Explore family friendly events, theatres, galleries, concerts, nightlife, things to do, and more in the Greenville, SC and Upstate areas.

Interested in adding an event to our calendar? Please click the green “Post Your Event” button below.

Monday, March 20, 2023
Camp for Paws
Mar 20 @ 9:00 am – 1:00 pm
Greenville Humane Society

The Greenville Humane Society is hosting Camp for Paws, a half-day camp designed for ages 8-12 all about our four-legged friends! Campers will learn all about compassion for animals, including leash skills, bite safety, how to speak canine and feline, and how they can get involved with animals in need throughout our community. Lunch will be provided by our generous Community Partner, Papa Johns Pizza! Campers will also receive an exclusive camp t-shirt and be awarded a certificate of camp completion!
There are limited spots available so register your kids today!
Saturday, April 1, 2023
Fool’s Rush In… To Adopt a Pet!! | FREE Adoptions
Apr 1 @ 11:00 am – 2:00 pm
Various Petco -see below
We’re so excited to announce that for Saturday, April 1st – Greenville County Animal Care will be offering FREE adoptions at 3 pawsome Petco locations!
For this event, we’ll be taking adorable & adoptable dogs over to the Cherrydale PetCo. (3270 N Pleasantburg
Dr, Greenville, SC 29609), Spartanburg Petco (1931 E Main St. Suite D, Spartanburg, SC 29307) AND the Woodruff Petco (1140 Woodruff Rd Ste 401, Greenville, SC 29607)
All adoptions for this off-site event will be FEE WAIVED! We hope to see you there!

📅: Saturday, April 1
🕚: 11 AM – 2 PM⁠
📍: Cherrydale Petco (3270 N Pleasantburg Dr, Greenville, SC 29609)
📍: Spartanburg Petco (1931 E Main St. Suite D, Spartanburg, SC 29307)
📍: Woodruff Petco (1140 Woodruff Rd Ste 401, Greenville, SC 29607)
Waggin’ Weekend with the Swamp Rabbits
Apr 1 @ 7:00 pm
Bon Secours Wellness Arena

Bark your calendars for the last Doggie-Date-Night of the season! Thanks to our friends at Noble Dog Hotel, Saturday, April 1st you can bring your four legged pooch to the Swamp Rabbits Game for a fun night of hockey!

Thursday, April 13, 2023
Greenville Humane Society: Survey
Apr 13 all-day
online
We value your input about the direction of the Greenville Humane Society’s future.
The Greenville Humane Society and its Board of Directors are conducting a pre-campaign planning study for a brand new, state-of-the-art expansion of our current facilities. Our primary goal of this study is to obtain your honest feedback and truly understand the needs of pet owners throughout Greenville County.
Following the pandemic, it has become clear that the Greenville community needs our support now more than ever. It’s a true honor that pet owners in Greenville — and beyond — continue to look to the Greenville Humane Society to care for their pets as if they were our own.
In 2022, our talented veterinarians performed 17,000 spay/neuter surgeries with 78% of those surgeries being performed on public animals. This means that the vast majority of surgeries performed at our clinic are on pets in our community. Since the opening of our Medical Center in 2017, the demand for public spays and neuters has increased by 38%. This number and the need for space to facilitate these surgeries continues to grow.
Due to the current veterinarian shortage, pet owners in the state of South Carolina are struggling to find access to affordable and quality spay and neuter resources. We are driven to fill this gap by expanding our operations to meet the public demand while continuing to serve our community.
Additionally, animal shelters continue to be overwhelmed by the amount of homeless adult dogs entering their facilities. The Greenville Humane Society currently partners with 50 different shelters in 10 states to help alleviate this burden, but we are consistently finding ourselves out of space and struggling with limited resources.
Our team has developed a new master plan to meet the unprecedented demand for our high quality, low-cost services. Phased in over the next few years, this project will dramatically expand our spay/neuter services, vaccine clinic, adoptions, humane education, community outreach and foster care program. While we’re excited for everything the future holds, we need your help!
We would love for you to take a few moments to complete the following survey as your feedback is very important to us.
Thursday, April 27, 2023
TCMU-Greenville Therapy Dog Thursday
Apr 27 @ 10:00 am – 12:00 pm
TCMU-Greenville

Join us for a PAW-some day at The Children’s Museum of the Upstate! From 10-noon, six pups will be stationed throughout every floor of the museum. Our furry friends will also help lead Story Time at 10:30 and 11:30, located in the Dream Theater. This event is free for TCMU members. Advanced tickets recommended.

Friday, April 28, 2023
THE DEAD POETS WITH GLENIS REDMOND AND ALLAN WOLF
Apr 28 @ 7:30 pm
Genevieve's

Experience poetry unlike you’ve heard before with this collective of performance poets. The Dead Poets take center stage resurrecting classic words of the likes of Shakespeare, Hughes and Frost with expert musicianship and whit. Then be swept by the literary prowess of Redmond and entertained by Wolf.

Each with their own performance style and acclaimed in their own right,  have spent nearly 30 years performing regionally and nationally, educating through the power of verse.

Saturday, April 29, 2023
TCMU On-The-Go: Papa John’s Mutt Strutt
Apr 29 @ 8:30 am – 10:00 am
Main Street

The Mutts are back on Main Street!

Join us Saturday, April 29th at 8:30 AM for the Papa Johns Mutt Strut presented by Heartgard, Nexgard, Frontline Gold, benefiting the Greenville Humane Society! Participants will enjoy a 2-mile walk/run through beautiful Downtown Greenville. Following immediately after, the Mutt Market festival and after pawty will take place on South Main Street!

The streets will be lined with entertainment including live music, free pizza from Papa Johns, caricature artists, face painters and sponsor tents with plenty of awesome giveaways! Participants over the age of 6 will also receive

RACE FEES

Race Registration Fees

Registration Closes Friday, 4/28/22, at 6:30PM

There will be no walk-up registration the morning of the event.

Register between January 9, 2023 and January 31, 2023: $30/person

Register between February 1, 2023 and February 28, 2023: $35/person

Register between March 1, 2023 and April 28, 2023: $40/person

Teams (4 person minimum): Team registration includes a t-shirt and ends April 25th at midnight. There will be no team registrations accepted after this date.

Children: Registration is FREE for children 6 and under. T-shirts are not included but can be purchased for $15 plus tax at the race and online during registration. (Sizes are not guaranteed.) Children between the ages of 7 – 12 are $20/per person with a t-shirt included in the registration price.

Senior Citizens: Adults ages 65 and up are $20/per person with a t-shirt included in the registration price.

a swag bag filled with goodies and a race t-shirt.

Monday, May 22, 2023
In Conversation with Lib Ramos
May 22 @ 12:00 pm – 1:30 pm
M. Judson Booksellers

Join us on Monday, May 22nd at 5:30 pm for an In Conversation event with local creative Lib Ramos. She’ll be chatting about the newest book from Good Printed Things, Holding Patterns: A Collection of Words on Ritual.

A walk. A cigarette. A laundry cycle. A prayer. From the ceremonial to the subliminal, ritual works its way into each of our lives. This book of poems, prose, and short stories is a collection of words from 29 voices on rituals of every kind, and the ways that they save us, challenge us, and utterly shape who we are.

We’re excited to have Lib in store with us and can’t wait to hear all about this collection, Good Printed Things, and what it’s like working with so many local creatives.

So don’t miss out on this free event!

PEOPLE INVOLVED IN THIS COLLECTION

Editors

Beth Ables, Angie Toole Thompson

Contributing Writers

Zebib K. Abraham, Rasha Abdulhadi, Gale Acuff, Abigail Bergey, Angelina Oberdan Brooks, Chris Andrei Cruz, Jelena Dunato, Jacob Edwards, Donna Faulkner née Miller, Zary Fekete, Melina Flowers, Rebecca Fremo, Shannon Greene, Tom Hartig, Emily Hockaday, Valerie Hunter, Morgan Johnson, Abby Moore Keith, Susan L. Lin, Vishaal Pathak, Marisca Pichette, Daniel A. Rabuzzi, Ojo Taiye, Kerry Trautman, Padmanabh Trivedi, Miller Voigt, Madeline Wilkins, Kate Young

ABOUT LIB RAMOS

With a background in print design, Lib has spent her career designing for a variety of companies. Her enthusiasm for handmade goods and the makers behind them led her to co-found Indie Craft Parade in 2010. She now serves as the Creative Director for The Makers Collective, a non-profit whose mission is to empower creative entrepreneurs while cultivating a supportive community around them.

She is a wife, mother, and an advocate for the maker community. Currently working on small batch collaborative projects at goodprintedthings.com.

Wednesday, May 24, 2023
Tom Tenbrunsel Virtual Writers Workshop: Poetry on my Mind
May 24 @ 7:00 pm – 9:00 pm
online w/ Carl Sandburg Home

You will find Tom Tenbrunsel a delightfully refreshing poet with a wide variety of subject matter and a style somewhere between Sandburg, Frost and the late Appalachian poet James Wright. Tom challenges one’s whit with a refreshing array of non-conforming rhyme, structure, rhythm and oft made-up words and hidden meanings. Uniquely Tom includes a photo and Author’s Notes with each poem. Join us in May to engage the spirit and myth of poetry with Tom’s “Poetry on my Mind”

Casual Poetry/Poetry on my Mind. Tom will read a couple poems for fun. He will ask guests to write a
short poem from a prompt with feedback from the group. Tom would like guests to feel free to bring short
poems to read and discuss. He encourages questions about writing poetry, about a poem of his or his
journey as a poet or his Self Help Series. So familiarize yourself with his works by scanning his website,
tenbrunsel.com Comments or questions are welcomed. Or feel free to email him in advance at
[email protected].  Check out his website tenbrunsel.com before the workshop. Send in one of your
poems to be commented on by Tom.

This workshop is open to writers of all skill levels and is a fun way to find inspiration from a new prompt or revise current work. It is hosted by the Friends of Carl Sandburg at Connemara and will use Microsoft Teams for the virtual connection. Sign up to attend the workshop here!

A writer and a poet, Dr. Tenbrunsel enjoyed a long successful career in Clinical Psychology. Born and raised in Nashville, Tennessee, Tom graduated from Bellarmine University, obtained his doctorate from St Louis University in 1969. He taught, published and was in administration at Michigan State University and was VP for Advancement at the University of Alabama at Huntsville. He and his wife reside in the Appalachians of Western North Carolina. They have three successful children and eight grand grandchildren. Dr T. enjoys photography, gardening, cycling, hiking, camping and stalking the elusive trout. His writings and publications speak for themselves. He has published numerous books including:  Casual Gardening,  Poetry on My Mind, The Fund Raising Resource Manual,  The Fund Raising Handbook, Fund-Raising and Grantsmanship:  Getting Money from the Community for the Community, The Lansing Area Doctors Directory, 1&2,   Dissertation “A Group Coupon Economy Program in Treating Mental Illness:  An Experiment in Social Innovation”,   A Wrinkle in My Time: My Memoirs (a work in progress)

Friday, May 26, 2023
American Kennel Club Dog Agility Trial
May 26 @ 8:00 am – 4:00 pm
Western North Carolina Agricultural Center

The Blue Ridge Agility Club of Western North Carolina will host an American Kennel Club (AKC) agility trial during the Memorial Day weekend, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, May 26 – 29, 2023.  The event will be held at the Western North Carolina Agricultural Center McGough Arena in Fletcher from 8:00 am until 4:00 pm Friday-Sunday and 8:00 am-1:00 pm on Monday. Spectators are welcome to attend and admission is free. Please leave your dog comfortably at home.

 

Over 300 purebred dogs, from throughout the southeast, will compete at various levels of difficulty, against each other and the clock. There will be approximately 70 AKC-registered breeds competing.

 

Agility is a competitive team sport that involves a handler and his or her dog.  The object of agility is for the handler to navigate the dog through a timed obstacle course without the dog making a mistake. The agility course is comprised of jumps; weave poles, tunnels and climbing apparatuses. Agility rules focus on safety for the dog. The sport of agility combines control, training and drive into a challenging game for both the handler and the dog. Agility training heightens the bond between dog and handler and provides fun exercise for both. Agility is one of the fastest-growing dog sports in the USA.

 

The FAST (Fifteen and Send Time) class will be offered Friday through Sunday. The FAST class is an additional test of strategy, accuracy, speed, timing and distance handling, to demonstrate a dog’s athletic ability. The distance challenge must be completed correctly for a qualifying run; it can be attempted anytime during the run.

 

Time 2 Beat (T2B) will be offered each day. Each dog has the chance to set the “Time to Beat” for each jump height. This class is the most interactive class with the most accurate and fastest dog setting the pace.  Dogs from the novice, open and excellent classes compete against each other on the same course.

 

AKC’s exciting Premier classes will be offered all four days. Premier courses are designed to challenge dogs and their handlers at an increased skill and speed level. The courses are set above the Master class with varied approach angles, spacing and discrimination obstacles.

 

The American Kennel Club was founded in 1884 and is the nation’s leading not-for-profit organization devoted to the study, breeding, exhibiting and advancement of purebred dogs.

Saturday, May 27, 2023
American Kennel Club Dog Agility Trial
May 27 @ 8:00 am – 4:00 pm
Western North Carolina Agricultural Center

The Blue Ridge Agility Club of Western North Carolina will host an American Kennel Club (AKC) agility trial during the Memorial Day weekend, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, May 26 – 29, 2023.  The event will be held at the Western North Carolina Agricultural Center McGough Arena in Fletcher from 8:00 am until 4:00 pm Friday-Sunday and 8:00 am-1:00 pm on Monday. Spectators are welcome to attend and admission is free. Please leave your dog comfortably at home.

 

Over 300 purebred dogs, from throughout the southeast, will compete at various levels of difficulty, against each other and the clock. There will be approximately 70 AKC-registered breeds competing.

 

Agility is a competitive team sport that involves a handler and his or her dog.  The object of agility is for the handler to navigate the dog through a timed obstacle course without the dog making a mistake. The agility course is comprised of jumps; weave poles, tunnels and climbing apparatuses. Agility rules focus on safety for the dog. The sport of agility combines control, training and drive into a challenging game for both the handler and the dog. Agility training heightens the bond between dog and handler and provides fun exercise for both. Agility is one of the fastest-growing dog sports in the USA.

 

The FAST (Fifteen and Send Time) class will be offered Friday through Sunday. The FAST class is an additional test of strategy, accuracy, speed, timing and distance handling, to demonstrate a dog’s athletic ability. The distance challenge must be completed correctly for a qualifying run; it can be attempted anytime during the run.

 

Time 2 Beat (T2B) will be offered each day. Each dog has the chance to set the “Time to Beat” for each jump height. This class is the most interactive class with the most accurate and fastest dog setting the pace.  Dogs from the novice, open and excellent classes compete against each other on the same course.

 

AKC’s exciting Premier classes will be offered all four days. Premier courses are designed to challenge dogs and their handlers at an increased skill and speed level. The courses are set above the Master class with varied approach angles, spacing and discrimination obstacles.

 

The American Kennel Club was founded in 1884 and is the nation’s leading not-for-profit organization devoted to the study, breeding, exhibiting and advancement of purebred dogs.

Sunday, May 28, 2023
American Kennel Club Dog Agility Trial
May 28 @ 8:00 am – 4:00 pm
Western North Carolina Agricultural Center

The Blue Ridge Agility Club of Western North Carolina will host an American Kennel Club (AKC) agility trial during the Memorial Day weekend, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, May 26 – 29, 2023.  The event will be held at the Western North Carolina Agricultural Center McGough Arena in Fletcher from 8:00 am until 4:00 pm Friday-Sunday and 8:00 am-1:00 pm on Monday. Spectators are welcome to attend and admission is free. Please leave your dog comfortably at home.

 

Over 300 purebred dogs, from throughout the southeast, will compete at various levels of difficulty, against each other and the clock. There will be approximately 70 AKC-registered breeds competing.

 

Agility is a competitive team sport that involves a handler and his or her dog.  The object of agility is for the handler to navigate the dog through a timed obstacle course without the dog making a mistake. The agility course is comprised of jumps; weave poles, tunnels and climbing apparatuses. Agility rules focus on safety for the dog. The sport of agility combines control, training and drive into a challenging game for both the handler and the dog. Agility training heightens the bond between dog and handler and provides fun exercise for both. Agility is one of the fastest-growing dog sports in the USA.

 

The FAST (Fifteen and Send Time) class will be offered Friday through Sunday. The FAST class is an additional test of strategy, accuracy, speed, timing and distance handling, to demonstrate a dog’s athletic ability. The distance challenge must be completed correctly for a qualifying run; it can be attempted anytime during the run.

 

Time 2 Beat (T2B) will be offered each day. Each dog has the chance to set the “Time to Beat” for each jump height. This class is the most interactive class with the most accurate and fastest dog setting the pace.  Dogs from the novice, open and excellent classes compete against each other on the same course.

 

AKC’s exciting Premier classes will be offered all four days. Premier courses are designed to challenge dogs and their handlers at an increased skill and speed level. The courses are set above the Master class with varied approach angles, spacing and discrimination obstacles.

 

The American Kennel Club was founded in 1884 and is the nation’s leading not-for-profit organization devoted to the study, breeding, exhibiting and advancement of purebred dogs.

Monday, May 29, 2023
American Kennel Club Dog Agility Trial
May 29 @ 8:00 am – 1:00 pm
Western North Carolina Agricultural Center

The Blue Ridge Agility Club of Western North Carolina will host an American Kennel Club (AKC) agility trial during the Memorial Day weekend, Friday, Saturday, Sunday, and Monday, May 26 – 29, 2023.  The event will be held at the Western North Carolina Agricultural Center McGough Arena in Fletcher from 8:00 am until 4:00 pm Friday-Sunday and 8:00 am-1:00 pm on Monday. Spectators are welcome to attend and admission is free. Please leave your dog comfortably at home.

 

Over 300 purebred dogs, from throughout the southeast, will compete at various levels of difficulty, against each other and the clock. There will be approximately 70 AKC-registered breeds competing.

 

Agility is a competitive team sport that involves a handler and his or her dog.  The object of agility is for the handler to navigate the dog through a timed obstacle course without the dog making a mistake. The agility course is comprised of jumps; weave poles, tunnels and climbing apparatuses. Agility rules focus on safety for the dog. The sport of agility combines control, training and drive into a challenging game for both the handler and the dog. Agility training heightens the bond between dog and handler and provides fun exercise for both. Agility is one of the fastest-growing dog sports in the USA.

 

The FAST (Fifteen and Send Time) class will be offered Friday through Sunday. The FAST class is an additional test of strategy, accuracy, speed, timing and distance handling, to demonstrate a dog’s athletic ability. The distance challenge must be completed correctly for a qualifying run; it can be attempted anytime during the run.

 

Time 2 Beat (T2B) will be offered each day. Each dog has the chance to set the “Time to Beat” for each jump height. This class is the most interactive class with the most accurate and fastest dog setting the pace.  Dogs from the novice, open and excellent classes compete against each other on the same course.

 

AKC’s exciting Premier classes will be offered all four days. Premier courses are designed to challenge dogs and their handlers at an increased skill and speed level. The courses are set above the Master class with varied approach angles, spacing and discrimination obstacles.

 

The American Kennel Club was founded in 1884 and is the nation’s leading not-for-profit organization devoted to the study, breeding, exhibiting and advancement of purebred dogs.

Thursday, June 22, 2023
In Conversation with Len Lawson
Jun 22 @ 5:30 pm – 7:00 pm
M. Judson Booksellers

Join us on Thursday, June 22nd at 5:30 pm for an In Conversation event with poet Len Lawson. He’ll be chatting about his latest poetry collection Negro Asylum for the Lunatic Insane. We’re excited to have Len in store with us and can’t wait to hear all about his writing processes and inspirations. So don’t miss out on this free event!

ABOUT THE POETRY COLLECTION

Negro Asylum for the Lunatic Insane enters the maelstrom of institutionalized racism and cruelty to aim an unflinching gaze at the violence, neglect, and delusions borne of Southern race ritual. These poems wield knives against slavery’s tumultuous afterlife, cutting us free, guiding us through thickets of scar tissue and nightmare till we glean the brutal clarity of American sin and bear witness to the wondrous power of Len Lawson’s artistic and historical imagination. ~Herman Beavers

Len Lawson is, above all, a talented lyricist whose candid chronicles of working in the field of mental illness—the patients’ trauma caused largely by the institutions supposed to treat and protect them—provides an insight into a realm plagued by racism and abuse, one often ignored and silenced by the world at the large. We come to learn of Lawson’s speaker’s interactions with Brock Bridges who “loved butterflies” and often too tried to escape the establishment, “thinking like the statue/chewing petals off that flower.” Though the speaker tries to keep a line between him and his patients, dealing with his own issues concerning his own happiness and the weight of family memory and present circumstances, all their lives are intertwined even in times of doubt: “I didn’t trust those butterflies like Brock did…Matter of fact I hate butterflies//They give people false hope//Everything can’t have wings/Everybody wasn’t made to fly//Ask all them Africans that didn’t/grow wings still on the plantation.” Lawson explores the larger implications of historical violence and survival, never flinching away (” If you show me this box/hovering up and down/heaven and earth,/I will show you/a casket/lowered into/a world’s eye”) through a variety of many (often experimental) free verse possibilities, and I too can be candid, this is one of the best collections of poetry I’ve ever read. Get it now. Lawson is going places. ~Rose Ben-Oni

Lawson’s Negro Asylum for the Lunatic Insane constructs a fictional institution based on actual 20th century mental asylums for Black people. This haunting, stark series of vignettes of people who occupy such spaces traverse through surprising and dangerous spaces in the mind. History starts surrounding us as an eerie specter seeping into the present, where mental health is now a demand as part of freedom in America. ~Tara Betts, author of Refuse to Disappear

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Len Lawson is author of Chime (Get Fresh Books, 2019) and co-editor of The Future of Black: Afrofuturism, Black Comics, and Superhero Poetry (Blair Press, 2021). He received a 2022 Fresh Voices in the Humanities Governor’s Award from South Carolina Humanities. Len has earned fellowships from Tin House, Palm Beach Poetry Festival, Callaloo, Vermont Studio Center, and Virginia Center for the Creative Arts among others. His poetry appears in African American Review, Mississippi Review, Ninth Letter, Verse Daily, Poetry Northwest, and elsewhere. A South Carolina native, Len earned a PhD in English Literature and Criticism from Indiana University of Pennsylvania.

Thursday, June 29, 2023
Pet working
Jun 29 @ 5:30 pm – 7:30 pm
The K9 Shop

Pet parents and animal lovers come together to learn about each other, brag about their fur babies and find ways to support one another in business, rescue and advocacy

Saturday, July 22, 2023
Woofie’s of SE Greenville grand opening
Jul 22 @ 2:00 pm – 6:00 pm
Birds Fly South Ale Project

 – Woofie’s of SE Greenville is now open, serving the needs of SE Greenville pet owners with a variety of customized, premium mobile pet care services for dogs, cats, birds, reptiles and more.

Woofie’s of SE Greenville is celebrating its grand opening at the Hampton Station’s Birds Fly South Ale Project, and Biergarten Greenville Music & Vendor event on Saturday, July 22 from 2 – 6 p.m. Woofie’s of SE Greenville will be giving complimentary wash-and-go baths and nail trimming for dogs, and giving out free swag and raffle prizes for pet owners and pet groomers alike. Attendees will be treated to a live band and goods from community vendors such as Hannah Chloe Company, a clothing brand for pets and their pawrents, and baked goods from Sweet Treats for Wet Noses, The Farmer’s Dog swag and more.

Woofie’s of SE Greenville services include:

  • Mobile pet spa for a luxurious experience for pets and their people
  • Dog walking
  • Overnight pet sitting
  • Pet transport and taxi
  • Wedding and event packages
  • All staff members are highly trained and CPR certified
Woofie’s of SE Greenville Grand Opening Celebration Brings Together Dogs, Families, Music, and Fun!
Jul 22 @ 2:00 pm – 6:00 pm
Woofie’s of SE Greenville

Woofie’s of SE Greenville, providing pet sitting, dog walking, a mobile pet spa, and more to pamper pets throughout the Southeast Greenville, South Carolina area, is holding its Grand Opening Celebration on Saturday, July 22, 2023, from 2-6 p.m. at Hampton Station’s, Birds Fly South Ale Project, and Biergarten Music & Vendor Event at 1320 Hampton Ave Ext in Greenville. Furry pets and their people are invited to attend as Woofie’s guests.
Join Woofie’s of SE Greenville for food, craft beer (sold by Birds Fly South Ale Project), live bands and community vendors such as Hannah Chloe Company, a clothing brand for pets and their pawrents, and Sweet Treats for Wet Noses, samples from The Farmer’s Dog and more. Woofie’s of SE Greenville will be giving complimentary wash-and-go baths and nail trimming for dogs, and giving out free swag and raffle prizes for pet owners and pet groomers alike.

WHAT: Woofie’s of SE Greenville Grand Opening Celebration. Woofie’s provides dependable pet sitting, dog walking, a pup-pampering mobile spa, and specialty products to keep SE Greenville pets healthy, happy, and safe.

WHEN: Saturday, July 22 from 2-6 p.m.
WHERE: Hampton Station, Greenville, at 1320 Hampton Ave Ext Greenville, SC 29601

WHO: Woofie’s of SE Greenville, is a franchise, owned and managed by husband-and-wife team Eric and Cameron McEntire, both University of South Carolina graduates and residents of Spartanburg, South Carolina, and Cameron’s father Dr. Eric Smith, a retired dentist. The McEntire family also includes Eric and Cameron’s 2-year-old daughter Eddie; infant son Jude; and German Shephard/Husky rescue, Finn.

Learn more here or call (864) 202-6933 to book an appointment.
Woofie’s is part of Authority Brands. For more information, visit www.woofies.com and www.authoritybrands.com.

Thursday, July 27, 2023
Carolina Foothills Dog Show
Jul 27 all-day
Greenville Convention Center

The Public Is Welcome to Attend Our Dog Shows      

The dog shows are free to the public each day. It’s a wonderful and inexpensive way to entertain the whole family.

The shows are held each day, Thursday through Sunday, July 27 – 30, 2023.  Each day is a separate show, so you can attend any day and see a complete show. 

These shows are among the largest on the east coast with an average entry of about 2,000 dogs each day.  The dogs hail from over 40 states from California to New England, along with a scattering of dogs from foreign countries.  They include popular breeds, such as the Golden Retriever with an entry of nearly 100 dogs, to the Xoloitzcuintli, the Mexican National Breed.  With over 150 breeds represented, there will many breeds that you are familiar with, but many more that you have probably never heard of nor seen.

There are 2 events that are fun to watch.  The “Conformation” show is about how the dog looks,  and the “Junior Showmanship” is for children from 8 to 17 who compete to demonstrate their dog-handling skills.

How to Watch the Show

Breeds are judged at different times in different rings every day.  To get the most from the show it’s best to “know before you go.”  If you are interested in certain breeds, you should check the schedule for the day you plan to attend.  The complete judging program will tell you how many of that breed are competing and at what time and in which ring.

Available around July 19th:

DAILY RING SCHEDULE

COMPLETE JUDGING PROGRAM

If you are interested in seeing the most breeds in the shortest time, it’s best to attend the group judging, where you will see the Best-of-Breed winner of each breed in that group.  Judging of a group takes about 20 minutes, seeing all the breeds will take a little over 2  hours.  The schedule will also show you when group judging begins and the order of group judging.

Immediately following group judging will be Best-In-Show judging.

How a Dog Show Works

Each breed has a written standard that describes exactly how the dog should look and behave.  It goes into great detail  as to how the dog looks. The judge evaluates how closely the dog “conforms” to the standard, hence the name “Conformation.”

Each breed is judged separately.  There are several classes for each sex.  Males are judged first. After all the classes are judged the 1st place winners of all the classes are compete against each other.  The judge’s selection for the best male is awarded the Winners ribbon and receives championship points. 

After the males are shown, the females compete in exactly the same procedure.

Following the female judging, the champions plus the male and female that won championship points   compete for Best-Of-Breed.  Later in the day, the Best-Of-Breed winner competes against the other Best-Of-Breed winners in his group for Best-In-Group.  There are seven groups, sporting, hound, working, terrier, toy, non-sporting, and herding.

The Best-in-Group dog moves up to compete for the ultimate prize … Best-In-Show.

Junior Showmanship

Junior Showmanship competition is to encourage children to learn how to handle show dogs.  It provides an opportunity for the kids to compete against each other to see how well they are progressing.    The classes are divided by age of the child.  They may handle any AKC pure bred dog. 

Suggestions when attending the show

  • Do not bring your dog to the show.  Only dogs that are entered for competition are allowed.
  • Baby strollers must be approved at the club desk near the front entrance and a stroller pass will be issued.  This is for the safety of the children and small dogs.
  • Dogs are not for sale at the show, but you can visit with breeders to find out where you might buy a puppy of that breed and to learn some puppy raising practices to ensure a good pet.
  • When approaching an exhibitor at ringside, be sure not to disturb them if they are preparing to go into the ring soon.  They are concentrating on the presentation of their dog to the judge and shouldn’t be distracted by long conversations.  It’s best just to ask if you can speak with an exhibitor.  Most are happy to talk to you after the competition.
  • Please ask before petting a dog.
  • Be sure to instruct your children to respect the dogs and ask for permission to pet them.
Friday, July 28, 2023
Carolina Foothills Dog Show
Jul 28 all-day
Greenville Convention Center

The Public Is Welcome to Attend Our Dog Shows      

The dog shows are free to the public each day. It’s a wonderful and inexpensive way to entertain the whole family.

The shows are held each day, Thursday through Sunday, July 27 – 30, 2023.  Each day is a separate show, so you can attend any day and see a complete show. 

These shows are among the largest on the east coast with an average entry of about 2,000 dogs each day.  The dogs hail from over 40 states from California to New England, along with a scattering of dogs from foreign countries.  They include popular breeds, such as the Golden Retriever with an entry of nearly 100 dogs, to the Xoloitzcuintli, the Mexican National Breed.  With over 150 breeds represented, there will many breeds that you are familiar with, but many more that you have probably never heard of nor seen.

There are 2 events that are fun to watch.  The “Conformation” show is about how the dog looks,  and the “Junior Showmanship” is for children from 8 to 17 who compete to demonstrate their dog-handling skills.

How to Watch the Show

Breeds are judged at different times in different rings every day.  To get the most from the show it’s best to “know before you go.”  If you are interested in certain breeds, you should check the schedule for the day you plan to attend.  The complete judging program will tell you how many of that breed are competing and at what time and in which ring.

Available around July 19th:

DAILY RING SCHEDULE

COMPLETE JUDGING PROGRAM

If you are interested in seeing the most breeds in the shortest time, it’s best to attend the group judging, where you will see the Best-of-Breed winner of each breed in that group.  Judging of a group takes about 20 minutes, seeing all the breeds will take a little over 2  hours.  The schedule will also show you when group judging begins and the order of group judging.

Immediately following group judging will be Best-In-Show judging.

How a Dog Show Works

Each breed has a written standard that describes exactly how the dog should look and behave.  It goes into great detail  as to how the dog looks. The judge evaluates how closely the dog “conforms” to the standard, hence the name “Conformation.”

Each breed is judged separately.  There are several classes for each sex.  Males are judged first. After all the classes are judged the 1st place winners of all the classes are compete against each other.  The judge’s selection for the best male is awarded the Winners ribbon and receives championship points. 

After the males are shown, the females compete in exactly the same procedure.

Following the female judging, the champions plus the male and female that won championship points   compete for Best-Of-Breed.  Later in the day, the Best-Of-Breed winner competes against the other Best-Of-Breed winners in his group for Best-In-Group.  There are seven groups, sporting, hound, working, terrier, toy, non-sporting, and herding.

The Best-in-Group dog moves up to compete for the ultimate prize … Best-In-Show.

Junior Showmanship

Junior Showmanship competition is to encourage children to learn how to handle show dogs.  It provides an opportunity for the kids to compete against each other to see how well they are progressing.    The classes are divided by age of the child.  They may handle any AKC pure bred dog. 

Suggestions when attending the show

  • Do not bring your dog to the show.  Only dogs that are entered for competition are allowed.
  • Baby strollers must be approved at the club desk near the front entrance and a stroller pass will be issued.  This is for the safety of the children and small dogs.
  • Dogs are not for sale at the show, but you can visit with breeders to find out where you might buy a puppy of that breed and to learn some puppy raising practices to ensure a good pet.
  • When approaching an exhibitor at ringside, be sure not to disturb them if they are preparing to go into the ring soon.  They are concentrating on the presentation of their dog to the judge and shouldn’t be distracted by long conversations.  It’s best just to ask if you can speak with an exhibitor.  Most are happy to talk to you after the competition.
  • Please ask before petting a dog.
  • Be sure to instruct your children to respect the dogs and ask for permission to pet them.
Saturday, July 29, 2023
Carolina Foothills Dog Show
Jul 29 all-day
Greenville Convention Center

The Public Is Welcome to Attend Our Dog Shows      

The dog shows are free to the public each day. It’s a wonderful and inexpensive way to entertain the whole family.

The shows are held each day, Thursday through Sunday, July 27 – 30, 2023.  Each day is a separate show, so you can attend any day and see a complete show. 

These shows are among the largest on the east coast with an average entry of about 2,000 dogs each day.  The dogs hail from over 40 states from California to New England, along with a scattering of dogs from foreign countries.  They include popular breeds, such as the Golden Retriever with an entry of nearly 100 dogs, to the Xoloitzcuintli, the Mexican National Breed.  With over 150 breeds represented, there will many breeds that you are familiar with, but many more that you have probably never heard of nor seen.

There are 2 events that are fun to watch.  The “Conformation” show is about how the dog looks,  and the “Junior Showmanship” is for children from 8 to 17 who compete to demonstrate their dog-handling skills.

How to Watch the Show

Breeds are judged at different times in different rings every day.  To get the most from the show it’s best to “know before you go.”  If you are interested in certain breeds, you should check the schedule for the day you plan to attend.  The complete judging program will tell you how many of that breed are competing and at what time and in which ring.

Available around July 19th:

DAILY RING SCHEDULE

COMPLETE JUDGING PROGRAM

If you are interested in seeing the most breeds in the shortest time, it’s best to attend the group judging, where you will see the Best-of-Breed winner of each breed in that group.  Judging of a group takes about 20 minutes, seeing all the breeds will take a little over 2  hours.  The schedule will also show you when group judging begins and the order of group judging.

Immediately following group judging will be Best-In-Show judging.

How a Dog Show Works

Each breed has a written standard that describes exactly how the dog should look and behave.  It goes into great detail  as to how the dog looks. The judge evaluates how closely the dog “conforms” to the standard, hence the name “Conformation.”

Each breed is judged separately.  There are several classes for each sex.  Males are judged first. After all the classes are judged the 1st place winners of all the classes are compete against each other.  The judge’s selection for the best male is awarded the Winners ribbon and receives championship points. 

After the males are shown, the females compete in exactly the same procedure.

Following the female judging, the champions plus the male and female that won championship points   compete for Best-Of-Breed.  Later in the day, the Best-Of-Breed winner competes against the other Best-Of-Breed winners in his group for Best-In-Group.  There are seven groups, sporting, hound, working, terrier, toy, non-sporting, and herding.

The Best-in-Group dog moves up to compete for the ultimate prize … Best-In-Show.

Junior Showmanship

Junior Showmanship competition is to encourage children to learn how to handle show dogs.  It provides an opportunity for the kids to compete against each other to see how well they are progressing.    The classes are divided by age of the child.  They may handle any AKC pure bred dog. 

Suggestions when attending the show

  • Do not bring your dog to the show.  Only dogs that are entered for competition are allowed.
  • Baby strollers must be approved at the club desk near the front entrance and a stroller pass will be issued.  This is for the safety of the children and small dogs.
  • Dogs are not for sale at the show, but you can visit with breeders to find out where you might buy a puppy of that breed and to learn some puppy raising practices to ensure a good pet.
  • When approaching an exhibitor at ringside, be sure not to disturb them if they are preparing to go into the ring soon.  They are concentrating on the presentation of their dog to the judge and shouldn’t be distracted by long conversations.  It’s best just to ask if you can speak with an exhibitor.  Most are happy to talk to you after the competition.
  • Please ask before petting a dog.
  • Be sure to instruct your children to respect the dogs and ask for permission to pet them.