These egg Tremley cute pets take over Easter on Fifth Avenue.
In typical New York fashion, revelers show creativity in over-the-top Easter outfits.
“I love taking boys as bunnies, so they’ll have bunny ears,” Pet Coturier Anthony Rubio told the Post.
Rubio is taking part in Easter Parade and Bonnet Festival along with his Twink Wawa Bogies and Kimba Since 2012 – his puppy is used to wearing the best on Sundays to walk around midtown.
“They actually sat on my lap and put their little arms in their clothes just like the little kids when you dress up,” he said.
Rubio, a native of the Bronx, strugglingly designs dog ensembles based on posture.
“Everything about his designs is always on his shoulders and back because I like to straddle my arms like a single dog is on a horse,” he explained.
“The other dog sits straight in my arms and heads forward, so everything his stuff is right in front of me.”
Coutured dog fans stop them along 57th Avenue from 49th Avenue to ask for photos.
“Nothing brings joy to my heart more than seeing the reaction,” he said.
Elizabeth Bayes is also bringing her fur baby along – her 8-month-old kitten Dewey sports a pink tuxedo to match Bay’s boyfriend.
This is the first time Dewey has appeared in the parade – running from 10am to 4pm on Easter Sundays – he probably won’t wear the hood.
“I tried. He bites them,” Bayes said.
The South Carolina native, who now lives in Hell’s Kitchen, has always been fascinated by the event due to the 1948 film Easter Parade and Fred Astaire and Judi Garland.
“I have to say, it responded to my romanticization… I’m just looking at the creativity, and that’s what I really like… some people just go out,” she gushed.
She was screaming from a dead cat.
When she first took her cat to the festival in 2022, she recalled, “I was like a celebrity.”
“People were like, ‘Oh, oh my god, you brought a cat.’ ”
“I’ll be going to the parade as long as I can remember,” she said.
Now, the two moms convey the beloved holiday traditions to her children and take the theme of their clothes very seriously.
“This year we are trying to do a pollinator theme. We’re celebrating where these flowers come from,” she said.
At first, I wasn’t sure if her one year old would be interested in participating.
“When I was pregnant with her, she appeared like an egg,” she said.
“I showed her hat and she cried out excitedly, so I think that was a good sign.”





