Laura Avila4 months ago
This is the best dog park we've been to in this area. There is a play area for the smaller dogs and a separate one for the big dogs. It is well maintained with water, poop bags, trash cans, and plenty of parking. The best part is that there is an obstacle course! There are hurdles, a hoop, a tunnel, a box, and an A-frame for the dogs to play. My dogs love it! The people are friendly & the dogs are even friendlier😃🐶🐾
Lukas Tomkowicza year ago
I've been taking my dogs here over 12 years. I absolutely love it here. Be careful if does get muddy around here. And over time they removed the trees so there is barely and shade now sadly. It does have a water fountain meant for dogs but during winter being your own. The one thing I hate is people bring any dog. I love all dogs but the owners is what I hate. They are not taking the time or care to do basic training, they don't watch their dogs anymore and they let hump who ever they want apparently. I was there last and for some reason 5 dogs came up to mine and start being to much, humping, starting fights and much more. OWNERS DIDNT DO ONE THING! Please if you bring your dog here you'll be welcome by warm hearts but please watch your dogs and train them. AND FOR CRYING OUT LOAD, CLOSE THE GATES, PICK UP THE POOP FROM YOUR DOG AND MOST IMPORTANTLY KEEP THEM ON A LEASH UNTIL YOU ENTER. Here are some fun photos.
Logan Howlett5 months ago
This dog park is consistently filled with careless owners. I’ve taken my 10-month-old black lab puppy here twice, and both times he’s been not knocked - but intentionally pummeled - to the ground by older dogs who are fixated on him, I guess because of his size and playful puppy energy. The first time he was about seven months old, so I decided to give it another try today, thinking that with his growth, it might go better. It was enjoyable for the first ten minutes—until two large German Shepherd mixes fixated on my dog. What started as playful interaction quickly escalated into them ganging up on him, pinning him down, biting his neck, and tugging on his skin as if they were playing tug-of-war.
When it escalated, I immediately intervened and picked up my puppy to leave. Neither owner offered help or even acknowledged what had happened, despite the obvious distress. One owner was preoccupied chatting up every woman in the park, paying absolutely no attention to his dog. The other, when I calmly asked why he hadn’t stepped in, had the audacity to tell me that picking up my dog was “the wrong way” to handle the situation. He suggested I should have just stood still and waited for the dogs to “de-escalate themselves,” or that each owner should have calmly pulled their dogs apart—a bit ironic coming from someone who did nothing but sip his coffee and watch a 130-lb, 25 year old woman struggle to get her puppy away from a pack of dogs, including his own. He even denied that his dog was involved at all.
I consider myself a reasonable person and did my best to remain calm and collected throughout, but I finally had to walk away when neither of them showed an ounce of accountability or offered a simple apology—just unsolicited advice.
I strongly urge anyone looking to safely socialize their puppy to avoid this park. Dogs will be dogs, and I don’t expect them to always know their limits—but people should. If you see someone struggling, step in, take responsibility for your pet, and show some basic decency.
M M3 years ago
Open, part dirt part plants. Main park is a nice size C shape. With the top part having dog obstacles for training or play. Benches to sit for humans. Nice little tree areas with rocks. A water fountain also. Small secondary park for small dogs
Heather Henrya year ago
Great, large dog park! There's also a separate fenced area for small dogs. There are 2 gates for entry (one east and one west), 2 picnic benches and an agility area. Most dogs that go there play well with others and owners are pretty good about curbing any behavioral issues.