Glamour Pooch

Glamour Pooch Mobile Dog Wash/Hydrobath. All breeds and sizes thoroughly bathed by operators with over 50 years experience in the canine industry.
(5)

Service includes 2x hand wash, 1xconditioner, towel/blow dry, and cologne.

28/03/2024
28/03/2024
24/02/2024

Afterpay Now

Happy New Year To our wonderful clients and their beautiful dogs.  Best wishes for a happy, and healthy 2024.
31/12/2023

Happy New Year To our wonderful clients and their beautiful dogs. Best wishes for a happy, and healthy 2024.

09/10/2023

‼️‼️‼️𝑻𝑰𝑪𝑲𝑺 𝑨𝑹𝑬 𝑯𝑬𝑹𝑬 ‼️‼️‼️

The best prevention is checking your pet daily by running your fingers throughout the coat, feeling for and investigating any lumps or bumps. The picture below depicts what ticks look like.
Veterinary products enhance protection against ticks such as Nexgard Spectra or Bravecto.

Signs of tick paralysis:

⚠️Hindlimb weakness, it can progress to affect the front legs
⚠️Grunting respiration
⚠️Regurgitation
⚠️Severe breathing problems, collapse and death.

If you see the clinical signs above, search for a tick(s). If you find one, you can remove it with a tick hook or grasp it near the skin and remove it in a corkscrew action. Take your dog or cat to the vet and keep the tick so it can be identified. If you find it is too difficult to remove the tick, the tick’s head is left in the skin, or you can’t find the tick but strongly suspect there is one attached to your pet, don’t worry, our team will help when you arrive.

Please contact our team on 0738028763 to assist you with your tick prevention .

25/08/2023

DOG SPORTS HAPPENING THIS WEEKEND!

Have you ever wanted to know more about Dog Sports? All you need to do is follow the link and it will take you to the Dogzonline website to where you will get a schedule of all the different dogs sports happening over this weekend 26-27 August 2023.
https://www.dogzonline.com.au/event-diary/list.asp?state=QLD&type=DS

23/08/2023
15/08/2023
25/07/2023

MORE THAN JUST BREEDERS....

Dogz Online breeders aren’t just the source for your next puppy- they’re a treasure trove of valuable knowledge and information about their breed that they’ve gained over the years. They are continually devoted to their dogs, striving to improve the breed, supporting you and your puppy for their lifetime.⁠

02/07/2022

Has your dog tried natures hydrating treat? 🥒 Cucumbers are not just beneficial for us humans but for dogs too! This crunchy, low calorie treat is not only great for helping your pup stay hydrated, but it's packed with antioxidants and vitamins such as Vitamin K - which helps strengthen your dog’s bones. PLUS! Can help freshen breath too.

✅ Freshens breath
​✅ Low in calories
​✅ Provides electrolytes
​✅ Vitamin K
​✅ Anti-inflammatory properties
✅ Providesntioxidants

​Feed as a crunchy treat, add some slices to your dog's dinner or freeze for a cool down treat!

24/06/2022

To shave or not to shave your Golden?? .. I share this excellent article each year and with the warmer weather upon us, this is a reminder on why not to be tempted to shave your Golden ..

Wait! By Nancy Bynes, NCMG of Nevada City

With warmer temperatures finally coming to Nevada County, many dog owners are exploring options to help their pets stay comfortable. Shaving off all that hair is probably the most popular option. Indeed, for some coat types, this is an ideal solution. Not for all. With the exception of hard-coated terriers, dogs come in one of two coat types: single coated and double coated.

Examples of single-coated breeds are poodles, shih-tzus, bichons, etc. This type of coat will continue to grow longer and longer, much like human hair, with genetics being the final determination in reference to length. Double-coated or fur-bearing breeds have coats that grow to a predetermined length. They can be further separated into open coats and closed coats. These breeds have a hard, protective outer coat (guard hairs) and a soft, dense undercoat. Examples of open, double-coated breeds are any of the spitz-type breeds, such as Siberian huskies, Pomeranians and chows.

This coat is designed to shed snow or ice and provide maximum protection against freezing weather. Closed, double-coated breeds have noticeably longer guard hairs, which lay down over the undercoat, sort of like a blanket. While the outer, or guard, hairs get wet, the undercoat works to keep the dog's skin dry. Examples include golden retrievers, Australian shepherds and Newfoundlands.

Single-coated breeds can be clipped down to the skin, and the coat will grow back pretty much as it was before. The same is not true for double-coated breeds. For this reason, shaving these dogs down is not a solution to summer heat.

Think of a healthy double coat as an old-growth forest. There is a balance with different parts providing different benefits. If you clear-cut an old growth forest, there will be immediate regrowth of a lot of young trees very soon. Unfortunately, they won't initially be the same kind as those you cut down. Instead, the forest has to start from scratch and spend decades, first growing ground cover and softwoods that provide an environment for slower growing hardwood varieties. It takes generations before the natural balance is restored. While on a much shorter timeline, it's the same thing with a double-coated dog. Guard hairs represent old growth, and undercoat represents ground covering vegetation.

The act of shaving a double coat removes the dog's natural insulation and causes his system to kick into high gear. He'll now produce coat to protect himself from extreme temperatures, sunburn and sharp objects. Since the top coat or guard hairs take a long time to grow, what the dog's body produces first is soft undercoat. That's why we hear people say, “I shaved my dog, and it grew back twice as thick and really fuzzy!” In reality, what happens is that the original coat isn't restored at all. What grows in instead is thick, prolific undercoat mixed with short new guard hairs. We call it false coat or coat funk.

So, why is this bad? Picture this scenario: It's 90 degrees outside. You're getting dressed to go work in your yard. Are you going to put on a light cotton T-shirt and sunblock or thermal underwear and a sweatshirt? A dog's shaved-down false coat is like that sweatshirt. It's dull, soft and soaks up water like a sponge. Burrs and foxtails stick like Velcro. Above all else, it's way too thick for hot weather. By the time that false coat grows out enough to protect the dog from sunburn, scrapes and bites (the usual job of the top coat), it is so thick that the poor dog might as well be wearing thermal underwear and a sweatshirt.

Remember, Mother Nature designed the undercoat to be extremely heat-retentive. Do you take your dog to a grooming salon? You can request a bath and blow-out. Virtually all modern professional grooming salons have high velocity blow dryers in their work areas. These powerhouses can literally blast the dead undercoat out of your dog's hair after a thorough bathing with minimal brushing and combing needed. The benefit to your dog is a healthy, balanced coat you can both live with. Sure, you could opt for the shave-down, but you'll more than likely be back in a month or so for another “shave-down” because your dog is cooking in its own hair.

Then, if you're like most owners who fall into this cycle, you'll intentionally let your dog's woolly false coat grow out all winter “for warmth,” only to have it shaved off again in the spring. In reality, all winter long while you're under the false notion that your dog is staying warm and dry under that thick layer of fuzz, his coat is matting, retaining water and mud and possibly even mildewing. It will stay cold and wet for hours. Do you see the vicious cycle that started?

In some cases, owners really don't have a choice. If there's an underlying skin condition, requiring removal of the hair, obviously shaving is the lesser of two evils. Same applies if the coat is so matted that shaving is truly the most humane option, affording the owner a chance to start over and improve their brushing skills. These are situations to thoroughly discuss with both your veterinarian and your groomer so you can make an informed decision.

However, if your sole motivation for shaving your dog in the spring is to “keep him cool,” you need to know that you're actually creating a far worse situation than you think. Aside from destroying coat integrity, shaved dogs are susceptible to a multitude of complications, including, but not limited to, alopecia, heat stroke and skin cancer, specifically Solar-induced Squamous Cell Carcinomas and Dermal Hemangiosarcomas. Sometimes, these complications are not reversible.

Nancy Bynes is a certified master groomer with more than 38 years of experience. She lives in Nevada City.

This article was originally published in the Nevada City Union, June, 2011.

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Park Ridge, QLD
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