Dogs playing party games with bubbles and agility equipment at a Bali pet party

Games are where my trainer half takes over from my baker half. A group of excited dogs is a wonderful thing right up until it is not, and the difference is structure: one game at a time, clear start and finish, prizes for everyone, and a human who can read the room at dog level. I have run play sessions for everything from a litter of foster puppies to a pack of fifteen Canggu beach dogs, and the formula holds — match the game to the dogs, not the dogs to the game, and end five minutes before anyone would have had enough.

The Games Menu

Treat Hunt

Sniffing is the most satisfying game a dog knows. We hide pet-safe treats from our bakery across the garden in difficulty tiers — puppies find the easy ones, the bloodhound mix gets a challenge.

Mini Agility Run

A soft, low course — tunnel, hoop, weave poles — built for fun, not competition. Every dog finishes, every dog gets a prize, and the action photos are spectacular.

Bubble Chase & Splash Zone

Dog-safe bacon-scented bubbles plus a paddling pool for hot days. The single most photographed five minutes of any party we run.

Musical Sit & Best Trick

Party classics, dog edition — owners join in, the trainer judges generously, and the prize table does the rest.

Safety Is the Real Entertainment

Before any game starts we do staggered introductions — new dogs meet one at a time, on lead, with space. During games, one handler watches play while another runs the activity; any dog showing stress gets steered to the calm-down corner with water, shade and distance, no drama. Sizes and play styles are grouped sensibly: a great dane's polite play can flatten a chihuahua, so chase games run in shifts.

Games slot into any dog birthday party as the middle hour, work brilliantly at beach parties (sand agility is a leveller — everyone is slower), and can headline a puppy shower with socialisation-focused play for the youngest guests. For cats, entertainment is calmer and solo — wand-toy sessions and puzzle feeders within their own party format.

How It Works

  1. Tell us the guest list

    Ages, sizes, breeds and any dogs with quirks. We design the game sequence around the actual attendees.

  2. We bring everything

    Agility kit, bubbles, prizes, paddling pool and a sound system that stays at dog-friendly volume.

  3. One hour of structured play

    Treat hunt, agility, bubbles, contests — with water breaks built in and the calm-down corner always open.

  4. Wind-down before cake

    Games end on a sniffing activity so the pack arrives at the cake moment happy, not frantic.

What It Costs

A trainer-led games hour starts at IDR 600,000 as an add-on to a Basic package, and is already included in Classic and Full packages. Big packs (8+ dogs) add a second handler at IDR 300,000. Standalone games sessions — for playdates or villa events without the birthday — start at IDR 900,000 including equipment. Details on the pricing page.

Frequently Asked Questions

My dog has never been to a party. Will they cope?
Most dogs surprise their owners. We start every party with calm, structured introductions, and the games menu has a level for everyone — even if your dog's level is 'observing from the snack table'.
Are the games safe for puppies and seniors?
Yes — that is exactly why a trainer runs them. Puppies get short, soft activities; seniors get sniffing games and gentle contests. Nobody is ever forced to participate.
What about dogs that guard food or toys?
Tell us in advance and we manage it: separated treat stations, no shared toys for that guest, and extra distance during prize moments. As a trainer I would rather plan around it than discover it.
Can you run games on the beach?
Gladly — sand agility and shoreline fetch are highlights of our beach parties. Mornings only, on dog-friendly stretches like Berawa.

Areas We Cover

Give the Pack Something to Talk About

Tell us how many dogs are coming and what they're like — we'll design the games hour and quote it on WhatsApp.

Plan the Games Hour