Entertainment

Well-pawed

If you’ve been searching summer after summer for the perfect East End yoga class or swim lessons for your Havanese, relax — your life just got easier. Veterinarian Dr. Cindy Bressler has partnered with Edward Alava, owner of high-end Upper East Side pet emporium the Dog Store, to unleash Hamptons Canine Concierge, a service catering to needs and whims your dog doesn’t even know it has.

The doggie duo organized a directory of pet professionals, encompassing medical experts, trainers, party planners, masseurs, sports instructors, chauffeurs, baby sitters, nutritional counselors, groomers — even a facialist.

“Edward and I were always getting calls from dog owners out here asking for everything you can imagine,’’ says Bressler. “If they wanted a treatment or luxury for themselves, they also wanted it for their pets.’’

Fashion marketing consultant Jonathan von Natterer, 49, who lives in TriBeCa and summers in East Hampton, told Alava that his Shar-Pei, Buka, loves squirrels.

“Dogs can get pretty jaded in the city,’’ he says. “Edward suggested taking her on a squirrel watch to keep her stimulated. She was in heaven. They sent her home with a squirrel toy, which was a really special touch. It’s so over-the-top that they keyed into her personality.’’

For Diane Eckstein, a 50-year-old interior designer who lives in downtown Manhattan with her schnauzer, Storm, and French bulldog, Cosmo, Bressler suggested swimming lessons. “Cosmo is developing cataracts, and dogs can get a little lazy about getting around when this happens,’’ explains Eckstein. “Dr. Bressler said this would be a good way to keep up his muscle tone.’’

On the roster of providers, all of whom will come to clients’ homes, is Michel Sacker, a facialist for the furry set.

She begins with a blend of lavender and other essential oils. The treatment involves eye massage and cleaning, and finishes with the animal wrapped in aromatic towels.

“It’s a little odd because you are pampering a client that doesn’t always understand it’s being pampered,’’ she sighs.

Bressler says they have been getting all kinds of requests, from a man who wanted a white stretch limo to transport his white poodles — “he insisted the car match the dogs,’’ she says — to a family who wanted a personal assistant for its pooch. She recently enlisted trainer Lisa Hartman to teach five small dogs to walk onto a yacht docked in Sag Harbor.

Keeping up with Hamptons-style partying for pups is another challenge HCC faces, naturally. Planner Erika Friedman was called on to organize an event in East Hampton for a client’s 11-year-old daughter, her friends and all their critters.

“The budget was $30,000,’’ says Friedman, who created grooming stations for girls and dogs, with pedicures and blowouts for each. There were bedazzled headbands and matching leashes, followed by a red-carpet runway and designer dog bags filled with treats. A gazebo was brimming with towers of pupcakes. “It was outrageous,’’ recalls Friedman. “The only problem was that the mother wanted everything to be vegan, which threw a little wrench in it.’’