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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Friday, February 24, 2006

Animal attraction unleashes pet lovers' Web sites

By Julie Hinds
Detroit Free Press

Brian McGlynn with Kona, his black labrador. McGlynn uses a Web site for animal lovers to meet women for dating.

TONY DING | Detroit Free Press

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Cherie Wilson has four males in her life who are loyal, fun, affectionate and thrilled to see her every time she walks into a room.

But she wouldn't mind having a steady boyfriend, too.

The 43-year-old yacht broker wants to find someone who loves pets.

"Seeing a man hold a cat or walking a dog and playing with it, that is so huge to me," says Wilson, who has two dogs — Sherlock, a Rhodesian ridgeback, and Squire, an Australian cattle dog — and two cats, Monkey and Tigger.

In the fall, Wilson signed up with www.AnimalAttraction.com, a dating Web site and informal community for pet owners. She hasn't found anyone from her home state of Michigan she wants to meet, but she plans to use the site to find people who share her passion.

"Some things are deal breakers," says Wilson of her dating preferences. "For me, smoking and non-love of animals would be total deal breakers."

It's worth noting that some singles have a love-me, love-my-pet philosophy about potential romantic mates.

As a result, places like dog parks and gourmet dog bakeries have become hangouts for pet owners who want to meet someone special or just socialize with those who understand them.

Picking up the trend, entrepreneurs have launched several Web dating sites that cater to pet lovers, like the popular DateMyPet.com. It focuses on a shared interest that taps into warm emotions.

"It's a strong bond, a common bond," says Diane Ingram, owner of the Doggy Deli in Clinton Township, Mich. "Everybody likes to brag about their kids. Four-legged kids."

AnimalAttraction.com, which started in 2004, was founded by Dan Cohen, a former sports marketer who's based in Washington, D.C. The site is free to users and earns money through advertising.

Back in 2003, Cohen stumbled on a dog-themed happy hour at a restaurant patio in the nation's capital. He was struck by the ease and sincerity of the people who'd brought their pets to the event.

"I joked with a friend of mine that we should start renting puppies to single people," says Cohen, whose own dog, Buddy, is a German shepherd-rottweiler mix.

AnimalAttraction.com has nearly 100,000 members, Cohen says, and is to reach 250,000 this year. On the site, members can post photos, list details about themselves and their pets and offer descriptions of themselves based on what their pets would say.

There also is pet-care information provided by the Humane Society of the United States, and chat rooms and message boards for those who prefer to communicate in a group setting.

Cohen says the site is evolving into a destination for both singles and the attached.

"We are gradually transforming from a pretty clear dating site to more of a community," he says. "Now, one of the things you do in a community is date, so that option is still there."

For Blakely Slater, 37, a lawyer who has a beagle, Suki, and a mixed-breed cat, Gabby, the site is a place to seek friendships.

"My instant thing was, 'Yeah, animal people. This is exactly the type of people I'm looking to be friends with,'" Slater says.

The pet theme appealed to Brian McGlynn, 35, an engineer who has a black Labrador named Kona.

"To generalize, pet people are a little more stable," McGlynn says. "Once you get to the 30-35 range, you're at risk of running into someone with issues. Usually, pet owners are responsible. They're in charge of keeping at least one person alive."

McGlynn says he's been dating a woman he met through the site for several months now. She has a dog and a cat and their combined pets all like each other, he says.

For Julie Herchock, 33, the site is part of her plans. She discovered it in May and is leaning toward relying on it and visits to dog parks when she steps up her efforts on the dating front.

"Those are the places where I'm hoping to meet my next, hopefully final, boyfriend," she says.

Herchock, a special education teacher, has three dogs — J.P., an Alaskan malamute, Kodiak, a yellow Lab, and a new addition, an 8-month-old black Lab named Ben. She also has four cats — Cubby, Silverbear, Morrie and Miss Kitty. She pictures herself in a relationship where her pets blend, "Brady Bunch" style, with those of her significant other.

She admits that differing philosophies on pets contributed to a breakup.

"He was raised with a dog that he loved," she explains. "But the dog stayed outside all the time. The dog was not allowed in the bed, on furniture. ... He thought of them as being beneath him."

Herchock says friends sometimes tease her about her devotion to her pets, but "most of them do really understand, when it gets to the heart of it, that they're my babies and I'm going to do everything I can to always help them."

Wilson, who's active in the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals of Southwest Michigan, understands those protective feelings. All of her dogs and cats are rescue animals. Her dog, Squire was about 6 weeks old when he was abandoned in a parking lot with pneumonia.

"He lives magnificently on 3-1/2 acres," she says. "Trust me, he's living much better than the people that did this to him."

Her other dog, Sherlock, who has Cushing's disease, requires $120 worth of medicine a month, which Wilson gladly covers.

And when Wilson wants to size up a new acquaintance, her dogs make excellent judges of character.

"I have actually dated a couple of people that the big guy, he did not like at all and growled right off the bat," recalls Wilson, who eventually found out Sherlock was right.

"He does know," she says. "He sniffs that out. It's amazing."