I'm a nail trimming failure

Atemas

UK Tour Guide
The other part of me is annoyed and upset because I know this would have really distressed Monty, and I have paid a lot of time into him having good associations at the vet (the hydro); as he also gets some not so good sessions when his joints are manipulated and he gets a cartophen injection.
Yes I understand. I ‘took the bull by the horns’ the other day and clipped Red’s nails (fore legs, her back ones seem to get worn down naturally). I just asked F to hold her and I got on with it. Took about 3 minutes. Yes some people would say it’s not good to hold her but we did it gently and kindly - better done by us than someone else. She got a good treat too afterwards
 
Yes I understand. I ‘took the bull by the horns’ the other day and clipped Red’s nails (fore legs, her back ones seem to get worn down naturally). I just asked F to hold her and I got on with it. Took about 3 minutes. Yes some people would say it’s not good to hold her but we did it gently and kindly - better done by us than someone else. She got a good treat too afterwards
Sometimes you have to do things. There is a time and a place for cooperative care, and that's the gold standard, of course. But there are times when you simply have to do a procedure for the good of the dog. This is where you don't even ask the question, "Can you do this now?". You set it up in a very different way and get through it as gently as possible.

For Willow, this is very rarely necessary these days, but in the past, there have been situations where she's been stressed continuously for such a long period that her nails needed doing and I knew she wouldn't be any less stressed the following day, or the one after. In those situations, I had J sit with her with a hand on her chest while I just got on with it. In this situation, I pick up her foot (her start button is offering me her foot, so I don't wait for that) and crack on. After a few goes with this, she didn't even need the hand. She understood that when J was sat with her, it was a time when she didn't have a choice. If not, she did. You just have to be very clear and, if you do ask the question, you must always respect the answer. So if you aren't prepared to accept a "no", just don't ask.
 
finally managed to cut 2 slivers off Cola's front nails tonight! - we have been working towards this for several weeks now. I put a bowl of treats in front of him with him in a down - started like in Kikopup video above - to touch eg his paw and feed treat at the same time - this really helped and then moved on to - touch his paw say "nice" ( my marker that says the food is coming to you) and reward from the bowl. - once he got the idea, then we have just built up gradually - hold nail - hold clipper next to nail - pretend to cut nail (other handling too - look in ears etc). It was as much me building up courage and it was him getting used to it. It obviously helps that he hasn't had any bad experiences with nails etc. But it is working for me. I would like to use a dremel with him too, so hope to introduce that I think in a similar way. - have to be a bit careful - the urge to chew is often stronger than the treat rewards!
We have been using the scratch board too - Cola understands a paw target, but quite hard to get a scratch rather than a touch (or a "it must be time to chew it mum" ) but will keep working on that too
 
Top