Wag'N Enterprises' Pet First Aid Training, Safety Courses Help Owners Save Their Animals (PHOTOS)

Pet First Aid Trainer: 'You Are Your Pet's 911'
|
Open Image Modal

HERNDON, Va. -- "You are your pet's 911," says Ines de Pablo, the owner of a Northern Virginia-based pet emergency management company called Wag'N Enterprises. She is 911 to a lot of other people's pets, in addition to her own cat and two dogs.

De Pablo got interested in pet emergency management in 2005 after Hurricane Katrina. She'd already been working in the emergency management field: She moved to D.C. from her native Switzerland in 1997 to study criminal justice and, after a stint teaching marksmanship in North Carolina, got her master's degree in risk, crisis and emergency management from George Washington University in 2004. The thousands of pets affected by the hurricane made her change course.

"It was bad enough for the people," she says. "The animals really got the wrong end of the stick. I figured I needed to do something about that."

Wag'N Enterprises was founded in 2007, and through it de Pablo now teaches classes, like pet first aid workshops geared toward owners and animal safety classes specifically for first responders (a possible benefit to these classes is to make law enforcement officers more comfortable with dogs, and potentially decreasing incidents of puppycide).

De Pablo develops and sells pet first aid supplies, too, like first aid kits named after her dog Mayday, a bandana printed with a flow chart detailing how to respond to different emergencies, even a "Pet In Distress -- Heat Alert" card to use when dogs are left in cars on hot summer days.

Wag'N Enterprises
Mayday Demonstrates A Pet Oxygen Mask(01 of09)
Open Image Modal
The oxygen wasn't turned on, of course. (credit:Arin Greenwood)
Ines de Pablo At A Map Of U.S. Jurisdictions With Pet Oxygen Masks(02 of09)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Arin Greenwood)
A 'Skinny Mayday' Pet First Aid Kit (The Bigger Kits Are Called 'Well Fed Mayday')(03 of09)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Arin Greenwood)
Ines de Pablo Demonstrates Chest Compressions On A Stuffed Dog(04 of09)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Arin Greenwood)
Ines de Pablo Demonstrates CPR On Mayday(05 of09)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Arin Greenwood)
Mayday And Gypsy Wait For Treats (06 of09)
Open Image Modal
Their reward for helping with first aid training. (credit:Arin Greenwood)
A Rover Responder Mobile Emergency Kit(07 of09)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Arin Greenwood)
Mayday Relaxes In The Wag'N Enterprises Office(08 of09)
Open Image Modal
(credit:Arin Greenwood)
A Notice In The Bathroom(09 of09)
Open Image Modal
If only dogs could read! (credit:Arin Greenwood)

She is also a supplier of pet oxygen masks to an increasing number of first responders across the U.S., and the devices are already paying dividends, having helped firefighters in New Jersey to save 20 dogs stuck in a house fire.

Few doggie day cares have yet engaged an additional service offered by Wag'N Enterprises: For "no less than $10,000," de Pablo will create comprehensive emergency management plans for pet facilities like doggie day cares.

"It's going to take one fire," de Pablo says. "That's what scares me."

De Pablo explains that part of her motivation to develop new products and learn new skills is her dog Gypsy's accident-prone tendencies.

"Gypsy jumps into cactus, she eats cactus. A snake is a stick that moves -- she has to chase it. She's constantly doing goofy stuff," de Pablo says. "We live in a scary universe, but I love it."

Our 2024 Coverage Needs You

As Americans head to the polls in 2024, the very future of our country is at stake. At HuffPost, we believe that a free press is critical to creating well-informed voters. That's why our journalism is free for everyone, even though other newsrooms retreat behind expensive paywalls.

Our journalists will continue to cover the twists and turns during this historic presidential election. With your help, we'll bring you hard-hitting investigations, well-researched analysis and timely takes you can't find elsewhere. Reporting in this current political climate is a responsibility we do not take lightly, and we thank you for your support.

to keep our news free for all.

Support HuffPost