profile Puppy Love Craig Lin has dedicated his life to the happiness of dogs. BY MEGAN SWOYER I PHOTOGRAPHY BY ANGIE BARN It's a Tuesday night at Botsford Hospital in Farmington Hills, and the emergency room buzzes with activity. Rattled and nervous patients await medical staff whose goal is to calm visitors while servicing their needs. Big Jake Lin isn't on staff, but he sure knows how to quash fears and quell angst amid the suffering. A nod, a loving look, a way with people — that's Jake. He doesn't talk. But who needs talk when you've got man's best friend beside you? Jake, you see, is a white-as-snow, 3-year-old Great Pyrenees dog who comes to the aid of Botsford patients courtesy of his owner, Craig Lin. "When we first started as volunteers here, we would visit pediatrics or geriatrics. But they recently asked us to visit the ER," says Lin, of West Bloomfield. "Big guys in there will say, 'Hey, bring him over,' and it's like they forget their pain and why they are there. It really works." Not only does Lin find the time to visit hospitals, he also volunteers in a local Dr. Paws Pet Assisted Therapy program and participates in the Detroit Kennel Club Dog Shows (held every year in March) at Detroit's Cobo Center and America's Family Pet Expo coming to Novi's Rock Financial Showplace in November. All this — plus he co-owns Dog Centers of America in Wixom. The state-of- the-art, 24-hour attended-care complex, which opened almost three years ago, offers lodging, training and grooming classes, nutritional food, accessories and more. Web cameras (a nanny cam for puppies) allow owners to watch their pets. On any given day, Lin, along with business partner Steven Subelsky and their Dog Centers staff, works with anywhere from 25 to 75 dogs, whether there for a weekend visit while their "par- ents" are vacationing or longer-term boarding. Dogs who require training can get all they need at Lin's facility "You cannot believe how many dogs just need to know what 'yes' and 'no' mean. After they understand that, you can transition that knowledge into commands," Lin explains. Exercise also is key for dogs, he notes. "If a dog has no outlet for energy, that means chewed shoes and couch." Mission accomplished with the 11,000-square-foot facility, 4,000 of which is dedicated to two enormous romp rooms. All, including a puppy room and doghouse, are brightly painted with murals of dogs and mountain B10 • JUNE 2008 • TN platinum vistas, faux trees and park benches. Even fire hydrants are scattered about — invit- ing details that welcome animals and people alike. When Lin and Subelsky began developing their complex, they focused on what was in the best interest of the dogs and worked from there. "The 24-hour care provi- sion was non-negotiable. It was key to our belief," Lin explains of the trained facilitator always on duty. Each dog that enters the complex is screened to make sure they're not aggressive. And the owners invested time and money in a workshop/consultation with a St. Louis company that has been servicing dogs for more than 30 years. As a boy growing up in Livonia (Lin jokingly refers to himself as a "hillbilly Jew," noting there were few Jews in the area at the time), Lin had a veritable menagerie. "We always had animals," recalls Lin, 50, who, along with his siblings, regularly brought critters home to his Yiddish- and Russian-speaking grandparents; his father, who owned Jack's Fifth Avenue clothing store in Detroit; and his homemaker mother. "My dad was best friends with the owner of a pet-supply store, so we would get exotic visitors, too," he says. "You could buy baby alligators at a department store on Eight Mile and Telegraph — so we did, of course," says Lin of the pet amphibian he named Ally. "My brother was on TV with an ocelot," says Lin, whose first dog was a collie. "And we had a monkey overnight once." In the neighborhood, Lin would keep his eyes peeled for just about anything that moved. "I had bullfrogs that I would put on a makeshift leash." But, he adds, "My days of owning alligators and racing pigeons and walking bullfrogs on a leash are over. I'm running with the dogs these days." Today, Lin prefers big dogs such as Newfoundlands, Bernese mountain dogs and Great Pyrenees like Jake, whom Lin bought after studying the breed intensively. "Great Pyrenees are excellent therapy dogs due to their overall gentleness," Lin explains. For him, dogs provide unconditional love and companionship. "I love that the only nag- ging I get from him these days is for a biscuit or a walk," Lin laughs. "Good boy!" ■ For more information about Dog Centers of America s call (248) 960-0800 or log on to dogcenters.com.