BUYING PET PRESENTS Puttin' on the dog



Spending on pets has nearly doubled in the past nine years.
PHOENIX (AP) -- This is clearly not the Manchester terrier's idea of fun.
Held in the gloved grasp of "Santa Paws," Nikki is trying to wriggle free, ears back, pointed nose waving to and fro.
A photographer's assistant squeaks a yellow duck-shaped toy and Nikki's owner, Cheryl Siewert, coos encouragingly to get the black-and-brown pooch to hold still. He obliges only momentarily, but Siewert is all smiles.
The photo with jolly Ol' Saint Nick, who is actually an animal shelter volunteer in a red suit and white beard, has become an annual tradition for Nikki, whose five photos hang in ornaments from Siewert's tree. "We take these pictures so we can know just how cute they can be," she said.
Siewert isn't the only one giving her pet the holiday treatment once reserved for human family members. Pet supply stores, which have enjoyed strong growth even in the soft U.S. economy, are doing a booming business in holiday and seasonal gifts for pets as owners stock up on sweaters, antler headbands, jingle bell collars and other holiday items.
"This year, it's just proliferating beyond anything," said Bob Vetere, chief operating officer of the American Pet Products Manufacturers Association. "It's just exponential. It's beyond anything we've ever seen before."
Americans are expected to spend $31 billion on their pets this year, including veterinary services, food and supplies, according to APPMA, an industry group. That's up from $17 billion in 1994, with a market that continued to grow during the economic downturn.
The industry doesn't track numbers of holiday-themed products, but Vetere said the number and variety have grown substantially in the last few years.
The gift giving isn't confined to December either, he said. "You can't believe the stuff they have for Valentine's Day. It seems like it's just any excuse for a pet gift."
When San Diego-based Petco surveyed its customers online, it found more than 85 percent said they would buy their pets a holiday gift. Sixteen percent said they would spend more than $100.
Americans are "adding their pets to their gift lists," said Alisa Bartmess, the cat-toy buyer for Phoenix-based PetsMart.
Pet supply companies say increasing numbers of pet owners think of themselves as "pet parents," meaning they treat their dogs and cats more like family than critters.
Siewert and a string of pet owners who had their dogs' photos taken at a PetsMart store in north Phoenix agreed.
"He's an only child," said Rosemary Connell of her German shepherd mix Bosco. She and her husband, John, brought the puppy in for obedience school and a Santa photo since it's Bosco's first Christmas with them.
The Phoenix couple said Bosco gets the family treatment from extended members of their family too, with some relatives in New York shipping gifts for Bosco.
Even some reluctant pet owners concede they have started treating their animals like family.
"I didn't want a pet, but now that we have one ... I'm growing attached to him," said Norma Shipp, who came from nearby Cave Creek to see Santa Paws with her three children and a fluffy 4-pound Maltese clad in a blue sweater.
Popular purchases
Apparel -- ranging from red Santa suits to collars with red and green lights -- are among the season's most popular purchases, said Kevin Drouse, a PetsMart store director.
And the number of choices keeps growing, Petco spokesman Shawn Underwood said. The variety of antlers, Santa hats and sweaters has grown dramatically in recent years, he said.
Even upscale retailers have begun offering apparel for the holidays. British clothier Burberry offers $225 lambswool check collar dog coats in its holiday catalogue. Ralph Lauren sells $95 cashmere sweaters in four colors and a toiletry collection that includes dog cologne.
Not all dogs are fond of being well-dressed in holiday sweaters or other decorative items, acknowledged Don Cowan, a Petco spokesman.
Underwood said all the holiday gift-giving even affects nonpet owners. Petco sees an increase in the number of gift cards sold around the holidays, and the company suspects they're being purchased by family and friends as gifts for other people's pets.
"What do you buy for the pet who has everything?" he said.