Our Mission
We work to provide people with disabilities a new found independence and higher quality of life through a task trained service dog. As we grow we will always strive to interact with clients with the mindset that they are people in need and not just a source of income. Additionally, we aim to increase the public’s knowledge on the importance of service dogs and how to properly interact with them. Providing Pawsable will remain a lifelong resource for anyone in need, not just a dog training facility
How We Achieve It
Our head trainer has dedicated her life to training service dogs after being impacted so greatly by her first service dog. Rebekah also dedicates her time to ensuring that public facilities have updated legal policies and that their employees have proper training regarding service dogs. She does this to ensure her clients have a greater confidence in gong out with their dog. She is also in contact with many other service dog trainers and programs in order to keep her practices and training methods up to the industry standard. Providing Pawsable is not interested in the mass production of Service Dogs for profit, but rather significantly improving the life of every individual we interact with.
It all started when…
My newly diagnosed genetic conditions became too much for me to handle with medication alone. I was having more unconscious spells than ever and overall felt defeated and lost. Like many of our clients I could not afford a fully program trained dogs so I began searching for a shelter dog with potential. That is when Zoey, a three year-old hound mix entered my life. She had the desire to please and a deep connection to me instantly. Not even a month into having her she began to alert to upcoming medical spells naturally. Her first alert was in our local grocery store and I will never forget it. She began circling my legs making it impossible to walk, I quickly became frustrated with her behavior. Before I could even get the correction out I became dizzy and began losing vision. Since that first alert I have become obsessed with how dogs can help those with medical difficulties.
Rebekah Undersander
Head Trainer