Our Dog Park clinic schedule is fully booked for 2024, If you need to enroll in a class near our area please call Get Rattled directly to inquire about availability 1-775-234-8844.

On April 14, 2024, our annual Rattlesnake Avoidance Clinic will be held at the dog park. Our wonderful friends and professionals at Get Rattled have assured us they are dedicated to training and retraining our dog park members.
1. The cost for initial training will be $150. This is an increase from previous years because of the rise in travel expenses.
2. Refresher training will be $100.
3. Only six dogs will be accepted PER HOUR. Get Rattled wants to ensure the best possible training for all dogs. It's all about QUALITY, not QUANTITY. We love this group for that reason!
Please join our Membership prior to attending this clinic. We will offset your INITIAL TRAINING expense (NOT a retrain) per member (NOT per dog) by $20. So basically, you are getting your membership dues back! If you have a FAMILY membership, we will still credit you $20.
Registration and Waiver are now available below.
PRINT and COMPLETE each page.
Make your check out to: GET RATTLED for either $150 or $100 (the $20 credit will be handed to you on the day of the clinic)
Mail it all to Western Gateway Dog Park, PO Box 5, Penn Valley, CA 95946.
This event sells out. Get your forms and check mailed quickly. Follow all instructions on the registration form!
If you have any questions or need further assistance, contact Nan Spier at 530-263-7634. Many questions can be answered from the FAQ document here.
As we are trying to build up our new Dog Park blog page, I thought I’d share with you a little bit about the local buzz and advertisement we’ve received. Here is an article published in The Union, February 6, 2015
Penn Valley off-leash dog park reopens after expansion, improvements
Jeri Stone lived in Penn Valley for 15 years before she ever discovered the off-leash dog park inside Western Gateway Park near her home.
“Nobody knew where it was,” said Stone, who has a dog named Lily.
Stone and others have always known they are free to walk their dogs with leashes inside thesprawling 87-acre Western Gateway Park, part of the Western Gateway Recreation and Park District established in the mid-’70s. But the off-leash section was somewhat of a best-kept secret — until lately.
Today, through the generosity of Bear Yuba Land Trust’s Al Salter Fund and the work of volunteers like Stone, the dog park is reopening after most of the work has been completed for a major expansion and renovation.
A $47,000 Phase II construction project financed by the land trust has doubled the size of the park to just over 2 acres, added numerous disabled access improvements, installed new signs, created a special protected area for small dogs and resurfaced the crusher-sand-and-gravel surface that makes it easy for dogs to run free.
“We’re just trying to make it as nice as possible,” said Stone, now president of the Friends of Western Gateway Dog Park. “It’s going to be real nice when it’s all done.”
As of 2014, Friends of Western Gateway Dog Park is the new official name for Gold Country Dog Park Association, the 501(c)3 nonprofit that oversees the facility.
“We wanted a name that specifically identified the dog park as being in Western Gateway Park,” Stone said.
The group is seeking donations for additional improvements that are not covered by the Bear Yuba Land Trust grant, Stone said.
“We need to repair the two broken ADA picnic tables in the new oak grove area,” she said. “The cost for new wood and materials is $514.72.”
Anyone wishing to send a check for donations may mail it to: Gold Country Dog Park Association, P.O. Box 5, Penn Valley, CA 95946.
Stone said she hopes small dog owners will return to the park now that they will have a protected area. In the past, large dogs would jump the fence into the small dog area, resulting in owners deciding not to bring their small dogs to the park.
“We’re trying to bring in the small dogs again,” she said.
Stone said contractors on the current Phase II construction include locally owned Hansen Brothers, Sun Fence and Earthshape Landscaping.
Hansen Brothers, Empire Fence and Creative Curbs, also locally owned businesses, were contractors on Phase I. Still to be completed are the tree planting, resurfacing the road and parking area and installing additional signs.
Stone also wants to put in a “hitching post” for owners to park their dogs while the owners are using the restroom.
“We want to thank the Bear Yuba Land Trust’s Al Salter Fund for their continued support, and also the Condon Dog Park volunteers for their helpful advice when we were looking to make these improvements,” Stone said. “They (the volunteers) were instrumental in guiding us; the many calls I made to them were always cheerfully answered.”
Western Gateway Recreation and Park District is one of the hybrids known as special districts, hundreds of which are established across the state.
In the case of Western Gateway Park, which comprises most of that special district, 80 acres are owned by Nevada County and the remaining 7 acres are owned by the park.
The park itself maintains a part-time office in the Buttermaker’s Cottage near the main park entrance on Penn Valley Drive.
The office, mainly an administrative center for the district’s governing board, is staffed from 8 a.m. to noon Monday through Friday. The phone is 530-432-1990.
More information on the park is at www.westerngatewaypark.com. Also, more information on the dog park may be found at www.westerngatewaypark.com/dogpark.html
The Union, February 6,2015 Full article here