Results in just 1-3 sessions
Clinical Canine Massage is a vet-approved, hands-on, life changing therapy for dogs, providing pain relief and improved mobility for dogs with muscular injuries and orthopaedic conditions like arthritis and spondylosis.
Improvements you can see and your dog can feel in 1 – 3 sessions.
The Lenton® Method is the ONLY canine massage therapy globally that has been the subject of clinical trials, with results showing each treatment causing further significant reductions in pain severity.
I visit you and your dog in your own home, and serve these areas each week:
Somerset and Mid Devon: 15 mile radius from Wellington, Somerset
South Hams: 15 mile radius from Kingsbridge
Canine Massage Guild

Clinical Trials

I am a member of the Canine Massage Guild whose mission is to ‘offer affordable, effective, and ethical clinical canine massage therapy for dogs with musculoskeletal issues and to achieve results within 1 – 3 treatments.’
‘Canine Massage Guild therapists are committed to the core values of animal welfare, consumer protection, clarity of law and professional standards as well as delivering the best possible service to dogs, their owners, and veterinary practices.’
Canine Massage Guild, 2020
Ground-breaking clinical trials into the efficacy of Canine Massage Therapy, published in Vet Record.
95% of dogs responded positively to canine massage therapy
‘Significant reductions in reported pain severity scores were recorded for all pain indicators over successive treatments’
‘Post-treatment a dog was significantly more likely to have a ‘positive’ quality of life.’
Canine Massage Guild

I am a member of the Canine Massage Guild whose mission is to ‘offer affordable, effective, and ethical clinical canine massage therapy for dogs with musculoskeletal issues and to achieve results within 1 – 3 treatments.’
‘Canine Massage Guild therapists are committed to the core values of animal welfare, consumer protection, clarity of law and professional standards as well as delivering the best possible service to dogs, their owners, and veterinary practices.’
Canine Massage Guild, 2020
Clinical Trials

Ground-breaking clinical trials into the efficacy of Canine Massage Therapy, published in Vet Record.
95% of dogs responded positively to canine massage therapy
‘Significant reductions in reported pain severity scores were recorded for all pain indicators over successive treatments’
‘Post-treatment a dog was significantly more likely to have a ‘positive’ quality of life.’