The Guardian (USA)

Pooch pizzas and pet psychics: life as a dog concierge at the Westminste­r Show

- Bryan Armen Graham in New York

It’s the weekend before this year’s Westminste­r Kennel Club dog show and the basement of the Hotel Pennsylvan­ia is a bustle of canine activity.

An Australian shepherd and bichon frise trot away on side-by-side treadmills. A giant schnauzer is meticulous­ly primped and primed on a grooming table while a half-submerged Newfoundla­nd is scrubbed in an elevated bathtub. A half-dozen dogs mill about a sprawling purpose-built relief station covered with pine shavings and plastic fire hydrants.

Jennifer Remazki, a breeder from Honey Harbor, Ontario, can’t help but smile as she takes in the scene with Shelby, her eight-year-old Alaskan malamute who’s come out of retirement for “one last go-round” at the Super Bowl of dog-lovers. It’s Remazki’s sixth time staying at the hotel, which sits across the street from Madison Square Garden, where the title of America’s top dog will be awarded this week.

“I get a kick out of the facilities,” she says. “It’s so quirky. This is the part of the show I love to tell my friends and family about back home, because they can’t even conceptual­ize this. There is a room devoted to peeing and pooing. There’s been years there have been psychics here for the dogs. I find it very humorous.”

Thousands of dogs and their owners have descended on New York to compete in the oldest continuous­ly held sporting event in the United States after the Kentucky Derby. Predictabl­y, many of the posh Manhattan hotels vying for a piece of the dog show market have temporaril­y relaxed their restrictio­ns on pets.

But none are more welcoming to the Westminste­r crowd than the Hotel Pennsylvan­ia, where doggy concierge Jerry Grymek will cater and pamper to the more than 600 dogs – and their often particular owners – who will call the hotel home for the duration of the show.

The 100-year-old landmark on Seventh Avenue, immortaliz­ed by the Glenn Miller standard, is pet-friendly year-round but becomes a veritable hotel for dogs each February when Westminste­r rolls around. The highlight is the basement conference room that is transforme­d into a canine salon and spa, but an assortment of other dog-related events on site throughout the week have elevated the hotel’s reputation among the tight-knit show community.

“Every year we do this, we change something,” says Grymek, who works in public relations for the 1,700-room hotel during the rest of the year. “We’ve had a dog tourist corner. We’ve had a pet masseuse, an on-site veterinari­an and a dog psychic who would communicat­e between the dog and owner. But it evolves over the years. Owners say I want to work on my own dog and some things fall out of favor. So we take the feedback and keep it to what they want and we plan for next year.”

Grymek, who has worked in the role for 14 years, takes heart in seeing the same guests return year after year – and over time their children as they’re groomed into the sport as breeders or handlers themselves. The dogs are typically on their best behavior, he says. It’s the owners, many of whom travel great distances by car, who can be temperamen­tal.

“Some of the owners can be a little stressed out, especially when they’re lacking sleep,” he says. “But that’s why we try to do as much as we can here in this facility. Don’t worry, it’s all down here, you don’t have to go outside if it’s cold. People come down here in their PJs, do their business with the dogs and just go.”

Grymek’s remit includes fetching comfort food for his canine guests on demand. The most popular orders include cheeseburg­ers, french fries and chicken sandwiches. Among the more unusual: spinach pizza. (“Nothing with onions,” he warns. “They’re bad for the dogs.”)

The job can also mean accommodat­ing the rituals and superstiti­ons of owners. Guests will frequently ask to request a room where a former winner stayed, such as Uno, the popular beagle who captured the top prize in 2008. Or if best in show is awarded on 12

February – as it will this year – then an owner will invariably call to reserve room number 212. No ask, it seems, is too eccentric.

“One owner wanted a green carpet rolled out for their dog,” Grymek recalls. “Another wanted to bring in an opera singer to serenade her Italian Spinoni.”

Both requests, he confirms, were accommodat­ed. “You can get anything and everything in New York,” he says with a laugh.

 ??  ?? For Jerry Grymek, the Hotel Pennsylvan­ia’s designated doggie concierge, no request is too eccentric. Photograph: Lauren Caulk/The Guardian
For Jerry Grymek, the Hotel Pennsylvan­ia’s designated doggie concierge, no request is too eccentric. Photograph: Lauren Caulk/The Guardian
 ??  ?? A show dog makes use of the amenities in the basement of the Hotel Pennsylvan­ia. Photograph: Lauren Caulk/The Guardian
A show dog makes use of the amenities in the basement of the Hotel Pennsylvan­ia. Photograph: Lauren Caulk/The Guardian

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