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Wednesday, June 21, 2006. Issue
3436. Page 9. |
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Five-Star Luxury for Your Four-Legged
Friends By Anna Smolchenko
Staff Writer
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Michael Eckels / MT
Cat's Dream hopes to introduce a webcam
pet-watch service for vacationers. |
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David Stewart travels a lot for business, and before
leaving town he always checks his two cats into a feline hotel.
He has never seen their lodgings -- hotel staff pick
up his Styopa and Marusya and drop them off again when he returns --
but he feels sure they are comfortable there.
"They provided me with a photograph of my cats
there, and it looked fine," Stewart, a senior executive at Basic
Element, wrote recently from Mongolia. "The people I deal with there
really seem to like cats."
Stewart's pets stay at Cat's Dream Hotel (http://www.cat-hotel.ru/), one
of a handful of pet hotels in and around Moscow. About 20 cats were
staying there during a recent visit, and for the most part they
appeared comfortable, although the newest arrivals looked a bit
lost, hiding in their tiny houses made of upturned cardboard boxes.
A sheet of paper was pinned to the door of each
cabin for staff to keep records of the cats' appearance,
psychological state, appetite and bowel movements; owners are also
encouraged to leave tips about how their pets should be treated.
The number of guests is set to grow as the vacation
season heats up in the coming months, said Maxim Kivva, who together
with his family runs the hotel located about 16 kilometers southeast
of Moscow in the settlement of Vyunok, near Zheleznodorozhny.
The hotel opened in late 2004 and has seen its
number of furry guests triple as Russians learn about the service
and become more relaxed about boarding a pet in a kennel rather than
leaving it with a friend, Kivva said.
The hotel is particularly busy during the winter
holidays and summer months. It had a full house during this past New
Year's holiday, when 68 cats checked in and another 40 had to look
for other accommodation.
"For New Year's, you have to book in August," Kivva
said.
Pet hotels in Moscow are few and far between -- and
even fewer of them are located within the city limits. Most are
family-run businesses in the countryside, where land is cheaper.
Some offer to bring your pet to the hotel and then return it to you,
as is the case with Kivva's hotel, where three-quarters of clients
take advantage of the 750 ruble ($28) service. Regular customers get
a discount.
Cat's Dream Hotel prides itself on being an
exclusively feline territory. A girl once asked if she could leave a
python, and somebody else wanted to board two lynx cubs. The owners
had to refuse.
"The beauty of it is that it's a cats-only place.
This is very important for the owners," Kivva said.
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Michael Eckels / MT
A Cat's Dream employee watching as a guest
surveys the standard lodgings, which lack luxury-class
ventilation. |
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.tmp) | Pets Hotel charges 250
rubles per day for a cat and 350 rubles per day for a dog.
Foreigners are charged about 50 rubles on top of that amount,
Markelova said.
The management at Cat's Dream Hotel and another
feline retreat, Zookhutor, said they do not charge higher rates for
foreigners.
At Cat's Dream Hotel, the prices depend on the
category of accommodation, from standard cabins at 250 rubles per
day to professional cabins costing 360 rubles per day to luxury
cabins for 580 rubles per day.
The kennels differ in size and amenities. For
example, each professional and luxury kennel is individually
ventilated, which means that unlike the standard cabins they lack
the odor of a dozen cats living together in one room. The cat boxes
and food bowls are disposable, so each guest gets its own fresh
set.
Luxury cabins offer such perks as heated floors in
winter, toys, premium cat food and fish bowls -- either real or on a
flat screen.
The business is so successful that the Kivva family
is building another kennel exclusively for kittens. By the end of
the summer, they hope to install video cameras linked to the
Internet so that pet owners will be able to see their furry friends
anytime, from anywhere, said Kivva.
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