About Gentled Animals

Helping animals and their humans.

Gentled Animals offers compassionate, science‑based behaviour support for dogs, cats, and horses. I help guardians understand why their animals behave the way they do, and how to improve wellbeing, communication, and relationships without fear, force, or punishment.

Meet Paige

I’m Paige Grala, a qualified animal behaviourist with a lifelong fascination for animals and how they experience the world.

From a young age, I questioned traditional, punitive training methods and felt deeply uncomfortable with approaches that relied on fear, dominance, or suppression. That curiosit, and discomfort, eventually became my purpose.

I believe behaviour is communication. When animals struggle, it’s not because they are “bad”, “stubborn”, or “dominant” –  it’s because something isn’t working for them.

My work is grounded in empathy, evidence‑based behaviour science, and ethical practice. Every animal I work with is treated as an individual, with their emotional and physical wellbeing at the centre of the process.

Paige Grala and horse

Qualifications & Professional Ethics

I am committed to ongoing education and ethical practice.

  • Qualified Animal Behaviourist (DipCABT)

  • Evidence‑based, force‑free methods only

  • Welfare‑first approach

  • Collaborative work with vets and other professionals when needed

I do not use dominance‑based, aversive, or punitive techniques.

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My Approach

At Gentled Animals, there are no quick fixes or one‑size‑fits‑all solutions.

I work by:

  • Understanding the root cause of behaviour, not just the symptoms

  • Using modern, science‑based learning theory

  • Prioritising emotional safety and trust

  • Supporting both the animal and the human

Behaviour change happens when animals feel safe, understood, and supported – and when guardians are given clear, realistic guidance.

girl and her maltese dog

My Story

An ode to the animals who shaped me

I wasn’t the firstborn in my family, my first dog was. Her name was Jo, a fluffy Maltese, and she was my very first teacher.

Jo taught me gentleness. She taught me kindness. And perhaps most importantly, she taught me how to slow down and find joy in the smallest moments, like napping in the warm sunshine. She set the tone for my life with animals long before I ever realised that animals would become my life’s work.

Not long after Jo, my family finally agreed to let me have my own puppy. I was six years old. Her name was Gracie –  a small, golden rescue pup we found at a market. She was pure sunshine, inside and out. Soft, kind, and quietly joyful. Jo adored her, and I grew up beside the two of them – two souls far too good for this world. Looking back now, I realise how incredibly lucky I was to have them as my first animal teachers.

As the years passed, many animals found their way into my life. Each one unique, each one leaving their mark. Dogs, cats, hamsters, horses… and even a very wild bunny. Every relationship brought lessons in patience, communication, trust, and compassion.

After school, I studied art direction. I loved art and design almost as much as I loved animals, but in hindsight, something was missing. While it may not have been the path I ultimately stayed on, it shaped how I see the world – teaching me to observe closely, think creatively, and understand the importance of environment, detail, and emotional nuance. These skills still live alongside me today through freelance work and quietly inform how I work with animals.

girl and her two dogs
paige and tabby cat

Three years ago, I felt an undeniable pull back to my roots. I knew I needed to work with animals, not just alongside them, but in service of them. That calling led me to study animal behaviour, where everything began to make sense. Shortly after qualifying, I felt the need to deepen my understanding even further, and began my journey into animal osteopathy – learning to support animals not only emotionally and behaviourally, but physically too.

Today, I share my life with my rescue dog, two rescue cats, and three horses. All with stories of their own. Alongside this, I also foster kittens for Kitten Clinic, a non-profit organisation started by my mom and two close friends. This work is incredibly close to my heart. Many of these kittens would not survive without early intervention, dedicated care, and advocacy – and being part of their journey, from fragile beginnings to healthy futures, is both humbling and deeply meaningful.

They continue to teach me every day. Gentled Animals exists because of them, and because of Jo and Gracie – the ones who started it all.

Ready to book a behaviour consult?

I’m here to help you understand your animal’s behaviour.