Hearth and Hound owner, Alexis Montgomery, left, manager and trainer Michelle Turner and employee Mackenzie Rathbun are ready to welcome dogs to the day care.
Some minor renovation work is being completed at the space. This room is used for the dogs.
Hearth and Hound also offers cat boarding with four indoor catios.
LEE, Mass. — Alexis Montgomery was disappointed on returning to the Berkshires to find the dog day-care she'd used was closing.
So she started her own.
Hearth and Hound opened at 915 Pleasant St., which used to house Love Us and Leave Us.
"My dog was a customer here and so I always thought about like what would it be like to work with animals, too," Montgomery said. "So I saw a Facebook post from the owner of Love Us and Leave Us saying that she was going to be selling the building and I called up Adams Bank."
She decided to take the jump to start her own pet day care, closing on the building on Feb. 13.
Montgomery said she has always had a love for animals and grew up volunteering at the local humane society and worked at a pet store after high school.
"When I was a little girl I always wanted to be a veterinarian. And I've always been obsessed with animals," she said. "I used to carry around books of different dog breeds and I would memorize them and just like tell people about dogs all the time."
Montgomery was a nurse at Berkshire Medical Center from 2008 through 2017 before moving to the state of Florida.
"My thought process is if the community trusted me because I worked at BMC for so long to care for their relatives when they were sick then hopefully they will trust me to care for their animals which are members of our family," she said.
Hearth and Hound held a soft opening on March 24. The building is still getting some minor renovations and painting, but it opened for day care and boarding.
The facility can take up to 20 dogs for overnight boarding and up to five cats unless two cats can stay in one catio with pet owners permission.
It has four big play areas and two small yards so that different dogs can be together or separated if needed when outside.
Hearth and Hound also offers wash and nail trim and Montgomery hopes to add grooming services in May once renovations are complete.
She has put much thought into the space, down to colors of the walls, making sure the animals can see those colors.
"The paint colors and everything that I picked out I put a lot of thought into what the animals like. Even the lighting, see how bright the lighting is, it's because dogs actually find daylight soothing," she explained. "The paint colors, too. We picked paint colors that dogs can see."
She also plans to add dog training and a puppy class and add weekends dedicated to one-on-one enrichment activities for reactive dogs.
"I was thinking of doing things specifically for the reactive dogs that can't be in day care," Montgomery said. "We don't offer day care on weekends, so on weekends, I would be able to have reactive dogs come in and do activities one at a time."
Her future goals are to partner with local businesses for events.
"I know someone else is opening up a Pilates studio and we are talking about doing yoga and puppies in this room," she said.
Pets are required to be up to date on all of their vaccinations, be on heartworm and flea preventatives, as well as a current dog license. Cats and dogs must be spayed/neutered to join day care.
Cats must be indoor only in response to avian flu risk.
Hearth and Hound's day care is open Monday through Friday 7 a.m. to 6 p.m. and boarding is open seven days a week. More information and to book an appointments here.
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Berkshire County Runners Take on Boston Marathon
iBerkshires.com Sports
BOSTON – Great Barrington’s Laura Stephen was the highest finishing Berkshire County resident at Monday’s Boston Marathon.
Stephen ran a time of 3 hours, 40 minutes, 25 seconds to place 33rd in the women’s division for runners aged 60 to 64.
At least a dozen Berkshire County residents were listed on the Boston Athletic Association’s finishers at the 129th running of the event.
Sharon Lokedi of Kenya won the women’s race with a record-setting time of 2:17:22.
Her fellow Kenyan, John Korir, won the men’s race in 2:04:45.
The fastest Berkshire County finisher was Lenox Memorial graduate Ted Yee, now a student at nearby Northeastern University, who ran a time of 2:32.43 to place 253rd in the men’s 18-39 division and 307th in the field of 30,000 who made the 26.2-mile trek from Hopkinton to Boylston Street.
Yee finished about four minutes ahead of Dalton’s Alex White, who was 448th in the men’s 18-39 division with a time of 2:36.48.
Town officials celebrated the start of a new public safety building on Tuesday by demolishing the Airoldi building and former Department of Public Works building. click for more
Pyenson said the economy has harmed his business, including the effects of the pandemic. He is thankful for everyone who has stopped by and supported the farm since his grandparents founded it.
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Alexis Montgomery was disappointed on returning to the Berkshires to find the dog day-care she'd used was closing. So she started her own. click for more
The Landing at Laurel Lake has made renovations to its assisted living building to better help residents continue living with some independence. click for more