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Rescue dog yoga with wolfdogs returns after sold-out debut

A sold-out debut sent Rescue Dog Yoga back to Springfield, with wolfdogs from Crux Pet Adoptions drawing the crowd to the June 14 class.

Nina Kowalski··2 min read
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Rescue dog yoga with wolfdogs returns after sold-out debut
Source: The Chronicle

Springfield’s appetite for dog yoga showed up fast enough to force a return engagement. Rescue Dog Yoga with Crux Wolf Dogs was scheduled for June 14, 2026, at 9:30 a.m. at the Who Rescued Who Event Center, 2787 Olympic Street in Springfield, Oregon, after the first session filled quickly.

The class was organized by The Laundromutt Self Service Dog Wash, but the real draw was the animals themselves. Instead of a standard wellness pop-up, this session centered on rescue messaging and the chance to practice alongside wolfdogs from Crux Pet Adoptions, giving attendees a rare look at canine ambassadors that are not often part of a yoga lineup.

AI-generated illustration
AI-generated illustration

The event page made the rescue mission plain. It said the class was meant to support rescue efforts while giving people a memorable way to meet incredible rescue animals, and it stressed that all levels were welcome. That framing helped explain why the concept clicked so quickly with local readers: it offered a limited spot, a hands-on animal experience, and a direct connection to rescue work, all in one morning session.

Organizers also left room for expansion if demand held. The listing said a second class could be added at 11:30 a.m. the same day if the first session filled again, a detail that pointed to more than a one-off novelty. The page also named future partners, including Many Miles 2 Home Dog Rescue, Unbreakabull Rescue Allies, and Wiggly Tails Dog Rescue, suggesting the event center was building a broader calendar around rescue-focused yoga.

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Source: worldanimalfoundation.org

That wider slate matters because it turns the debut into a model. The combination of a dedicated venue, a clear rescue pipeline, and wolfdogs that drew immediate interest gave Springfield a format that could keep returning as long as the seats keep filling. For anyone watching the local dog yoga scene, the message was simple: the crowd for rescue-centered doga was already there, and it showed up fast.

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