Labradoodle & Goldendoodle Forum
Hi everyone,
I have an almost three-year-old doodle who has fleecy curls. After two years of unsuccessfully dealing with her mats between grooming appointments, we just gave up and began having her sheared at each appointment. Only her face gets shaped. Aside from her face, we really don't mind having her short, or even slightly uneven. What we do mind is that we pay $125 a groom every six to eight weeks. There was no price reduction when we told them to stop trying to de-mat her.
We live small and urban with no real space to set up a real grooming station, but I am wondering if I should try to just shear her myself? My groomer keeps trying to talk me out of it, saying it is dangerous to get it wrong. That I can hurt her with the clippers, but I can't see how that's really possible. Don't most of these have safety features where you set the length?
I figure I've now spent almost $3000 on grooming and surely there can be no harm in trying to cut her myself.
So:
Am I nuts to try in limited space? Or with a dog who has never gotten a haircut from her 'mom'? What's the best tool for a shearing? Am I right that I could shear her legs and body, but would need to really trim her feet, tail and face with scissors and brushes, etc...
Thanks,
Shari
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Thank you, Debb. I think I will ask my friend if I can borrow her grooming kit before investing myself. I honestly don't have a space that I can dedicate to this chore aside from my kitchen. I'm now feeling a little daunted by the process. I think I thought I'd bathe her one day, let it dry then groom her the next. I can't imagine where I will set up all this stuff. I live small and urban ... no yard, no basement. I don't think I understood that I also need a special dryer.
His coat looks very similar to Lexi's. I suspect this will be a bigger project than I anticipated, which is why I'm now double-y sure I should borrow a friend's tools to try it out first. Did you put him on a table?
I think that's the main reason for blowing out the coat with a high velocity dryer. Not only does it dry the coat effectively, it stretches out the curls making the clipper glide through the coat easily. I use a slicker type brush (not a Les Pooch brush) to brush while drying which helps straighten the coat further. With the coat fluffed out and straightened you can use different lengths of attachment combs on the clipper.
If you don't already do this, you may want to consider starting with baths, blow drying and detail scissor work. That's what I did for years on Lucy between professional grooms. That got me use to a portion of the process before graduating to full clipper cuts. It was a BIG step for me and took a LOT of courage to actually do my first clipper cut. I have pictures on my page (under 'Photos') of my first attempts (3 yrs ago) at clipper cutting both Lucy and Oscar if you'd like to check them out.
I remember the first pass I took with the clippers. It was on Sophie and she was 2 and had never had a full haircut. She had long sort of wavey hair. It took me forever to get up the nerve to do it. As soon as I took that first pass it was like I couldn't stop. She looked so much better underneath and it was so much easier than I thought it was going to be ... I was hooked.
Exactly ... the last time they went to the groomers I specifically said do not cut their eyelashes and she did. I was so mad. Now, I cut them all the time, lol!
That is exactly how I felt! So funny. It was so difficult to run that first stroke, but after that, I was like an addict!
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