Orlando Sentinel

Downward dog

- By Marco Santana

flows into puppy love during Poses for Pups, a yoga event held to promote the adoption of playful dogs.

All Katie Donzanti and the yoga class at her Curry Ford Road studio wanted to do was downward dog. Instead, they got a face full of dog slobber and ear nibbles.

Peaceful Peacock Orlando, a 3-month-old yoga studio, brought in eight rambunctio­us young pups to mix and mingle with a yoga class on Saturday.

The result was a sometimes chaotic — often adorable — morning that had even the most serious yoga student in the class cracking a wide smile.

“This is the kind of stuff that keeps my heart beating,” said Donzanti, 37, a former marketing director at Harley Davidson. “Anything that allows us to give back.”

Poses for Pups, an awareness event meant to showcase the adoptable puppies, is the first in what Donzanti hopes is a frequent effort for her studio.

She wants to partner with rescue organizati­ons and feature other animals that need rescuing, she said.

“It’s been a dream of mine to open a yoga studio and contribute to this community,” Donzanti said.

Estimates say that nearly 16 million people in the U.S. alone practice yoga.

In recent years, that growth has spurred the creation of new, unorthodox types of yoga, including yoga among goats, using hula hoops and with dogs trotting around.

“It’s just something else to look at,” said Orlando resident Matt Spurlock, who attended the class Saturday. “Anything they can do to bring more enjoyment is a good thing. When you get an occasional sniff and kiss, you enjoy it even more.”

Lizzie Fredrick had the perhaps unenviable task of keeping the class moving along as the puppies did what they could to disrupt her.

That sometimes meant puppies running through the legs of someone in the class. Other times, well, it meant the class’s leaders having to clean up after a puppy accident.

She said adding foreign el-

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