Japan’s Deluxe Dog World
Where are the naked dogs of Japan? Maybe fretting in front of their wardrobes sighing, “I haven’t got a thing to wear!” T-shirts, jumpers and jackets are in vogue; bare fur is for bumpkins. Gripped by a booming pet industry, Japan is where dog indulgence can be shameless, anthropomorphised fun.
In special dog cafés, ladies chat over tea and cakes joined by pooches in prams. Dogs sport designer labels and get massaged in hot spring hotels. Swanky Tokyo suburbs Aoyama and Daikanyama are luxury havens with organic food, ayurvedic beauty treatments and celebrity hair stylists with three-month waiting lists. Weekends here are a good opportunity to gawk at the canine pram parade.

“People in other countries love their dogs too, but what’s unusual here is the amount of money owners spend on goods for their dogs,” said Yuki Wada, a manager at a top Japanese dog apparel company (source: Monocle). Posh pampering filters through society. Rich, doting women are one extreme, but dogs do walk in Japan. Men aren’t shy about chucking them in clothes either.

At a cosplay (pop culture character costume eg. from manga or anime) festival, a middle-aged man showed off his pomeranian.

Dog ownership, like cocaine use, can be seen as an economic indicator and pet dog numbers have surged recently in India and Brazil (The Atlantic). The world’s biggest economies (the US, China and Japan) boast lucrative dog product markets. The US sector rivals Japan, China’s is rapidly growing, but Japan, renowned for supreme quality and service, has the edge.
Highway service stations sell bento box dog meals. The BowLingual is a Japanese-invented handheld dog translator with over 5000 voiceprints. Wan Wan Paradise (“wan wan” means “woof woof” or dog) is a resort chain where people enjoy group hikes, games, swims and relaxation with their dogs. People can take their dogs to meet over 400 resident hounds at Tsukuba Wan Wan Land, a mega play park. Those who can’t keep pets can also pay to play with dogs here or at places like Tokyo’s Dog Heart.
Japanese businessman Takashi Fujita opened dog boutique, spa and day care centre Hachi in chichi South Yarra, Melbourne, Australia. Hachi promotes the Japanese aesthetics of cuteness, creativity and craftsmanship with sushi and squid chew toys, strawberry-shaped beds, kimonos, all natural ice-cream, Swarovski crystal collars and specially commissioned traditional porcelain bowls from Kyoto. Each month, there’s a free dress up and photo session.

Keeping dogs has different cultural nuances around the world. Men walk dainty poodles in France without a flinch to their masculinity. The outdoorsy Swiss love burly Bernese mountain dogs. Hachi retail assistant and dog photographer Rumi Nishi says, “In Japan, many houses are small especially in crowded cities so toy poodles, chihuahuas, corgis and dachshunds are common. People see them as cute and adorable.”
In Australia, dog prams are less for parading and more for older, disabled dogs or pugs and bulldogs with breathing problems. Wettable cooling jackets made from fast-dry fabric are big sellers. Unlike Japan’s teacup fluff ball and chipolata-shaped clientele, there are more poodle mixes like cavoodles so Hachi imports larger clothes. “But we don’t get a lot of kelpies or working dogs.”
Hachi is named after a real akita dog from Japan. The akita is one of six nationally protected Japanese dog breeds. Hachi followed his owner to the train station every day and waited for his return. His owner died suddenly at work and Hachi waited at the station for seven years until he died in 1935. Today, Hachi’s statue outside Tokyo’s Shibuya Station is a famed meetup spot.

This dashing shiba became an internet star for his customer greetings in this cigarette shop.

The shiba is another designated Japanese breed and extremely popular in Japan. A bit cat-like, they like to stay clean and groom themselves—a boon for the hygiene-obsessed Japanese. Many Japanese keep their dogs inside the home, wiping the paws before entry. They often carry disposable mats and bottled water to keep streets clean after toileting dogs.
The other Japanese breeds are the kai, kishu, hokkaido and shikoku. Thousands of years ago, the Japanese started using dogs to hunt boar, deer and bears. In the West, dogs were bred for many specialised roles and evolved into wildly diverse types. In Japan, the belief “letting nature take its course” meant dogs retained a wolfish appearance. In the late 19th century, foreign dogs entered Japan as it opened to the West. Movements to preserve the Japanese breeds sprouted from the 1920s.
The philosophy of letting nature take its course means many Japanese will not euthanise old dogs but will nurse them or visit them in dog retirement homes. Old dogs might be carried on walks but are painful conditions being prolonged sometimes? When pets die funerals with full Buddhist rites can be arranged. The flipside to all this devotion are the problems that plague other countries—puppy mills and thousands of abandoned dogs gassed every year.
In 2003, the number of pets surpassed children under 16 in Japan. Factors such as a challenged economy with more people continuing to live with their parents, long working hours and difficult conditions for working women with children have stunted birthrates. With its ageing population, Japan’s economic future is in trouble.
The dog industry thrives throughout Asia however. Visitors from China, Hong Kong, South Korea and Thailand take home Japan’s retail concepts. My Chinese friend has a box of outfits for her maltese-shih tzu cross, including smart trench coats in red and blue. The dog goes nuts with joy when the box is pulled out but not because it loves snazzy design—dress ups means a trip out.
Dog are oblivious to commercial and cultural trends. With pure, simple hearts, they’ll chomp a plain bone with the same zeal as a personalised birthday cake. Humans are the curious ones, tied to their foibles and fetishes. At least in Japan, as disposable income splashed on dog diapers and Snoopy dog passports is gobbled like liver treats, the owners seem happily enslaved to their pets.
This story is also featured at Japan Travel
Hachi is at Shop 3 / 286 Toorak Road, South Yarra, Melbourne. https://hachi-melbourne.com.au
Sources:
“Doggie Style—Japan,” Monocle magazine Issue 53, Vol 06, May 2012
“The Dog Economy is Global—but What is the World’s True Canine Capital?” The Atlantic magazine, Nov 13, 2012
Dogs, Begin Japanology, (documentary), NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation), 2009
Pets, Begin Japanology, (documentary), NHK (Japan Broadcasting Corporation), 2015
Photo of Hachi statue by Saschaporsche (Own work) [CC BY-SA 4.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0)%5D, via Wikimedia Commons
Thanks for the link to Tsukuba WanWan Land! I think I have to go there…(^ω^)
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That’s great – it looks pretty adorable on the website. If you do please take lots of photos!!
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Hahaha loved the article, it’s such a weird topic! Not sure where this idea of pampering their dogs is from!!!
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Thanks so much! Probably multiple reasons but one seems to be Japanese people are having less children so pets are their “fur-babies”!
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