Holiday Inn Ames Conference Center is pet friendly! Two pets up to 25 lbs are welcome for an additional fee of $25 per pet per night. The hotel will accept larger pets with prior hotel approval. …
Best Western Plus University Park Inn & Suites welcomes a maximum of two pets, of any size, per guest room for an additional $10 per pet, per night. All rooms are pet-friendly.
The Ames Animal Shelter is a safe and humane place for the care of homeless, unwanted, lost, injured and many other animals, while owners are sought. At the Ames Animal Shelter we promise to love and care for the pets brought to us to the best of our abilities; we promise to make them as comfortable as possible in a difficult situation; we will work responsibly to maintain our 90%+ reclaim and adoption rate!
Off Leash City Dog Park -Large dog (10 acres) -Small dog (2 acres)
Grandstay Residential Suites allows up to two dogs of any size per guest room for an additional fee of $10 per pet per night.
Pets are welcome, the fee is $10.00 per pet per night.
Comfort Inn Ames accepts two pets under 50 lbs for a fee of $15 per pet per night.
Econo Lodge Ames allows up to two dogs (50 lbs or less) per guest room for an additional fee of $10 per pet per night.
Americinn Ames is pet friendly! They welcome pets with no weight limit for an additional fee of $30 per stay.
Country Inn Suites By Carlson Ames allows up to two dogs of any size per guest room for an additional fee of $30 per pet per stay.
Super 8 Ames IA allows pets of any size for an additional fee. For pets 25lbs and under, there will be a nightly fee of $10 per pet. For pets over 25lbs, there will be a …
Quality Inn and Suites of Ames Iowa allows two pets under 50 lbs for a fee of $20 per stay.
Dog Boarding, daycare and dog wash facility
A house call veterinarian providing in-home preventative and medical care for dogs and cats in Ames, Iowa.
In home dog obedience training, for you and your dog. I believe in positive reinforcement methods to train dogs along with negative punishment. What this means is, I train dogs using things they find rewarding and stop training, removing all rewards, to correct them. I don’t see the need for e-collars, choke chains, prong collars, or anything that is physical to be used in correction.