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Puppy yoga in Wheat Ridge adds brunch and adoption appeal

An hour of puppy yoga at The Werks came with patio brunch, a Bloody Mary bar and adoption paperwork. The Wheat Ridge session was built for casual visitors, not just yogis.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
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Puppy yoga in Wheat Ridge adds brunch and adoption appeal
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Puppy Yoga on the Patio turned The Werks in Wheat Ridge into a brunch-and-adoption stop, pairing a 9 a.m. to 10 a.m. yoga class at 2625 Kipling Street with puppy time, patio drinks and a rescue-friendly finish. The one-hour in-person event was listed for Sunday, June 21, and a separate listing for Rescue Puppy Yoga - The Werks showed the same venue tied to a 10 a.m. session.

The setup leaned hard into the social side of dog yoga. The organizer said the class was weather permitting outdoors, and guests were told to arrive early, take photos and stay afterward for brunch. The add-ons made the pitch unmistakable: a make-your-own Bloody Mary bar, bottomless mimosas and 10 percent off the bill, all stacked on top of a puppy-filled yoga session.

That post-class window was built for more than selfies. The organizer said attendees would have time after class for photos, playtime and even adoption paperwork if one of the dogs stole their heart. Another listing spelled out the welcome in plainer terms: bring your own mat or rent one for $5, and there was no yoga or adoption requirement, just puppy love.

For dog-yoga readers, the appeal is how little it behaves like a standard studio class. The Werks is a craft brewery and hospitality space that leans on community, creativity and locally sourced food, which makes it a natural fit for a patio format that can hold yoga regulars, brunch crowds and rescue supporters at once. The American Kennel Club says puppy yoga works much like a normal yoga class, except puppies roam freely through the room, and that the format can help with puppy socialization.

The Werks and Rescue Puppy Yoga have also shown up together on earlier listings in August 2025 and May 2026, suggesting this is not a one-off stunt but a repeat collaboration with a working formula. For anyone deciding whether to send it to a friend for next weekend, the answer is in the structure itself: one hour on the mat, plenty of cuddle time, and brunch on the patio if the weather cooperates.

This article was produced by Prism’s automated news system from verified source data, official records, and press releases, then run through automated quality and moderation checks before publishing. The system is built and supervised by the people who set the standards it runs under. Read our full AI policy.

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