“We didn’t just bring a dog home—we built a life together.”
Most people are quietly taught a version of pet ownership that looks like this: early morning walks squeezed in before work, quick potty breaks between meetings, weekend guilt for not doing “enough.” Travel? Your dog stays behind—or becomes an afterthought.
We tried that. And it didn’t feel right. Deep down, we didn’t want a life where our dog lived on the edges—we wanted a life that expanded because of him. So we made a different choice. We stopped trying to fit a dog into our life… and started building our life with him. And that choice didn’t just change how we traveled—it changed how we lived.

A Life That Slowed Us Down
I didn’t grow up with dogs. Becoming a dog mom wasn’t planned—it happened later, unexpectedly, as if life had been quietly preparing me for a new rhythm I hadn’t known I needed.
My first dog, named Pepito, was a senior rescue—we learned he was a former puppy mill stud who had spent most of his life confined to a cage. The world, to him, was unfamiliar in ways that are hard to fully explain. He didn’t know leashes, treats, or even the softness of human touch. There was no chaos or boundless puppy energy. What he brought instead was something quieter: a steady presence, a deep stillness, and a kind of wisdom you don’t expect—but immediately feel.
Pepito had a quiet, unmistakable gift—he made people smile. Strangers softened the moment they saw him, drawn in by something gentle and unspoken. It wasn’t something he tried to do—it was simply who he was. And somehow, in a way that still feels hard to explain, that same quiet magic lives on in Chance.
Loving Pepito required patience—but more than that, it required me to slow down. Not dramatically, all at once, but in small, almost invisible ways that reshaped the flow of my life. Short walks became intentional moments. Errands were transformed into shared adventures instead of tasks to rush through. Silence, once uncomfortable, became safe and rich.
Pepito didn’t just enter my life—he changed my rhythm. And then, everything changed again. When Pepito was diagnosed with congestive heart failure, I was told he had three months left. Three months to love him, to honor him, to let him teach me everything he had to offer. We moved—closer to green spaces, closer to calm, closer to the life he deserved. But Pepito had his own timeline. He stayed for ten months—ten months of deeper connection, ten months of presence that felt like a gift, ten months of lessons on how to truly live slowly and intentionally.
And when it was finally time, he passed gently while in my lap, calm, at peace, and still smiling, as I was putting on my sneakers to take him to the ER. It was a quiet, profound moment that I will carry forever. In that instant, through the grief, I made a quiet wish: Find your way back to me.
Chance: The Dog Who Changed the Direction of Everything
That very day, as we drove back to Pennsylvania to lay Pepito to rest, a five-week-old puppy was being transported from Kentucky to Western Pennsylvania. Two months later, we met him. He was so very tiny, curious, and already brimming with personality. We named him Chance—and nothing would ever be the same.
Chance came into my life with an energy entirely his own: expressive, adventurous, and full of curiosity. And yet, there was a familiar thread—a calmness, an old-soul presence, even markings that reminded me of Pepito, who had been a blue merle Chihuahua. Chance felt both new and somehow known. From the very start, he wasn’t just along for the ride—he wanted to be part of everything.
So we trained. Not just basic obedience, but real-world skills: navigating busy city streets, building confidence in new environments, communicating and trusting each other. New York City became our training ground, and what started as ordinary walks evolved into something deeper, something transformative. Through the training process, I changed too. I learned patience. Emotional awareness. The power of presence. And with every walk, every sniff, every quiet pause on a street corner, something in me was slowly coming alive again.
At the same time, my creativity returned. I picked up my camera and began capturing Chance—not just in posed, stylized photos, but in the small, beautiful moments that told a story of life together. What started as photography became storytelling, and Chance became both my muse and my purpose. Walks stopped being routines—they became explorations. Errands became adventures. We lingered longer, followed curiosity instead of schedules, and started to notice the world in a new way: its small joys, hidden corners, and unexpected treasures.
From Everyday Moments to Unexpected Spotlight
Chance’s first feature came at six months, on BuzzFeed. At the time, it felt like a fun one-off. But as his confidence and training deepened, so did the opportunities. Chance started appearing in ads, campaigns, and even on TV. He wore an off-white raincoat and went viral again. He made background appearances on shows and slowly, naturally, became a recognizable face in the pet world.
By the time he was four, Chance was cast in the Amazon Prime series The Pack. Seeing him on screen—and later on billboards across both coasts—was surreal. From city sidewalks to national campaigns, every step felt like a natural extension of the life we were already living together.
And yet, through all of it, our everyday life didn’t change. We still lingered on street corners, sat longer in parks, and explored the city at a dog’s pace. That rhythm, that way of slowing down and being present, was the foundation of everything Chance achieved.
Choosing a Different Ending
By the time Chance was seven, he had already lived a life many dogs never experience. Campaigns, sets, European city streets transformed into backdrops—everywhere we went, he was noticed, photographed, admired. And yet, I started noticing the small things: the quiet moments between adventures, the way he stretched in the sun, the joy he found in a simple sniff.
I asked myself a harder question: What does a good life look like for him?
Not measured in campaigns, views, or accolades. Not defined by recognition or appearances. But life that felt right for him.
So we made a choice. We traded call times for quiet mornings, shot lists for long, wandering sniff walks, and the pressure to perform for the freedom to just be. Chance didn’t stop showing up for the world—he just showed up differently.
He became a multi-tasked service dog, helping me navigate a new chapter of my health. The same calm presence that once filled a camera frame now steadies me in ways I can’t fully explain. The same instincts that made him magical on screen became grounding, intuitive, and real.
This chapter is bigger than anything that came before it—not because of fame, but because we built a life together. A life where Chance gets to be everything he already is—not for the world to see, but for us to live.
What NYC Dog Adventures Really Stands For
Yes, we’re a dog-friendly travel blog. But that’s just the surface. At its core, NYC Dog Adventures is about redefining life with a dog, especially in a city that never stops moving. In New York, it’s easy for dogs to become an afterthought—or worse, for pet parents to feel guilty for not doing “enough.” We wanted something different. We wanted to explore more, stress less, and truly live alongside our dog—one park, one street, one paw at a time.
The Purpose of Slow Travel With a Dog
When most people think of slow travel, they imagine quiet towns or countryside escapes. For us, slow travel is intentional—no matter the city, no matter the country. Whether it’s a 3–5 day road trip, a short flight, or a 10+ day European adventure, we stay long enough to feel the rhythm, the heartbeat of a place. We don’t bounce from city to city. We linger. We notice. We pause.
Slow travel with a dog means mornings spent strolling through empty streets, afternoons in parks soaking in the smells, evenings letting our days unfold naturally. It’s about living like the locals, connecting deeply, and creating experiences that enrich both humans and dogs.
What You’ll Find on NYC Dog Adventures
Explore nycdogadventures.com, and you won’t just find recommendations—you’ll discover a new approach to life with your dog:
- Deep-dive neighborhood guides that let you see NYC differently.
- Seasonal walks and moments—from spring cherry blossoms to fall foliage and quiet winter routes.
- Hidden gems tucked in plain sight.
- Real strategies for stress-free dog travel.
- Stories that remind you why you chose this life in the first place.
Everything we create has one goal: to help you build a life that feels good—for both you and your dog.

Final Invitation
If life feels too fast…
If you wish your dog could be part of more moments…
If you crave a softer, slower way of living…
Start small:
- Take the longer route home.
- Sit a little longer at the park.
- Say yes to bringing your dog along.
Let them set the pace—just once. And see what changes. The most meaningful shift isn’t in where you go—it’s in how you experience it.
Follow our journey at nycdogadventures.com and on Instagram at @nycdogadventures
For dog-friendly NYC guides, slow travel inspiration, and a softer way to explore life—together.