Chamber Rating

4.8 - (43 reviews)
39
3
0
0
1
Read Our 43 Reviews

Chamber Rating

4.8 - (43 reviews)
39
3
0
0
1
  • maria podolskaya

    We had a very nice and low stress first appointment. Dr Starr was very patient and thoughtful to my dogs needs and looking forward to our next session.
    Oct 30th, 2023

  • Lisa Makrinikolas

    Great resource for those of us with not so mobile companion animals. Many of my pugs have been patients of Dr. Starrs and Ive referred tons of folx here.
    Sep 29th, 2023

  • George Tzanetos

    My dog Ellie had FHO surgery (major hip surgery). Dr. Starr was so kind and helpful. Ellie made a complete recovery and honestly no one would ever know she was ever injured.
    Aug 3rd, 2023

  • Colleen Moore

    Dr. Starr evaluated my dogs hip dysplasia and provided some at home PT exercise to help her. She was very honest and nice. We will go back if/when my dog needs more help than we can do on our own.
    Jun 19th, 2023

  • Alyssa Ferland

    3/1/24 - Update: Still have not heard back from the owner. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 9/30/22-Update: it's been about six months since I wrote this review. I have not Heard from the owner at all. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ March 2022- I would not recommend due to 1) Suzanne's technique with my dogs and 2)pricing. My girls had never been in the water before, so that pool was terrifying for them. We had discussed over the phone that I was interested in a swimming lesson and that we don't really play fetch. Maybe in the future, after they have become accustomed to the water, then fetch could be something to do. But not the first visit. I just wanted this to be a pleasant introduction to the water. The way that I like to approach situations with my dogs is by using treats and positive reinforcement to help them build confidence and trust and be able to do it on their own terms. Suzanne did use treats but the part I was surprised at was that she took the handles of the life vests and plopped my dogs in the water. That was not on their own terms! That really is not a positive way to introduce a dog to something. I just will not be back there due to that level of pushiness. Especially for my deaf dog, she really needed extra comfort going in that pool due to having one less sense than the rest of us. She was throwing toys out into the pool, waiting for them to fetch them, though I had told her that is not a game we really play. We do nose work, agility, hikes, squeaky toys....not fetch. If they are petrified to be in the water, I don't think they are going to go for a toy. They first need to get used to the water and like it before any of that stuff can happen. I felt like Suzanne was not getting that concept. Before you write a book, you have to learn your ABCs, you know? Before you go dock diving, you have to learn to be in the water, learn how to swim, etc. The other thing was pricing. I paid $50 for a thirty minute visit, which is fair. However, I was there for a total of 27 minutes, including checking in, talking, paying, putting life vests on, and drying off my dogs. This really should have been 30 minutes of water time. Granted, my dogs hated it so I understand why she cut the class short. But why not adjust the price accordingly?? Again, I was not about to say something, as this was her choice. She made a choice to charge me the full price while cutting the class short and didnt mention anything about it. She did not offer to adjust the price accordingly. She simply stated that my dogs might just not like the water. So, I did take a different dog to New England Canine in Walpole, MA. This instructor had me go on the ramp and use treats to get my dog to willingly go in the water. If he chose to run up the ramp, that was ok. I just kept calling him a good boy and giving him treats until eventually he was wagging his tail to go in the water. In that half hour lesson, my dog did 3 laps. He went into the pool with the teacher. While facing me, the teacher let go of his life vest and he swam toward me and onto the ramp. He was just as scared as my girls were. The difference here was that the teacher had him go into the pool on his terms with positive reinforcement. She also used me, since he didn't know her and was in a new place. By the end of that visit, he was so excited, he was rolling over in his life vest. Also, this place has a washroom to give my dog a bath afterward. Suzanne's did not and I had to stop at public dog bath place afterward to get the chlorine off of them. In the future, I will go to New England Canine.
    Mar 1st, 2024

Read Our 43 Reviews

About
Paws In Motion

Paws In Motion is located at 214 N Main St # 101 in Natick, Massachusetts 01760. Paws In Motion can be contacted via phone at 508-653-7297 for pricing, hours and directions.

Contact Info

  •   508-653-7297

Services

  • MASSAGE
  • PHYSICAL THERAPY
  • REHABILITATION

Specialities

  • ALTERNATIVE MEDICINE
  • COMPANION ANIMALS
  • DOGS

Questions & Answers

Q What is the phone number for Paws In Motion?

A The phone number for Paws In Motion is: 508-653-7297.


Q Where is Paws In Motion located?

A Paws In Motion is located at 214 N Main St # 101, Natick, MA 01760


Q What is the internet address for Paws In Motion?

A The website (URL) for Paws In Motion is: https://www.pawsinmotionvet.com/


Q How big is Paws In Motion?

A Paws In Motion employs approximately 2-5 people.


Q Is there a key contact at Paws In Motion?

A You can contact Suzanne Starr at 508-653-7297.


Q How is Paws In Motion rated?

A Paws In Motion has a 4.8 Star Rating from 43 reviewers.

Key Contacts

image
Suzanne Starr
Owner


Ratings and Reviews
Paws In Motion

Overall Rating

Overall Rating
( 43 Reviews )
39
3
0
0
1
Write a Review

maria podolskaya on Google

image We had a very nice and low stress first appointment. Dr Starr was very patient and thoughtful to my dogs needs and looking forward to our next session.


Lisa Makrinikolas on Google

image Great resource for those of us with not so mobile companion animals. Many of my pugs have been patients of Dr. Starrs and Ive referred tons of folx here.


George Tzanetos on Google

image My dog Ellie had FHO surgery (major hip surgery). Dr. Starr was so kind and helpful. Ellie made a complete recovery and honestly no one would ever know she was ever injured.


Colleen Moore on Google

image Dr. Starr evaluated my dogs hip dysplasia and provided some at home PT exercise to help her. She was very honest and nice. We will go back if/when my dog needs more help than we can do on our own.


Alyssa Ferland on Google

image 3/1/24 - Update: Still have not heard back from the owner.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
9/30/22-Update: it's been about six months since I wrote this review. I have not Heard from the owner at all.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
March 2022- I would not recommend due to 1) Suzanne's technique with my dogs and 2)pricing. My girls had never been in the water before, so that pool was terrifying for them. We had discussed over the phone that I was interested in a swimming lesson and that we don't really play fetch. Maybe in the future, after they have become accustomed to the water, then fetch could be something to do. But not the first visit. I just wanted this to be a pleasant introduction to the water. The way that I like to approach situations with my dogs is by using treats and positive reinforcement to help them build confidence and trust and be able to do it on their own terms. Suzanne did use treats but the part I was surprised at was that she took the handles of the life vests and plopped my dogs in the water. That was not on their own terms! That really is not a positive way to introduce a dog to something. I just will not be back there due to that level of pushiness. Especially for my deaf dog, she really needed extra comfort going in that pool due to having one less sense than the rest of us. She was throwing toys out into the pool, waiting for them to fetch them, though I had told her that is not a game we really play. We do nose work, agility, hikes, squeaky toys....not fetch. If they are petrified to be in the water, I don't think they are going to go for a toy. They first need to get used to the water and like it before any of that stuff can happen. I felt like Suzanne was not getting that concept. Before you write a book, you have to learn your ABCs, you know? Before you go dock diving, you have to learn to be in the water, learn how to swim, etc.
The other thing was pricing. I paid $50 for a thirty minute visit, which is fair. However, I was there for a total of 27 minutes, including checking in, talking, paying, putting life vests on, and drying off my dogs. This really should have been 30 minutes of water time. Granted, my dogs hated it so I understand why she cut the class short. But why not adjust the price accordingly?? Again, I was not about to say something, as this was her choice. She made a choice to charge me the full price while cutting the class short and didnt mention anything about it. She did not offer to adjust the price accordingly. She simply stated that my dogs might just not like the water.
So, I did take a different dog to New England Canine in Walpole, MA. This instructor had me go on the ramp and use treats to get my dog to willingly go in the water. If he chose to run up the ramp, that was ok. I just kept calling him a good boy and giving him treats until eventually he was wagging his tail to go in the water. In that half hour lesson, my dog did 3 laps. He went into the pool with the teacher. While facing me, the teacher let go of his life vest and he swam toward me and onto the ramp. He was just as scared as my girls were. The difference here was that the teacher had him go into the pool on his terms with positive reinforcement. She also used me, since he didn't know her and was in a new place. By the end of that visit, he was so excited, he was rolling over in his life vest. Also, this place has a washroom to give my dog a bath afterward. Suzanne's did not and I had to stop at public dog bath place afterward to get the chlorine off of them. In the future, I will go to New England Canine.


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