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Paw patrol: cuddly dogs help provide stress relief at Berlin's 'cursed' airport
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Benny is one of three dogs roaming Berlin's international airport on a charm offensive. /AFP
Benny is one of three dogs roaming Berlin's international airport on a charm offensive. /AFP

Benny is one of three dogs roaming Berlin's international airport on a charm offensive. /AFP

Benny waddles up to eight-year-old Maya, performs a cheerful twirl on his short hind legs and then comes in for a cuddle. Already a little irritable from the long wait for her flight to Turkey with her family, Maya falls instantly in love with the four-year-old dachshund and her father Michael Uth can relax a little.

Berlin's massively delayed, over-budget, and comparatively tiny international airport BER, which opened in 2020 to much derision, has had to get creative to try to win over tired passengers. A pilot program is dispatching three particularly good-natured dogs along with two human trainers as on-the-ground stress relief ambassadors.

At the start of the autumn school holiday rush, Benny along with black Labrador Emi and Pepper, a terrier mix, were on a charm offensive at Germany's third busiest airport. Patrolling the shiny floors of the terminal on long leashes, it doesn't take long to find travelers who could use a little comfort or entertainment.

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Uth arrived at BER with Maya and five-year-old son Vincent three hours early for a three-hour flight to Antalya. "This gives them something fun to do," Uth, 38, said as his children played catch with the pups. "It's keeping their minds off the wait and the stress with all the crowds here. Happy kids is a great start to a trip."

Social media storm

BER airport had been called "cursed" by local media after the opening was delayed by nine years. Its six-billion-euro ($6.4-billion) cost was three times more than planned and BER finally opened just as air travel collapsed with the COVID-19 pandemic.

The facility needed a hefty bailout to stave off bankruptcy, with taxpayers asked to pump in nearly two billion euros ($2.17m) by 2026. Passengers often report huge check-in queues and big delays for baggage retrieval due to staff shortages.

BER is Germany's second-least popular airport, according to a poll by claims management company AirHelp, after former military airfield Frankfurt-Hahn. Although conditions have generally improved, a recommendation that passengers allow at least 2.5 hours to reach their flights sparked a storm on social media.

Those who've met the dogs say the animals have calmed their nerves ahead of their flights. /AFP
Those who've met the dogs say the animals have calmed their nerves ahead of their flights. /AFP

Those who've met the dogs say the animals have calmed their nerves ahead of their flights. /AFP

There were bitter comparisons with the capital's decommissioned airport Tegel, which was famed for direct access to check-in gates from a taxi drop-off point.

Airport spokesman Jan-Peter Haack admitted BER had a rocky start but touted now "very stable" operations with nearly 20 million passengers served last year. He said innovations like an option to book a time slot at the security gates at no extra cost and self-service check-in and bag-drop machines had cut the crush at various chokepoints. But on busy days, tempers can run high.

The stress relief dogs, an idea from Los Angeles's international airport, have drawn "very good feedback" from BER passengers, Haack said. "The dogs only approach people who are really receptive – no one is forced," he said.

If the dogs aren't in the mood, they're not forced to work. /AFP
If the dogs aren't in the mood, they're not forced to work. /AFP

If the dogs aren't in the mood, they're not forced to work. /AFP

Elisabeth Tornow, 69, who travels often to the Swiss city of Basel to visit her family, said she found boarding particularly stressful. "I'm not the youngest anymore and you have to climb the stairs and get pushed around finding your seat," said the retired office manager.

Unable to manage the nighttime walks, Tornow had to let her own pet go when her husband died. Playing with Pepper, she said all airports could be improved with a few animals. "It just calms you down when a dog's around," she said. "I wish I had a treat with me."

'Tantrum over'

Trainer Joerg Utech, 63, volunteers with the Therapy Dogs Association Brandenburg and was on his third outing at BER. The former IT specialist said he first saw the dogs in action five years ago when his wife was dying of cancer at a care home.

Since then, he's watched the animals charm and engage the elderly, help fidgety children focus in school and calm fearful air travellers. He said the patrols required a special kind of animal.

"They've got to have a calm temperament but love to play too," he said. "You have to be careful that you don't have them out for more than an hour though because this is a lot of work for a dog. And if one is having a bad day and is showing us he's unhappy then we stop immediately."

Utech said screaming children remained the biggest challenge. "The first time we were here, a family came along with a child who really didn't want to sit in the stroller," he said. "My colleague was there immediately with Pepper who danced for a treat. The tantrum was over and the holiday could begin."

Paw patrol: cuddly dogs help provide stress relief at Berlin's 'cursed' airport

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Source(s): AFP

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