The partners are well aware that their canine business associates are not typical in the average money management firm.

Try down the street

And if a prospective customer doesn’t like doing business in an office that is so inclined, that’s okay.

“We know going into it there will be people who think it’s unprofessional and that’s fine,” said Carver, who is the vice president of operations. “That’s part of the cost of doing business with dogs in our lives.”

They do try to minimize the impact on newcomers, though.

“We know that not everybody loves dogs, so we’ve got the gate to keep them from jumping up on people when they come in,” Carver said.

But the pair keep things in perspective by realizing it’s probably not that big a deal.

“At the end of the day, nobody is going to be making their money decisions based on whether they do or do not love dogs,” Harris noted.

The three dogs are unique personalities:

NEBR

The youngest and blondest, Henry, is about five years old and the most outgoing. He loves everyone. He was rescued from a “high kill” shelter in Tennessee where if a dog isn’t claimed in 10 days, it is euthanized.

Larry, with a brown and white coat, is six years old, and partner-in-crime with Henry. The two are inseparable, and at the same time, jealous of each other. Larry is the whiner of the bunch, and loves attention.

At 10 years old, Edith has a light brown and white coat and is the wall flower of the family. She takes a long time to warm up to strangers. She came to the house as a foster with her brother Archie. The two had lived with a woman for 10 years, until her failing health rendered her unable to care for them.

Shortly after they joined the gang, Archie passed away. Since then, Edith has been somewhat somber. But once she gets to know someone, she’s their unquestioning pal.

Edith took a shine to one of the employees, and if she disappears, they usually find her asleep under his desk while he’s working.

Aside from caring for their three full-time dogs, Harris and Carver are fostering a fourth dog more often than not, and most fosters last two to three weeks.

“We usually just foster one dog at a time,” Harris said. “Four in one house is a whole lot of dog.”

They’ve been doing it since late 2006, and have fostered almost 20 dogs since then. In 2008, they were named Foster Family of the year by New England Basset Hound Rescue.

And while the rewards for fostering rescued pooches may not be material, they are substantial.

“You put a whole lot more into it than you get out of it,” Harris said. “But there is a tremendous psychic reward — there are a whole lot pets out there who don’t have the opportunity to feel loved. I can’t imagine not doing this. It is our life.”

End of Article…..

More taking your hounds to work later….Cat, with Chaps and Emma laying right next to me!

P.S. If I worked there I bet they would all be under my desk! hehehe