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Former resident brings back family, new business
By Linda Anderson
KP News
Local
residents may have noticed a new van driving around the
Peninsula, with big orange paw prints marching across
the white paint. The van belongs to Peninsula Paw Spaw,
a new service to local residents and their pampered
pets. Peninsula Paw Spaw is mobile pet grooming,
bringing full service pet care to a person’s driveway.
Paw Spaw
owner Danielle Young, a Pierce County native, is a
former Key Pen resident who returned to the area
recently. Young had moved to Wauna with her mother in
time to attend Key Peninsula Middle School. Even though
the family moved around the Pacific Northwest a bit over
the years, they always returned to vacation in this
area.

Danielle Young
grooms "Skipper" a poodle/terrier mix
in her custom-made van parked outside a
customer's
home.
Photo by Mindi LaRose |
Young
learned to groom pets when she was 12 years old as a
part of her 4-H experience. As an adult she has more
than 10 years of experience in professional pet care,
having worked at both Petco and Petsmart. She is
certified with the International Society of Canine
Cosmetology and is a member of the National Dog Groomers
Association of America, Inc.
Peninsula
Paw Spaw is not her first business. Several years ago
she traveled with her family to Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., to
establish and operate a pet grooming service at a family
member’s kennel business.
A year
ago, with the pet grooming service fully established and
others trained to operate that portion of the business,
Young and her family eagerly returned to the Key
Peninsula and made their home in Lake Holiday. Her
7-year-old son attends Vaughn Elementary School. Young
says they returned to the Key Peninsula “because it’s
beautiful, full of memories, the people are nicer and we
enjoy the calmer pace of living out here.”
When first
returning to the Peninsula, Young considered how to best
serve the area in the pet service business. She knew she
wanted to have a grooming shop, but considered several
issues with regard to pets and the local demographics.
Her first consideration was to have a cageless shop.
“It
provides a calmer atmosphere for the pets where they are
not sitting in a scary kennel cage listening to other
nervous and frightened pets barking and crying,” she
said.
Young
noted that because of the rural setting of this
Peninsula and the neighboring Kitsap County, mobile
service makes more sense and allows her to serve more
people and their pets. “Also, the Peninsula has a large
population of elderly pet owners and it is difficult for
many of them to load their pets in the car, drive
somewhere to drop them off and then have to drive back
to retrieve their pets,” she said. “Many who cannot do
that either have to rely on someone else to do it for
them, or deny their pets specialized care.”
Young has
plans to expand her business to include specialty pet
products, which she will also deliver to her customers
in addition to her mobile grooming services. For more
information regarding Peninsula Paw Spaw, visit
www.penpawspaw.com.
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