Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
Poor Bernie. This is our first issue with matting but I guess I should have been more careful, considering the time of year and that he's up to a bath a week!
I've just found a number of mats on his legs, no where else. The slicker brush we have just seems to go over the mats and fluff the outer hair up nicely enough to disguise them. The mats themselves seem to be in the 'middle' if that makes sense, not at the base near the skin, and not all the way through to the tips of the hair - does that matter at all? No pun intended!
Any tips on tacking these myself? I don't want to take him to a groomer who may just insists on shaving him to avoid the work, and I honestly don't want to pay for her time to work through them if I can do it at home. A second reason for wanting to do it myself - this would be Bern's first groomer trip and I don't want his first experience to be a de-matting session, I can't imagine it would be pleasant!
Thanks so much.
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Here's what I do with Simon. Between baths, I spray him with either Ice on Ice (if just a couple small mats) or Isle of Dogs Detangle (worse mats). I brush him 1/2 dog at a time. I start with his feet, then up his legs, then shoulder, neck, ribs, back with a pin brush. On tougher mats, I spray Isle of Dogs heavily onto the mat, rub it in with my fingers and leave it for a minute or two while I go to brush something else. After the mat seems to be broken down and brushed out as much as I can (from the skin to the tip), I use a static-free metal comb - again from the skin up. If I get a mat that doesn't give up easily, I cut through it VERTICALLY - skin to tip - then break it down with the pin brush, then a comb.
When I wash Simon, I use Best Shot Ultra Wash shampoo. (It helps break down tangles you might've missed) And I love Double K The Solution for Detangling and Conditioning conditioner. After you put the conditioner on, I then use the metal comb to go through any little tangles/mats I missed. At that point, he is tangle/mat free and blowing him out is a breeze. After I've finished, I pin brush him again to finish getting out any extra hair.
Ice on Ice www.chrissystems.com
Isle of Dogs www.groomers.com
Best Shot Ultra Wash and Double K The Solution www.groomersmall.com
those are helpful tips--and thank you for the product links! are you saying you comb your doodle out before blow drying? is that recommended? (i haven't done it before but am willing to do whatever it takes)!
thanks!
I don't know how old Bernie is, but if he is somewhere between 7 months and a year, it is probably his puppy-to-adult coat change causing the mats. Simon's started around 10 months. If that is the case, believe me, you will use all of this stuff for quite a while. As I understand it, the slicker is more of a finishing tool. A good non-static metal comb, your fingers, and a pin brush are your best bets for breaking up the mats. And, as I learned the hard way, despite the many more experienced people who assured me it was the right thing to do, keeping the coat clipped short is really a must. This is the first time Simon's coat has been long in almost a year and I'm getting ready to cut it back soon.
Bernie is totally adorable, btw.
Since Barb is a pro groomer as well as a breeder of ALDs, she is better than an excellent source of info. :-)
I hear ya Jill! We're new to Doodles too. I actually ended up buying the Top Paws Dematting Rake (the link is below) and I used it to brush him! All his mats are in his legs so I laid him down, made sure he was calm, then started carefully brushing. I started at the top and worked my way down to his toes, when we hit a mat it would take a few more strokes but we got them all out. Plus the dematting comb thinned out the hair quite a bit, which I think may help with matting later on?
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