Old English Sheepdogs are now an endangered breed. They are very, very special and require a special owner. Someone who will not mind grooming and taking care of their dogs coat. They are extremely sweet and extremely athletic. Sadly, too many people get this breed and have no idea what kind of dedication they require. I've had many breeds in my life. At the moment I have a whippet but, I'd love to have another OES one day. Best breed ever!
@@lucianacastrillon2335 It's a lot more than a monthly groomer visit. You want to brush that coat at least once every other day. Especially the ears, belly and under the legs where mats form very quickly. Some OES have more profuse coats than others but, on average you are probably going to be brushing about 20 to 30 minutes per day and checking their ears too. If you do a bath and groom at home? That's about five hours or more if you don't have a good pet dryer. If you only went to the groomer once a month and did not brush? Your dog is going to be uncomfortably matted and the groomer is then going to charge you a lot more to get the matts out. Start with the complete brushing when they are puppies so they will get used to it.
I don't know who breeds most of the dogs you've seen but all of my dogs have none of those issues mentioned. This is why backyard breeders and puppymills should be stopped and only reputable breeders who ensure that the dogs are properly formed.
When you trimmed the visor you didn't watch for the dog's eyelashes. My OES is 9mos and he has eyelashes that are at least 3 inches long. Did you trim them off? Shoudn't you have held them down? They need their long lashes to lift their visor as the visor hair grows and the lashes don't grow back, they fall out and regenerate. By the way, my boy is very patient about being groomed daily and he had his first summer trim and the groomer said he was very well behaved. I think the breeds that need grooming require patient brushing and handling at least every second day so they are used to the table and the combing/brushing/scissoring. If the owners don't do this, it's not the dog/breed's fault for being impatient.
The dog is clearly very uncomfortable being handled, and I don't blame him with the way your grabbing his paws and fur recklessly without thinking about how the dog feels.
@@emanuelpuga5157 Mine never did but, I groomed her from day one as a puppy and when doing a big groom I never did it all at once. I would do half-hour breaks throughout the process. It takes from four hours up to an entire day to do a full groom when they are in full coat. I almost never clipped mine down and kept her in full coat most of the time.
As an old English sheepdog owner and lover I find your attitude towards the breed offensive! The cut is nice but I wouldn't be bringing you my dogs. Obviously not that you would care. Future groomers note: people love their dogs and get offended when a vet or groomer doesn't care for their fur baby.
Old English Sheepdogs are now an endangered breed. They are very, very special and require a special owner. Someone who will not mind grooming and taking care of their dogs coat. They are extremely sweet and extremely athletic. Sadly, too many people get this breed and have no idea what kind of dedication they require. I've had many breeds in my life. At the moment I have a whippet but, I'd love to have another OES one day. Best breed ever!
Realistically aside from a monthly visit to the groomer, how much time is needed for daily brushing and combing is needed?
@@lucianacastrillon2335 It's a lot more than a monthly groomer visit. You want to brush that coat at least once every other day. Especially the ears, belly and under the legs where mats form very quickly. Some OES have more profuse coats than others but, on average you are probably going to be brushing about 20 to 30 minutes per day and checking their ears too. If you do a bath and groom at home? That's about five hours or more if you don't have a good pet dryer. If you only went to the groomer once a month and did not brush? Your dog is going to be uncomfortably matted and the groomer is then going to charge you a lot more to get the matts out. Start with the complete brushing when they are puppies so they will get used to it.
I don't know who breeds most of the dogs you've seen but all of my dogs have none of those issues mentioned. This is why backyard breeders and puppymills should be stopped and only reputable breeders who ensure that the dogs are properly formed.
When you trimmed the visor you didn't watch for the dog's eyelashes. My OES is 9mos and he has eyelashes that are at least 3 inches long. Did you trim them off? Shoudn't you have held them down? They need their long lashes to lift their visor as the visor hair grows and the lashes don't grow back, they fall out and regenerate. By the way, my boy is very patient about being groomed daily and he had his first summer trim and the groomer said he was very well behaved. I think the breeds that need grooming require patient brushing and handling at least every second day so they are used to the table and the combing/brushing/scissoring. If the owners don't do this, it's not the dog/breed's fault for being impatient.
He looks like he's trying to RIP the dog's hair out
What a great dog! Thanx!! Getting ready to see if I am trainable 🤷♀️✨💛✨
Thank you for the Barkleigh Form reco!
He's cutting off the dogs eye lashes !
The dog is clearly very uncomfortable being handled, and I don't blame him with the way your grabbing his paws and fur recklessly without thinking about how the dog feels.
great vid! at the end I wanted to hear how Jay handles OYDs!!?? Thanks for the vid!
Kat4Animals00
Horrible how this groomer handle the dog the poor baby is crying because of the groomer hurting him this type or groomers must stop working with dogs
This breed is also very impatient too. The groomer did an awesome job!
@@emanuelpuga5157 No they are not. I've had an OES and you must start when they are puppies. My girl was very good with her grooming.
@@rca6576 I own one myself, and even when they’re train they could get a bit impatient
@@emanuelpuga5157 Mine never did but, I groomed her from day one as a puppy and when doing a big groom I never did it all at once. I would do half-hour breaks throughout the process. It takes from four hours up to an entire day to do a full groom when they are in full coat. I almost never clipped mine down and kept her in full coat most of the time.
Very informative thanks
Are olde english sheepdogs some of your most expensive grooms? I just did one and it ended up the highest.
Doggie needs vitamin E on his pink nose.
WHY did you twist the dogs leg out to the side like that! NO, you should lift up straight to the back. Otherwise, it hurts their hips.
As an old English sheepdog owner and lover I find your attitude towards the breed offensive! The cut is nice but I wouldn't be bringing you my dogs. Obviously not that you would care. Future groomers note: people love their dogs and get offended when a vet or groomer doesn't care for their fur baby.
He also apparently has never seen a well bred Old English Sheepdog from his comments about how their never properly formed! This pissed me off
Pobrezinho todo o tempo do vídeo em pé, por isto que voltam para casa com problema de coluna
Ima get one of these they look cute :)
o e d
Love it 😍😍😍🐶
Shaving an Old English??
Cláudia Pinto they are sculpting.