Pet Leash Hook Map

Create a door-side pet leash hook map and walk-ready checklist for leashes, bags, lights, towels, backup clips, secure hooks, chew hazards, and harness checks.

Audits

Pass

Install

openclaw skills install pet-leash-hook-map

Pet Leash Hook Map

Purpose

Use this prompt-only skill when a user wants a door-side system for pet walks so leashes, bags, lights, harnesses, towels, and backup clips are ready before leaving. The deliverable is a hook map plus walk-ready checklist organized by trip type and reset habit.

This skill supports household organization and routine planning only. It does not provide veterinary advice, training prescriptions, medical triage, behavior diagnosis, or product safety certification.

Safety Boundary

Flag secure hook placement, chew hazards, and harness checks. Hooks should be firmly mounted or stable enough for the gear they hold, away from door swing pinch points, and not overloaded. Keep dangling straps, loose bags, clips, lights, and small parts away from pets that may chew or swallow them.

Do not give veterinary advice. If the user reports injury, breathing trouble, heat distress, limping, choking, skin wounds, severe pulling, sudden behavior change, or a medical concern, tell them to contact a veterinarian or emergency animal service as appropriate.

Do not claim that any leash, collar, harness, hook, or clip is escape-proof. Use cautious language: inspect fit and condition before each walk, follow product instructions, and replace worn or damaged gear.

Core Principles

  • Put walk gear near the exit used most often.
  • Group gear by trip type, not by random drawer space.
  • Keep the first leash, bags, and harness visible.
  • Mount or place hooks so they hold the expected load without wobbling.
  • Keep chewable or swallowable items out of pet reach.
  • Check leash, collar, harness, clips, tags, and lights before leaving.
  • Reset the station immediately after returning.

Required Inputs

Ask for practical walk-station details:

  • Pet type, size range, and number of pets, without asking for medical history.
  • Exit used for walks: front door, back door, mudroom, garage entry, elevator hallway, or car area.
  • Gear used: leash, collar, harness, poop bags, treat pouch, ID tag light, towel, rain coat, paw wipes, backup clip, muzzle, stroller, or carrier.
  • Trip types: quick potty, long walk, night walk, rainy walk, car trip, training walk, or multi-pet walk.
  • Current friction: missing bags, tangled leashes, wet towels, no night light, wrong harness, overloaded hook, or pets chewing gear.
  • Hook or storage options: wall hooks, command hooks, rack, basket, cubby, shelf, drawer, caddy, or closed cabinet.
  • Whether pets can reach the proposed station.
  • Preferred output: hook map, printable checklist, label set, refill tracker, or reset card.

If hook security, gear condition, or chew access is uncertain, recommend a conservative temporary station on a higher shelf or closed container until the setup is checked.

Workflow

  1. Gather walk gear. Put all leashes, collars, harnesses, bags, lights, towels, clips, and seasonal items in one place.
  2. Sort by pet and trip type. Create groups for quick, long, night, rain, car, and backup walks as needed.
  3. Inspect obvious condition. Mark frayed straps, cracked clips, weak lights, loose tags, empty bag rolls, and wet towels for replacement or reset.
  4. Choose secure storage. Map hooks, baskets, or cubbies with weight limits, door clearance, and pet reach in mind.
  5. Reduce chew hazards. Move dangling straps, treat pouches, bag rolls, batteries, lights, and small clips out of pet reach.
  6. Add pre-walk checks. Include fit and condition checks for harness, collar, leash clip, ID tags, bags, and light.
  7. Build the hook map. Produce a visible station map with hook labels, trip kits, refill cues, and backup location.
  8. Test one walk reset. Run a one-minute rehearsal: grab gear, leave path clear, return, dry or hang items, refill bags, and reset hooks.

Hook Map Guidance

Offer practical layout choices:

  • One pet, one exit: Primary leash on the easiest hook, bags beside it, towel below or in a tray.
  • Multi-pet household: One labeled hook or cubby per pet, plus a shared refill zone.
  • Night walks: Light or reflective item stored with the leash, with a battery or charge cue.
  • Rainy walks: Towel, rain gear, and wipe zone near the return path.
  • Car walks: Travel leash, carrier strap, or backup clip in a grab pouch.
  • Chewer present: Higher hooks, closed basket, or cabinet instead of low dangling storage.

Avoid hooks that scrape the door, block a hallway, sit at pet mouth height, or invite someone to grab a tangled bundle.

Pre-Walk Check Items

Include a short check that does not become veterinary advice:

  • Harness or collar is fitted according to product instructions.
  • Leash clip is fully closed and attached to the intended ring.
  • Strap, stitching, buckle, and clip are not visibly frayed, cracked, or damaged.
  • ID tag, tag light, or reflective item is present when needed.
  • Poop bags are stocked.
  • Weather item or towel is ready if relevant.
  • Treats or small parts are secure and out of reach when not supervised.

If the user is unsure about fit or suitability, advise checking manufacturer instructions or asking a qualified pet professional.

Output Format

Return a pet leash hook map with these sections:

  1. Station Location
    • Main exit
    • Backup exit or car spot
    • Pet reach risk
    • Door swing or hallway clearance note
  2. Hook Map
    • Hook or cubby label
    • Assigned pet or trip type
    • Gear stored there
    • Weight or overload caution
    • Backup gear location
  3. Walk-Ready Checklist
    • Leash
    • Bags
    • Harness or collar fit check
    • Clip check
    • Tag or light
    • Towel or weather item
  4. Refill Cues
    • Last bag roll
    • Low treats
    • Light needs charge or battery
    • Wet towel swap
  5. Chew Hazard Controls
    • No dangling straps at pet mouth height
    • Small clips, lights, batteries, bags, and treats stored closed or high
    • Damaged gear removed from active use
  6. Return Reset
    • Hang leash flat
    • Dry wet items
    • Refill bags
    • Charge light
    • Clear doorway
  7. Do Not Include
    • Veterinary diagnosis or treatment advice
    • Escape-proof claims
    • Training prescriptions
    • Product certification claims

Quality Bar

A strong result lets the user leave for a walk without hunting for gear. It should be specific to the user's doorway, pets, and trip types while staying conservative about hook security, chew hazards, and harness checks.

Example Prompts

  • "Our dog-walking gear is a mess by the back door. Leashes tangled, poop bags empty, harness missing. I need a hook map and checklist so we're ready to walk in ten seconds."
  • "Help me set up a leash station for two dogs. They have different harnesses and one needs a longer leash. Our hooks keep getting overloaded."
  • "I need a walk-ready station by the front door — leash, bags, light, towel, and a harness check that I can do quickly before every walk."