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New Columbia dog park would give owners an extra choice

Olga Helsing and her three dogs are looking forward to a free dog park planned for Owens Field Park.
Olga Helsing and her three dogs are looking forward to a free dog park planned for Owens Field Park. Columbia Voice

Ola Helsing has complained for years about not having a place in Columbia to take her three dogs. She lives in a Gervais Street apartment, and some parks are too far away. Others require a membership or annual fee.

Only the city’s Emily Douglas Dog Park on Wheat Street is both free and public, but Helsing said it’s not regularly maintained.

She and other dog owners could soon have another option, however – a free dog park in the Rosewood area, planned as part of the renovations to Owens Field Park. And Helsing, who used to live in Rosewood, says she’d happily drive the almost 4 miles to her old neighborhood several times a week to let her dogs play.

“Columbia should be more dog friendly, and being dog friendly means having more dog parks,” Helsing said.

Dog parks where owners can let their animals run free have grown 20 percent in the past five years, according to The Trust for Public Land, which says they grew faster than any other kind of urban park.

Dog parks are great because dog owners go to the parks early in the morning and after kids leave at night, so parks with dog parks see more consistent use,” said Abby Martin, a researcher at the trust.

There has been little opposition to opening dog parks in Columbia because they offer contained areas for dogs to socialize and exercise, said James Hill, associate director at Richland County Animal Care.

But they are not without issues. Most dog parks start as free municipal parks but eventually require membership fees to help pay for maintenance, said Roseanne Conrad, president of theNational Dog Park Association.

“I don’t need one of my kids – we have a lot of kids that play ball here – I don’t need them face-planting in what-in-the-world your dog’s business is,” said Huggins, president of the South Kilbourne Neighborhood Association.

Another dog owner, Sarah Williams of Columbia, brings her dog, Moses, to Emily Douglas because it’s the city’s only free dog park. But Williams, like Helsing, said she would take Moses to the new dog park.

“There needs to be more dog parks,” she said. “It’s just going to make people and dogs happier.”

Helsing said each of the Midlands dog parks she has visited has issues. For instance, Lake Carolina Dog Park is only open to Lake Carolina residents, while Sesquicentennial State Park’s dog park and the NOMA Bark Park in Elmwood each requires an annual $25 pass.

Columbia Dog Park on Humane Lane is both members only and $35 a year.

The idea for the Owens Field dog park came up about three years ago when the Rosewood community was discussing the larger renovation plans, said Mark Miller, president of the Rosewood Community Council. Those renovations, which would cost about $2.7 million in two phases, were supposed to start last fall but have been delayed due to stormwater runoff and drainage issues, Miller said.

Construction now could begin in May, said Todd Martin, Columbia’s park planner and manager. The dog park, part of the first phase, will go to the right of the Jim Hamilton Boulevard entrance.

“Dog parks are wonderful to me, and Owens Field is a great, great space,” Helsing said. “It’s just the perfect place, and I can’t wait.”

This story was originally published April 5, 2016 at 12:26 AM with the headline "New Columbia dog park would give owners an extra choice."

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