At 6.30am in a gated apartment complex in Chennai, the lifts open in quiet succession. A Labrador tugs forward, an Indie pauses to sniff the same patch it always does, and a Beagle refuses to move without greeting everyone first. Within minutes, individual routines blur into a familiar formation — a loose circle of residents who didn’t plan to walk together, but now do. Across apartment complexes, dog walking is quietly shifting from a solitary task to a shared ritual. What began as chance encounters has turned into loosely organised groups, often held together by a simple WhatsApp chat and the comfort of showing up at the same time.
‘It started because our dogs would stop and wait for each other anyway’In a Velachery apartment, the WhatsApp group is called “Block C night round.” In another in Uthandi, it’s “Dog walking circle.” No branding — just functional. On most evenings, six to 10 dogs show up; some days, it’s three. Someone’s always late, someone’s always early, and someone inevitably messages, “Going down now, who all?” “It started because our dogs would stop and wait for each other anyway,” says Amrutha. “Now, even if I’m tired, I know there’ll be at least two familiar faces downstairs.
That’s enough to get me moving.” For Arjun S, the group works as a quiet nudge : “If no one texts, I might skip. But if I see ‘Coming?’ on the group, I go — it doesn’t feel like obligation, just… company.”
‘It’s not even just our community anymore, it’s theirs, too’Every now and then, the routine stretches beyond the gates. Once or twice a month, if schedules align, the group plans a longer walk to a nearby park or a quieter street.
“It’s never formal,” says Abigail, a marketing executive who helps coordinate the group’s weekend walks. “Someone just texts, ‘Sunday walk?’ and whoever’s free shows up.” On those days, the group feels fuller, louder, more in sync. Dogs that usually follow the same route suddenly have more space, but still within familiar company. “It’s like they’re a pack at this point,” says Mikhail, a software engineer who’s part of the evening walking group. “They wait for each other, stick together… it’s not even just our community anymore, it’s theirs, too.”
‘Regular, familiar interactions can significantly reduce anxiety in dogs’Over time, these walks become more than routine. Residents share vet contacts, swap recommendations, and watch out for each other’s pets; newcomers are added quickly. For dogs, the benefits are clear. “Regular, familiar interactions reduce anxiety,” says Dr Rachita, noting they become calmer and less reactive. The predictability — same route, timing, faces — helps. “My dog used to be very jumpy,” says Akhil. “Now, he waits by the lift at 7pm and even looks around if a regular is late — it’s like their own circle.”
Showing up, even when it’s not yoursIn an Anna Nagar community, two regulars — a school student and a college-goer — walk a neighbour’s dogs every weekday evening. What began as a one-off favour has quietly settled into routine. “No one told us to do it,” says Sai Lekha. “We just liked coming down to see them. Then, it became our thing.” Surya, now in college, shrugs it off just as easily. “It doesn’t feel like helping. It’s just part of my day now and the nicest part, actually.”
Written By: Aashna Reddy