The PetMeet blog.
Guides, essays, and field notes for pet people. Written by humans, co-authored by their pets.
The PawPost™ - a field guide to the post we invented.
Why social media needed a new format, and what a great one looks like.
Every social network inherited its post format from a platform that wasn't built for your dog. We thought pets deserved their own shape on the page. So we drew one.
Read the full storyEverything we’ve written so far.
So you want your pet to have an account.
A starter guide, co-authored by a dog who technically has one.
We asked Moose - a two-year-old labradoodle with the work ethic of a mid-career poet - for advice on starting a pet social media account. He paused, stretched, and dictated this.
Finding your people, as a pet owner.
On the quiet loneliness of pet ownership, and what to do about it.
Pet owners are some of the happiest people we know. They are also, occasionally, some of the loneliest. Here's the paradox, and a few honest ways through it.
Dating with a dog - real rules from people who figured it out.
A guide for the ones who'd introduce their dog first.
If you're a pet owner, dating isn't a solo sport. It's a duo. Here are the rules we've collected from the people doing it well.
The science of why pet photos make you happier.
A short tour of the real biology, and a case for a kinder feed.
A study at the University of Leeds found that looking at cute animals for thirty seconds lowers blood pressure and heart rate. We took that personally.
A safety primer - share your pet online, not your home.
The quiet rules nobody told you about pet photos on the internet.
Photos of pets are more revealing than they look. Here's a short, practical guide to what to hide, what's fine, and how to share without oversharing.