🐾 How to Handle Aggressive Dogs at the Dog Park – Real Advice from Dog Owners
Visiting the dog park can be a joyful activity for both you and your furry friend—but aggressive encounters can quickly […]
Mansfield Street Dog Park is a small, fully-fenced, pebbled dog park conveniently located in the Allston neighborhood of Boston. The park provides an accessible space for local pet owners to let their pups socialize and play off-leash in a safe, enclosed environment. While the park is easy to find, nearby parking is limited to permit holders, so visitors may need to plan accordingly.
This dog-friendly park is known for being wheelchair accessible and suitable for kids, making it a potential option for families. While the park offers basic amenities such as fencing, reviews note a lack of grass, limited seating, and some maintenance concerns. Despite its challenges—including minimal shade and no water sources—it remains a dedicated off-leash area for Boston dog owners seeking a simple, neighborhood dog park for their pets.
Fenced in dog park, pebbled. Nice space and location, but street parking by permit only. People should always clean up their dogs excrement.
Stumbled upon it while walking our pups one morning. Great little neighborhood dog park!
It’s fenced in but that’s about all I can say. The ground is all pebbles and there were no other dogs when we went (5pm on a Monday). The park is also not well kept – we saw beer cans and cigarette butts littering the ground.
This is the saddest dog park in the whole world. Showed up and there were no dogs or people around. It’s all gravel and there was only a sad tennis ball and dog poop around. It’s also near a giant electrical fence with a huge sign about being careful near it. So so disappointed. Hope the city fixes it! I need a place to take my pup!
A very sad place indeed. There’s no grass, a huge “DANGER HIGH VOLTAGE” sign in the rear and some industrial cable spools for no apparent reason. Not one blade of grass nor other dog. Even the trees have opted to die rather than stick around and I don’t blame them. This is Boston’s excuse for a dog park?