Patches
Well-Known Member
...and it's all systems go to not just do home boarding, but to actually have a very small boarding kennel facility on site.
The chap I spoke to was SO helpful and supportive. He loves our location and my ideas and gave me many, many helpful hints. He is willing to help me every step of the way to get something up and running and will spend however much time chatting with me, visiting etc for advice.
I am so thrilled. He said with our council the regulations for home boarding or home kennelling are pretty much the same that I might as well go that step further and give myself the option to have kennels.
He's sent me a heap of things through the post to look through and will come and check things out before I submit the license fee and application.
He went as far as to tell me that he wishes there were more smaller kennels around instead of just a handful of large ones with 50 dogs in them. He also said that he is 99% certain I wouldn't need planning because a business already runs from these premises and they'd recommend to the council that they would pass us...so it's a waste of resources to formally need to apply. I'm not quite sure what that was about...but it sounded like he had a lot of clout to say "we like it, we're happy to issue a license...let this business get under way, don't step in it's way".
So...Canine Country Retreat looks to be all systems go, in theory.
As for the kennels themselves. He said I'd be surprised what would be passable for a license and told me not to think I need to spend tens of thousands for a bespoke "posh" kennel. The link I showed you all of the below kennels WOULD pass for a license so long as I made a few alterations.
All I would need to do would be cover the back of the run and the divider with sheeting, much in the way that the inside has in it. It doesn't have to be GRP, it can be clear perspex or even sheet metal.
I would also need to cover the backs of the doors and the edges of the kennel opening and the front wall of the sleeping kennel bit with the same sheeting too.
He did say that the minimum requirement would be to just cover corners or any area that the dog could effectively chew but I already said I would cover the inner walls "so high".
I can use an empty stable as an isolation pen in case of sick dogs as well, which is cool. Doesn't need to be anywhere specifically posh, just away from the main population.
He told me once word was out that we were doing this it wouldn't take long before we decided to expand as kennels are rarely empty over summer, our area not having much in the immediate vicinity either.
So, all in all, we've alot to go on and even more to work out! I agreed with him that we'd go for just two kennels to start with, because IF the business faltered it would just be a kennel each for Bess and Harvey, should we need them.
The chap I spoke to was SO helpful and supportive. He loves our location and my ideas and gave me many, many helpful hints. He is willing to help me every step of the way to get something up and running and will spend however much time chatting with me, visiting etc for advice.
I am so thrilled. He said with our council the regulations for home boarding or home kennelling are pretty much the same that I might as well go that step further and give myself the option to have kennels.
He's sent me a heap of things through the post to look through and will come and check things out before I submit the license fee and application.
He went as far as to tell me that he wishes there were more smaller kennels around instead of just a handful of large ones with 50 dogs in them. He also said that he is 99% certain I wouldn't need planning because a business already runs from these premises and they'd recommend to the council that they would pass us...so it's a waste of resources to formally need to apply. I'm not quite sure what that was about...but it sounded like he had a lot of clout to say "we like it, we're happy to issue a license...let this business get under way, don't step in it's way".
So...Canine Country Retreat looks to be all systems go, in theory.
As for the kennels themselves. He said I'd be surprised what would be passable for a license and told me not to think I need to spend tens of thousands for a bespoke "posh" kennel. The link I showed you all of the below kennels WOULD pass for a license so long as I made a few alterations.
All I would need to do would be cover the back of the run and the divider with sheeting, much in the way that the inside has in it. It doesn't have to be GRP, it can be clear perspex or even sheet metal.
I would also need to cover the backs of the doors and the edges of the kennel opening and the front wall of the sleeping kennel bit with the same sheeting too.
He did say that the minimum requirement would be to just cover corners or any area that the dog could effectively chew but I already said I would cover the inner walls "so high".
I can use an empty stable as an isolation pen in case of sick dogs as well, which is cool. Doesn't need to be anywhere specifically posh, just away from the main population.
He told me once word was out that we were doing this it wouldn't take long before we decided to expand as kennels are rarely empty over summer, our area not having much in the immediate vicinity either.
So, all in all, we've alot to go on and even more to work out! I agreed with him that we'd go for just two kennels to start with, because IF the business faltered it would just be a kennel each for Bess and Harvey, should we need them.
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