Puppy yoga at Phoenixville brewery raises funds for dog rescue
Two puppy-yoga sessions at Stable 12 paired $35 tickets, pints and snuggles with TLC Rescue fundraising, while limited spots kept the Phoenixville event intimate.

Stable 12 Brewing Company gave Phoenixville dog lovers a simple way to show up for TLC Rescue: two puppy-yoga sessions on Sunday, June 14, at 368 Bridge Street, each running from 9:00 to 10:00 a.m. and 10:30 to 11:30 a.m. The class cost $35 per ticket and included puppy snuggles and a pint, with TLC saying the limited spots made the event feel part yoga class, part adoption appeal, and part brewery hangout with actual puppies wandering into the flow.
For TLC, the partnership fit the way the rescue already works. To Love a Canine Rescue describes itself as a 100% foster-based, no-kill rescue in Chester County focused on abandoned, stray and surrendered dogs, and it says it relies on events because it does not have a facility where adopters can visit multiple dogs. That makes gatherings like brewery meet-and-greets, farmers markets and puppy yoga more than a novelty. They are a practical way to raise money, socialize dogs and put adoptable animals in front of people who may not otherwise cross paths with them.
The puppy-yoga listing was only one stop in a crowded June calendar. TLC also posted a Yappy Hour at Stove & Tap for June 19 from 5:00 to 7:00 p.m. at 158 W Gay St. in West Chester, where Stove & Tap said it would donate 15% of all food sales to the rescue. The rescue also listed another puppy-yoga-style event for June 20 at Twelve78 Brewing Co. in Phoenixville, underscoring how much of TLC’s fundraising now depends on these social, limited-capacity events moving from one local venue to the next.


Stable 12 was a natural stage for the format. The brewery describes itself as a craft brewery with a full food menu, and its events history shows this was not the first time rescue-dog yoga had landed there. Stable 12 has hosted a puppy-yoga event at the same brewery before, and it previously promoted a similar rescue-dog yoga gathering years earlier. That continuity gave the June 14 sessions a familiar rhythm: a brewery crowd, a short class, a pint, and a rescue getting dogs seen in the kind of setting that can turn curiosity into an adoption lead.
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