02-04-2023, 08:33 AM
(02-03-2023, 02:00 PM)busker Wrote: What dogs are the easiest to groom?
And which ones the least?
Have you ever been bitten by a vicious ungroomed mutt that liked its mud caked coat as it was?
And how do they compare with cats?
Today I did a standard poodle, 1 year old, 55 lbs, 4 inches of hair, a few mats around the neck and legs, took 1 and a half hours to shampoo condition and blow dry, 2 and a half hours to trim all the hair to a half inch length.
The lady called asking for a standard poodle specialist. My front desk told her I have a standard poodle and am pretty good. This morning her husband drops the dog off, doesn't want his poodle to 'look like a poodle'.
It had me thinking, what's my specialty? I used to think it was filing nails, I could get any dog smooth and close to the quick. Now I realize it's difficult dogs. Old dogs, puppies, aggressive, matted, triple coat, dogs banned from other places, cats, I just have a knack. Maybe it's my customer service. People are just super thankful I will take their pet.
If all dogs were well behaved, the easiest dogs to groom have short hair, long noses, white nails. Golden doodles and mixes are the hardest physically on a person, long hair, heavy weight, puppy temperament, often matted. I give them an hour block in a schedule because it's essentially two or three dogs. Great Pyrenees usually too, and many of them get very heavy and old and can't stand for long. Shepherds and heelers are notoriously difficult to do nails, messing with their feet in general. They are strong and fast.
Long haired dogs can get matted, rescue dogs are often matted to the skin and have to be carefully shaved before a bath, the bath can send them into shock, might uncover scabs and tumors.
I have two dogs that I will add on any day no matter how busy I am. A Yorkie who is shaved one length all over and a Pomeranian who gets scissored round, the dogs are so good, so quick, the parents are super nice, come often, and tip well.
I have a family of four dogs, the parents have something to change every haircut and say rude things to the front desk people, the dogs are all small and simple for me, but none of the employees can stand the owners, plus they call about the time, even though 4 dogs in 4 hours is reasonable for one person. It's stressful and therefore difficult. I have fired clients before for complaining too much.
I'm allergic to cats. I've done more cats this year than my previous 6 years combined. I do not advertise it, I don't like to do it, it is very stressful, yet people will drive 30 minutes or more for me to do it. I understand it,, the mats can tear their skin., I can't explain how I do it, I like to have someone else to hold them if necessary but sometimes I'm stuck by myself. I've been bit and scratched nearly everywhere. My cats have to be the first appointment, I want to get them out as fast as possible, the longer it takes the more dogs will be around. I had an employee get bit by a cat and her hand swelled up, had a $400 doctor bill and was out for three days. She won't do cats anymore.
I've been legitimately scared of two chows. Still groomed them, terrified. Ive never really seen any horror stories but I've heard plenty. I piss off my employees because everytime I take a dog they were struggling with, the dog is fine, like I have a magic touch, but really it's just behavior reading and muscle memory.
A lot of schnauzers bite for a lot of reasons.
Peanut butter honey banana sandwiches


