오엠쥐ㅠㅠㅠㅠ순이야ㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠ귀여워ㅠㅠㅠㅠ목욕이 처음이야?ㅠㅠㅠ귀엽다ㅠㅠ순이 털 아주 복슬복슬 부드럽고 귀엽겠는 걸?ㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠ꾸엥ㅠㅠㅠ다리봐ㅠㅠㅠㅠㅠ 발에 핑크젤리가 아니라 초코젤리가 있네ㅠㅠㅠㅠ귀여워 귀여워ㅠㅠㅠ앉아있는 것 봐ㅠㅠㅠㅠ귀여워ㅠㅠㅠㅠ카메라 쳐다보는 것 봐ㅠㅠㅠ 귀여워ㅠㅠㅠㅠ발 털 정리 받는 것 봐ㅠㅠㅠ귀여워ㅠㅠㅠㅠ엎드려 있는 자세 봐ㅠㅠㅠㅠ뒷다리 뭐야ㅠㅠㅠ귀여워ㅠㅠㅠ넘넘 귀여워 순이야아아아아악!!!!
Wow! He was so calm! Was he heavily sedated?! My Maltipoo would never let me trim the hair between his toes & cut his nails while he just laid there half asleep. What a good dog!
Very, very cute dog and so calm! Some feedback: What is that device you use to trim the fur off the toes? Your slicker brush is too large. Get a smaller one for this size dog. It makes a big difference. Make sure you close ears when bathing. Make sure you clean the inside of ears with alcohol, or chlorhexadine, and wipe dry. Use a Q-tip with mineral oil to go deep inside to clean out debris, wax, soap, water. Hair under eyes and on eyebrows should be trimmed back a little frequently. When it gets into their eyes, the eyes water. When eyes water, the iron in the fluids, stains the white hair brown. After blow drying, put some moisturizing eye drops (Genteal or Blink) into eyes so they are not dry. These small breeds all have sensitive eyes, and you have to baby them or they develop chronic irritations. Good job on the grooming! Nice to see a happy dog with gentle and loving owners!
Lass-in Angeles this is a groomer. She is a great groomer. She doesn’t show every single step, I’m certain that your “advice” is apart of her routine. I personally use one large brush for all my dogs, no matter the size. 🤷🏽♀️. And for the record test stains are hereditary.
@@tayannarenee8166 I groom and rescue dogs and wildlife. I am older and have much more experience. Your use of a large brush is only shows your own inexperience. Smaller slicker brushes have more compact pins and get small dog hair brushed out faster and better and get into spaces a large brush does not. A large slicker brush has very stiff hard pins which hurt smaller dogs. Test them out side by side before you display your ignorance of grooming. Eye stains are not 'hereditary'. They occur due to inbreeding genetic lines where eyes bulge out and get dry and hair bothers it since it sticks out so much. They also end up with cataracts leading to glaucoma. If you were more humble and thought about my advice, you would learn something, instead of blindly defending where no defense is needed.
Lass-in Angeles For one, just because you have more experience, doesn’t prove that your expo is better than mine. Second, tear stains are hereditary. If you recall the term “inbreeding” comes from the root word “breeding”, which in turn is heredity. Tear stains also come from the protein in the dogs bodily secretions, in conjunction with red and brown algae forming from the constant wetness. And lastly, my choice of size of slicker brush does not show ignorance note does it show inexperience. It shows preference, i indeed use different sizes of brushes depending on the type of mat. A dog that is not matted and is getting basic prep brush out, does not need a small slicker. A medium or large will do. I was defying tia groomer because she’s is phenomenal. And I’m certain that her skill set is safe, she is confident and comfortable with her tools. Experience doesn’t always make your knowledge superior.
@@tayannarenee8166 The lesson in English you want to give me, is one you should take yourself. 'Expo' is an abbreviation for 'Exposition', not 'Experience'. 'Nor', not 'Note'. 'Defending', not 'Defying'. Quite the opposite meaning. 'The', not 'Tia'. 'I', not 'i'. 1. How do you know the groomer is 'phenomenal' based on one video? Hasty judgment. 2. A heavy mat needs to be cut off, not brushed out. It cannot be untangled, that is why its a 'mat'. 3. Switching slicker brushes from big dog size to small dog size does nothing but hurt the dog. If big slicker brushes worked as well, small ones would not be invented. They are completely different. Like cat brushes are from dog brushes. You do not use a big slicker brush on cats either, they will scream. Small brushes make them purr. 4. Use of a poodle comb to untangle hair not too badly matted, is advisable. Only used at 4:47 in video. This should have been done before shampoo, to identify mats to be cut out or untangled. If you shampoo before removing a mat, it is more matted after bath. Well known fact by groomers. Mats are like knotted hair, very painful and pull on the skin. Neglect from owners. No dog should ever have matted hair. 5. The tear stains are genetic to some breeds, not hereditary. There is a difference. Small dogs were genetically altered by humans to look cute. Dogs have also evolved to look cute, especially the companion breeds. There is an interesting Nova or Frontline film on that. Cute to humans means big, round saucer eyes on a flatter face. This endears the dog to us, so we take care of it. Wolves don't look cute - their eyes are on either side of a pointy face. Hereditary means something you inherited from your parents but not necessarily affecting the whole breed. In some Great Danes for example, the front paws splay out and this is a hereditary problem which does not affect the entire breed. 6. Brown stain caused by tears or saliva is not protein. It is porphyrin synthesized into heme which gives blood its red color. It is full of iron. Heme floats in the saliva, tears, giving fur that iron rust color when eyes water, or fur around the mouth has stains, or when the dog licks paws excessively. Porphyrins are complex molecules, which synthesize into heme assisted by certain enzymes. When these enzymes are missing, porphyrins accumulate without being converted to heme, and this is the reason for the disease Porphyria, (Madness of King George). Heme binds with globulin to form hemoglobulin, which is the red color in blood. It is porphyrin pigments and heme in the dog's saliva and tears that start the staining process around the eyes, mouth, paws, or wherever you get these deposits. 7. Dogs do not get red, brown, or green algae growing on them as you stated. 'Algae' is an edible water plant and does not grow on dogs, but in ponds, aquariums, and oceans. What you meant was a 'fungus', which is a mushroom, not a plant. It is Malassezia, which can lead to skin conditions externally. This fungus makes those areas itch. So the dog may rub his face a lot, especially around the eyes, lick paws, shake ears, and scratch body. This fungus happens because some areas on dog are always damp, around eyes, wet muzzles, wet paws. 8. The way to fix the watery eyes on dogs - trim hair above and below eyes, so hairs don't rub against eyeballs to produce tears, and there is no fur below to stain. Lubricate eyes with Genteal Severe Eye Gel, or Blink Gel Tears frequently to prevent dry eyes. Keep heating down at home, and keep home interior moisture up to at least 55% humidity. If your dog has cataracts, get it treated with special drops from an eye specialist. Cataracts inflame eyes, so drops keep inflammation down. Cataracts can turn into Glaucoma - complete blindness with massive eye swelling - very painful - in 6 hrs if not treated. Glaucoma costs $2500 per eye to remove the eye surgically. Cataracts cost $5000 to surgically change out the lens so the dog is cured of the cataract permanently. 9. The way to cure fungus anywhere on the body - wash with ketoconazole dog shampoo, once a week for a couple of months to kill fungus. If fungus is not severe, avoid oral meds as they damage the liver. Finish the bath with a diluted 50% white vinegar rinse on dog, but avoid the head, too risky, and dip the paws fully into the vinegar. Diluted, not full strength. Avoid open wounds. Gently swap this vinegar mix around the eyes, inside the ears, ensuring no dripping. Dry out dog well. Apply Tea Tree oil diluted with mineral oil under paws, wipe down inside of ears. On tear stains, VERY CAREFULLY apply small amounts of Hydrogen Peroxide ensuring none goes into eyes. This bleaches out the stains. You can also use on paws or fur, on a warm day, as it must dry on the fur. Peroxide does not kill fungus. Vinegar does. Peroxide only lifts the brown rust stain. Essentially, this is iron / rust staining. Put some UNFILTERED CLOUDY SHAKEN apple cider vinegar drops into the dog's water bowl to change his body PH into less acidic and more alkaline PH. Visit www.nzymes.com and buy the Healthy Skin Kit (a version sold for humans too), and follow directions. Many rescued dogs have yeast on the inside as well. This company has nailed it down. Vets only prescribe sulfur drugs which damage the liver as they have to be used long term. Not advisable. Hope this helps others reading it. I have worked with very difficult cases of fungus in rescued dogs and these are my findings.
REAAALY IT'S TOO CUTEST ANIMAL THAT I EVER WATCHED BEFORE!!! He is soooooooo adorable. How you can had many dogs sooo adorable and gently??. I love your all videos about your animals. It's so refreshing and i can't stop to watching them everydaaayyy. How lucky are youu!!!!♡