Am zonked out now after 3 days of financial analysis. Will use my time effectively when I'm at normal work tomorrowMeeeeee! And the Monty Mooster. Will post tomorrow about what I'm hoping to achieve and our 'issues'![]()

Am zonked out now after 3 days of financial analysis. Will use my time effectively when I'm at normal work tomorrowMeeeeee! And the Monty Mooster. Will post tomorrow about what I'm hoping to achieve and our 'issues'![]()
Yay!Meeeeee! And the Monty Mooster.
Yes I think this was what my vet was trying to say , it needs to be done over time.The quick, she said, will then retract over time until eventually you've got the whole nail under control without ever hitting the quick.
Thanks for posting that photo @HAH, do you class that a tiny amount ? To me that would be a big piece and pretty sure that would result in a squealing Monty and lots of blood!I think I’ve read similar about the quick retracting over time @Emily_Babbelhund , probably on this forum (?) - and a tiny bit at a time is a great idea. As is the styptic powder.
Great plan @Natalie , thank you for writing it out so clearly - it’s encouraged me to do the same
I’m hoping to trim one nail a day - but the main aim is to get a consistently calm, comfortable response to foot handling. Trimming doesn’t matter so much as whether Kipper is comfortable. At the moment we’re a little variable, and I’m pretty sure that’s down to irregular handling sessions. So consistency is the key for us, and this Bavarian challenge is heaven-sent!
We had a good practice run today (this definitely doesn’t count towards the challenge, more of a warm up!) - here’s the evidence:
View attachment 8243
Yes, this is us. He really has an aversion to this, he has arthritis in his ankle joints which may or may not be a contributory factor.consistently calm, comfortable response to foot handling. Trimming doesn’t matter so much as whether Kipper is comfortable
No, I don’t at all - that nail and the same one on the other foot are overlong, and it was really clear (pale nails) that it wasn’t close to the quick. Plus I went really slowly and Kipper was cool with it, so off it came. Other nails will be a lot more conservative - it’s that tension between wanting to reduce nail length (which is over-long because I haven’t done it enough) and keeping it easy for both of us. If I can do both then win-win, but I’m anticipating it’ll be a far slower rate of progress generally, that was just a bonus long onedo you class that a tiny amount ?
I've never tried that but if it works for you and Monty, why not give it a try?Do you think a strong, rough emery board would be enough to take them down over time?
I've just found a large file that you use for getting hard skin off feetWhether emery boards work or not will depend on your dog's nails. They were far too slow on Willow, but OK for Shadow. A metal file worked better for both, before I started Dremelling.
Yes, this is exactly the way that my Rottie breeder taught me. Less filing/clipping as the the shape promotes the nail wearing down naturally toward the quick.The recommended way is to trim the nails in a slightly different way to normal - rather than trimming them flat across the nail, trim them on the sides and the top so they form a "point".
I believe so or Corn Flour.Am I right in thinking arrowroot powder also works to stop bleeding if it occurs?
This is how I do them as you recommended this before Fiona. I do however still cut the shell as Charlie does have long quicks. The thought of using a Dremel sends shivers down my spine!The quick will only recede if it's exposed. Of course, to expose it, you have to get close to it. The recommended way is to trim the nails in a slightly different way to normal - rather than trimming them flat across the nail, trim them on the sides and the top so they form a "point". This will be naturally worn back much more quickly, as the soft shell is exposed on more sides. Some people continue to trim the soft shell to actually expose the quick. I do not, and don't think it's necessary; none of my dogs have overly long quicks, so they don't need to recede. I just use this method to get the nails as short as possible.