diana,
fergie, and oh yeah, mary
by julie savage parker
Mary
Hourihan is the third woman to run the pet supply store that sits quietly
just north of Beaver Lake on Merrimon in Asheville. Well if truth be
known, Mary is a mere handmaiden, a lady-in-waiting, so to speak, to
their royal majesties Fergie and Diana, the four-leggeds who are the
power behind Mary's throne.
But
first, the once-upon-a-time part. Ahem. Once upon a time, (a little
more than a dozen years ago) Mary and her husband Bob moved to Asheville
and toyed for a bit with the antiques marketjust long enough to
become, uh, disenchanted. Then they bought Asheville Pet Supply more
or less on a lark, and ended up biting off much more than they really
planned to chew. "When you own a small business," Mary says,
"you have a lot of hats to wear!" (The Cat in the Hat flashes
by, nodding knowingly to Mary as he passes.)
"When
we first took over the store, Pet Love at the mall and Exotic Pets were
the only related stores around." (And what a testament to the persistence
of women that this small shop has been consecutively woman-owned for
25 years.) Over time Mary has taken over the two adjacent stores and
greatly expanded the variety of nutritious dog and cat foods, supplies,
and toys. Reps claim that Asheville Pet Supply is the place to go for
toys.
Though
her business is thriving, when I ask her what she would most like to
see in our profiles of local women business owners, she says she wants
to read about their motivation, what keeps them going. "I want
to know how other women juggle 20 balls in the air without losing their
minds." Mary's last vacation was sometime in 1993, and you'll often
see her after closing time, still hard at work and still open for business.
"The thing that saves me is that I love what I do. I love the people."
She
has a strong business background which she feels goes a long way to
ensure her success. She also keeps on top of what's going on in the
world of pet products. Mary Hourihan provides for her customers quite
a variety of healthy foods for dogs and cats. Apparently more and more
people are catching on that ordinary commercial dog food can seriously
compromise an animal's health. Aside: I first learned from Michael W.
Foxa veterinarian, former vice-president of the Humane Society
of the United States, and prolific writer of books about animals, bioethics,
pet food, and the animal/human connectionabout the dangers of
the garden variety commercial dog food, while our dogs were playing
at their (unofficial) dog park in DC. It would be quite good to inform
yourself about what really is and is not nutritious for your animals.
Discover for yourself after a bit of research that it is a misguided
concept that dogs should never be given "people food", but
instead the huge, cheap bags of heaven-knows-what you pick up at the
grocery store.
Asheville
Pet Supply even has a frozen raw food blend for dogs. Mary obviously
keeps up carefully with Whole Dog Journal. No dusty, backwoods pet supply
store, this store's shelves are lined with yogurt chips for rabbits,
hammocks for ferrets, "Jungle decks" for reptiles, hanging
fabric hideaways for birds. And there's iguana food, tropical fruit
snack bars for parrots, and even flower remedies, essences, and herbal
tinctures for your beloved fur (finned, feathers, scaled, etc.) family.
People take great pains to create appropriate habitat and diet for the
animals they love.
There
is a constant stream of people who deeply love their animals coming
through her doors. I believe they detect a kindred spirit. Mary's intent
is that each person who enters the store feels better when she leaves
than when she came in. (Or was that Fergie?)
Asheville
Pet Supply
1451 N. Merrimon
Asheville, North Carolina
(828) 252-2054
hours: m-f 10-7 sat 10-6
FERGIE
~ PHOTO BY RITA MCCLELLAN