关于金毛的基础美容(一)
<p><b>PREPARATION</b> <br/></p><p>Start with a clean and dry dog, if not already bathed, thoroughly brushed. Actually for show grooming, I prefer trimming the dog before bathing, then doing any touch-up work after the bath and blow drying. If you wonder how those show dogs get those nice straight coats....it is from the blow drying. If you cannot afford a blow dryer, it is considerably more difficult to straighten a wavy coat, but it can be done by pinning towels snugly around the dog while they are still dampish. The blow dryer also comes in really handy during wet weather, after trips to the beach and yes, even "blowing" away all of that coat when the dog is shedding!<br/><br/><table cols="2" width="500" align="center" border="0"><tbody><tr><td><div align="right"><img src="http://www.pvgrc.org/grooming/GRM1.jpg" border="0" style="CURSOR: pointer;" alt=""/></div></td><td><div align="right"><font face="Comic Sans MS" color="#5c3826">This is a relatively ungroomed ear. See the fine fuzzy stuff on the top (or base of the ear), as well as the long straggly fluff behind the ear.</font></div></td></tr><tr><td><font face="Comic Sans MS" color="#5c3826">Start with the fuzzies behind the ear. Hold your thinning shears vertically as shown, and get the blades under the fuzzy stuff fairly close to the skin. Make about 3 cuts with the blades, then stop, brush out and look. You will probably need to repeat this several times, but note, we don't want to totally remove the hair, we just want to thin it, & trim the straggly stuff so it will lay down nicely on the neck. Normally, I would be holding the dogs ear forward & out of the way while doing this.</font></td><td><div align="left"><img src="http://www.pvgrc.org/grooming/GRM2.jpg" border="0" style="CURSOR: pointer;" alt=""/></div></td></tr><tr><td><div align="right"><img src="http://www.pvgrc.org/grooming/GRM5.jpg" border="0" style="CURSOR: pointer;" alt=""/></div></td><td><div align="right"><font face="Comic Sans MS" color="#5c3826">Trim with thinning shears from the starting point shown, toward the face. On most dogs, not much is needed here. You do not want to trim the inside of the ear flap totally smooth and short or you will create a very "hard look" for your dog. The exception would be on a dog with extremely heavily coated ears (inside & out), which usually means heavier or thicker ear leather as well. In that case you may wish to thin quite well on the inside of the ear flap.</font></div></td></tr><tr><td><font face="Comic Sans MS" color="#5c3826">Next trim the hair in front of the base of the ear; <br/>using the same method with the thinning shears; thin, brush, look, repeat. The hair immediately around <br/>the ear opening should be trimmed close, or plucked <br/>with forceps, taking care not to have bits of hair <br/>fall inside the ear canal. The hair under the <br/>fulcrum of the scissors in this picture, actually <br/>on the dogs neck, should also be thinned in <br/>this way from about 2" below the ear, <br/>up to the base of the ear.</font></td><td><div align="left"><img src="http://www.pvgrc.org/grooming/GRM4.jpg" border="0" style="CURSOR: pointer; ZOOM: 80%;" alt=""/></div></td></tr><tr><td><div align="right"><img src="http://www.pvgrc.org/grooming/GRM6.jpg" border="0" style="CURSOR: pointer;" alt=""/></div></td><td><div align="right"><font face="Comic Sans MS" color="#5c3826">Unless you have a dog with very heavily coated ears inside, you will only need to make one "light" stroke with the thinning shears here, at most one stroke this direction, and one stroke close to the skin under the coat going the opposite direction (towards the dogs nose). </font></div></td></tr><tr><td><font face="Comic Sans MS" color="#5c3826">Notice, by looking at your dogs ear, that the hair naturally grows longer at the top, and shorter towards the tip. When trimming the hair, we want to neaten and shorten, but in essence keep the "natural effect". Take too much off, and again you will change the "soft" facial expression of your Golden, to a very unbecoming "hard" look. Notice the angle that the thinning shears are being held in relation to the long hair on top of the ear held between my fingers. The thinning shears are held so the cut will be shorter at the tip of the ear (lower hand), and longer at the top of ear ( the actual base of ear).</font> </td><td><div align="left"><img src="http://www.pvgrc.org/grooming/GRM7.jpg" border="0" style="CURSOR: pointer; ZOOM: 90%;" alt=""/></div></td></tr><tr><td><div align="right"><img src="http://www.pvgrc.org/grooming/GRM6a.jpg" border="0" style="CURSOR: pointer;" alt=""/></div></td><td><div align="right"><font face="Comic Sans MS" color="#5c3826">See the white, blue and orange markers, directing the approximate lengths that the hair on the front of the ear is trimmed. As a beginner, do this trimming in small increments over a period of several days, in which time you have the opportunity to look at your progress, without having "butchered" the dog. <br/>First use the thinning shears underneath the longer hair on the top 3rd of the ear, close to the skin, and make a couple of strokes with the thinning shears vertically across the width of the ear, and comb. <br/>Secondly: trim the length of the hair on the ear with the thinning shears as in the picture above, but do so only about 1/4" (or less) at a time; comb out, look and then do a little more. This is the most critical part of grooming the ear, so work slowly, stop and look at it for a day, then do a little more if necessary. </font></div><br/> <br/> <br/></td></tr><tr><td><font face="Comic Sans MS" color="#5c3826">Trim the outside edge of the ear with quick repetitive cuts with the thinning shears, all around the ear, from the position shown, around the tip and up to about my thumb on top hand in photo, and don't go any farther up the inside front of the ear. Holding the ear out and away from dogs head do the same with the hair from the fulcrum of the shears (left in this photo) and just above the thumb of hand holding shears. Voila', you have successfully neatened the shape of the ear. </font></td><td><div align="left"><img src="http://www.pvgrc.org/grooming/GRM3.jpg" border="0" style="CURSOR: pointer; ZOOM: 80%;" alt=""/></div></td></tr><tr><td><center><div align="right"><img src="http://www.pvgrc.org/grooming/GRM8.jpg" border="0" style="CURSOR: pointer;" alt=""/></div></center></td><td><font face="Comic Sans MS" color="#5c3826"><center><b>Here we have a good example of a "neatened", natural looking ear.</b></center><div align="right">Note:The few long curls that run the length of the front rim of the ear, take very little thinning and trimming. If you cut this short, again you will spoil the soft expression of your dogs face. This specific problem is not shown in picture form: I use the thinning shears close to the skin, going vertically up under these hairs, and trim ONE stroke or thinning cut only. Comb or brush it out, and don't be surprised that you didn't take much out...that is what we want! Then brush or comb these "decorative face framing hairs" straight out from the ear, and angle your thinning shears so you trim closer (shorter) at the tip of the ear and yet leave these hairs longer at the top or base of the ear by the eye, just as it grows naturally. Truly, I do very little here, for the reason I've said, and these decorative hairs will lay down and look neat with very little trouble.</div></font><font face="Comic Sans MS" color="#404040"> <br/> <br/></font></td></tr></tbody></table></p><center><p><font face="Comic Sans MS"><b>WHISKERS:</b> <br/>Goldens may be shown "with" whiskers, and of course their whiskers are of great importance in hunting and other performance activities, so it is entirely up to you whether you wish to trim them, or leave them on. Or, you may do a combination of trimming only the crooked or heavy whiskers, and leaving the finer ones. If I were not showing the dog, I definitely would not trim them. If you choose to trim whiskers, I prefer to do so with a small blunt nosed scissors. Facing the dog, holding the muzzle with one hand, and using one finger to pull the flews slightly towards you will make the whiskers stand straight out. The dog cannot "hide them" with this method! Then you use your blunt nosed scissors, very close to the skin and being very careful to go under the short hair of the face, trim the whiskers from the back toward the front, each individually. Really good lighting, or daylight is needed to see what you are doing. The very fine whiskers around the nose, and under the chin are also trimmed, but these may be trimmed carefully with your regular straight shears if your dog is steady, otherwise continue to use your blunt end scissors. These whiskers can be trimmed straight across and even with the coat (without doing individually). Trim the whiskers along the lip line as well as by the throat, eyebrows, and on the cheek near the ear. </font></p></center><br/> <p>咳~~~</p><p>大姐,全英文。。。</p><p>我是不行了,读书的时候没咋认证听过~~~</p> <p>查字典哈哈</p><p>偶也一样看不懂,不过相信有看的懂喜欢的人看。</p> 黄松狮价格松狮图片
北京松狮犬
辛苦了!
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