are subject to our formal terms regarding emergency cancellations, extreme weather protocols (as dictated by the National Weather Service), and staff emergencies. We strongly advise all clients to maintain a secondary emergency contact or a "lockbox neighbor" to ensure pet safety in the event of city-wide emergencies or restricted access to your neighborhood.

 
 
WHERE WE SERVE
GET IN TOUCH
DOG WALK HOURS
Capitol Hill /  South Lake Union (SLU)  /  Central District  /  Madison Park  /  Madrona / Eastlake / Beacon Hill / Columbia City / Seward Park
​98122. 98102. 98109. 98112, 98122, 98118
(Outside of those areas still may be eligible. Please inquire.)

Mon - Fri: 9am - 5pm

(310) 569-3923

info@trailsandtailsdogwalking.com

601 E Roy St, Seattle WA 98102
 

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© 2020 by Trails and Tails Dog Walking

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