How To Trim Black Nails (with pictures)

July 29, 2012 in Dog Grooming

How to Trim Black Dog Nails

Long Black NailsRelax. It’s actually not that hard. The trick isn’t in where to cut, it’s actually in how you look at the nail. Most people view the dog’s nail from above. If the nail is clear, it doesn’t really matter if that’s how you look at the nail. You can see the quick through the nail, so you more or less no where to cut. If the nail is black however, looking at the nail from above tells you nothing. Instead, when you look at your dogs nails, turn your dogs paw so the paw pad is facing up, and look at the underside of the claw. You’ll see one of three things most likely. Let’s start with the most common thing, the normal-but-needs-cut nail.

The normal-but-needs cut nail looks like the sketch to the left. The lighter triangle you see is the quick. The darker black above it is cuttable nail, and should appear hollow. These are the easiest black nails to cut, in my opinion. Just give yourself some space between the fleshy triangle and the hollow nail your cutting. If your dog tolerates it, you can file the nail back slowly using a dremmel, watching the cut nail to see the middle first turn white, and then white with a black spot in the middle. Stop at the black dot.

A brief disclaimer: Many dogs do not enjoy having their feet handled, and it takes training, patience, and many treats before they will allow you to hold their foot without pulling or biting. Before you start trimming, first see if you can handle the foot. If you can’t, see a professional trainer to help you resolve foot handling issues. Bottom line: Don’t get bit!

If your dog’s nails did not look like the one in the picture above, it may look like this one here. Sometimes if nails are not kept up on, or if the quicks have grown too long, or really just because, the nail ends up looking like this. These nails are more difficult to cut because in this case, you really can’t see the quick from the underside. In the case of the sketch to the side, the quick may be a quarter of an inch past the toe, or it could be all the way out to the end. The only way to know for sure is to cut the nail.

How do you cut it without bleeding the dog?

Notice, once again on the underside of the nail, how the tip forms a kind of oval? (Sometimes it might be an ovalish triangle, but the end will look different from the rest of the nail)

It’s usually safe to cut the oval part off. If you’re a big chicken like I am, start by cutting about half the oval off. You will see one of three things: No change, a white chalky center, or a white chalky center with a dark colored dot in the center.

If it’s a dark colored dot, stop. You’ve found the quick. If you see a white chalky center or no change to the nail at all, you haven’t reached the quick yet. Cut again, the smallest amount possible, and keep cutting till you find that black dot. When you’re done, it should look something like the picture once again to the left.

Long Black Nails CutIt may not be as short as you would like it to be, but it’s the shortest you can go without bleeding your dog. Remember that if you do accidently nick the quick, it’s not the end of the world. Your dog will forgive you. Be sure to keep styptic powder on hand and apply it to the tip of the nail. If you don’t have styptic powder, use cornstarch or flour to help stop the blood.

Is this not how the underside of your dogs nail looks either?

That’s okay, watching the tip of the nail actually works on all other types of nail, whether they curl tightly or stick straight out, except in one last case:

 

 

 

See these nails here? They’re actually the same as in the first picture, except they are so darn short there’s nothing to cut. If you clip the tip off this type of nail (unless your very good with clippers) you will probably have blood everywhere. The only thing you need to do on a nail like this is file the very edge off, mostly to keep the nail that length. If you have a dog with long nails like the one above, and a short one like this, treat the long nails like the ones above and the short one like these nails, because it probably broke nad this is the recovering nail.

This type of nail is my favorite to see as a groomer, because it’s the healthiest type. It’s my least favorite to cut, because you have to be very careful working with them. After all, there really isn’t much there!

If you see this when you lift up your dogs paw, congratulate yourself and either gently file the tip, or just plain set the foot down. What ever you’re doing, it’s working. Congratulations!

 

One final disclaimer: If you’re not sure what you’re doing is correct, print this out, take it to a groomer, and ask them to show you or explain what’s confusing you. Groomers would not be groomers unless they care about the health of your dog. Most groomers will be over the moon that you want to take care of your dogs feet.

Another great tip: Have a groomer do your dogs nails professionally, and then carefully look at the tips of the nails to see how they’re suppoesd to look when they’re cut. That way you’ll no what’s about right for your dog, and what a correctly cut nail looks like.

 Need to buy some supplies? Support Rocco’s House by buying them here:


 

 

 

How to Trim a Dog’s Nails

May 27, 2012 in Dog Grooming

Unless your lucky enough to own a dog who wears his nails down naturally, your dog will need regular nail trimming throughout his life to stay healthy. Long nails can cause deformities of the foot, arthritis, unnatural gait, and that’s assuming they don’t curl and pierce the paw pad or break off and bleed excessively.

If you’re reading this though, you’re probably already aware of the many problems associated with long nails, and hope to find out how to address the issue. As intimidating as it may seem, trimming your dog’s nails can be very easy, as long as you know where to start.

Test the Waters

Does your dog mind having his feet touched? Many dogs will pull away or nip when humans attempt to handle their feet. Before you buy clippers, quick stop, or a dremmel to file your dog’s nails with, check to see if trimming the nails will even be possible by yourself. If your dog instantly yanks his paw back, you will have to do some training with paw handling before you can trim his nails.

Don’t get bit testing your dog’s foot handling skills. If you think or know your dog will bite, take him to a professional trainer, or to a vet or groomer for nails. For the sake of those who will be handling your dog, warn them he may bite.

Lift the Foot

If your dog is fine with having his feet picked up, lift the foot and look at the nails from underneath. This gives you the best view of the quick if you know what to look for, and is less intimidating for the dog. (Most dogs don’t want to watch you trim their nails.) If your dog’s nails are clear, cut a healthy distance away from the pink (which is the blood vessel you’re trying to avoid while clipping) no less than 2 millimeters to avoid accidentally hurting the dog. If your dogs nails are black, you’ll do things a little differently.

Trim just a sliver of nail off the tip (and I do mean the smallest amount you can cut) and take a look at what the cut area looks like. Is it all one solid color? Keep cutting. Keep cutting one sliver at a time. Eventually the center of the cut area will turn chalky white, and after that a black dot will appear in the center of the white. Stop at the black dot. That’s the quick!

If He Bleeds

Accidents do happen. If you accidentally cut the nail too short, you can either use a styptic powder purchased at a pet store, or either flour or cornstarch to stop the bleeding. If this happens, be sure to go a little longer on the next toe. (A lot longer if there’s a lot of blood!) If you continue to quick every nail afterwords, trimming nails, take the dog to a groomer. It’s not always the length of the nail that decides where it needs to be cut. Some dogs (Greyhounds are especially guilty of this) have very long quicks and though the nail may appear long, the nails are cut as short as they can go.

Stop Itching!

February 24, 2012 in Dog Grooming, Hot Topics, Leia's Corner

When my husband first got me Leia, I can not express to you the joy I felt. She passed the Rocco Test right there in her own front yard, she got along great with our son, she was beautiful, and she was Chihuahua. Everything I was looking for in a dog. I snuggled her into my arms on the way home, and discovered something very quickly about my wonderful dog.

My perfect puppy had a whole lot of fleas. To compound the problem, we’d taken Rocco with us to make sure any new additions we brought home were ones he approved of. What were the odds one didn’t migrate?

We took them by my workplace where Rocco and Leia both got flea baths and 30 day flea protection. I figured the bites would heal in a week, and there’d be no more itchy dog. Boy was I wrong.

Leia continued to itch for weeks. I changed her food, changed her shampoo, and called the vet.

Between these things, I learned a lot about itching dogs and what causes them. If you have an itching dog, check for these problems:

Fleas

They can hide from you. They can hide in short haired dogs, and just because you don’t see them, doesn’t mean they aren’t there. Use a flea comb to check the base of the tail, chest, belly and the top of the head. If you have a flea collar on the dog, check under it. Fleas frequently hide under them. If you don’t find fleas but you do find little tiny black grains, you found flea dirt.

If your dog has 30 day flea protection on, he may still be suffering from fleas. Flea protection works by killing any fleas that bite the dog. The dog still has a flea bite to show for the dead flea, and that bite still itches!

 

Food

A common culprit in dog allergies is grain, or rather the toxic insects frequently found in animal-grade cereals. Common signs of allergies include itching, black pigmented skin on the belly, red oozing ears, yeast infections and more. That’s a lot of problems! Unfortunately it takes anywhere from six weeks to six months for a food change to help with itching since it has to work from the inside out.

Leia’s major problem was her previous food. Switching her to EVO solved the problem…six weeks later. This can be frustrating when you’re buying an expensive new food and even though you can practically see your dog eating dollar signs, he’s still itching!

Environment

Dogs get hay fever too. If you’ve ruled out food and fleas, ask your vet about environmental allergies such as pollen. You can limit this by wiping down your dogs feet and belly with a cleaning wipe or even a damp rag every time they come in. Don’t forget shampoo and topical flea treatments as possible external allergies.

Genetics

Some dogs are prone to skin problems, and a few breeds have skin disorders specific to their breed alone. Unfortunately there is no easy solution for many of these diseases. Ask your vet for help, and do your research before getting a puppy.

 

Has your dog ever had itchy skin? What did you do to get rid of it?

We won an award!

January 11, 2012 in Dog Grooming

Rocco’s House got its first award today!! HURRAY!!!

“Liebster means “dearest” in German, and the award is intended to help up-and-coming blogs get the attention they deserve. As with any award, there is a bit of ceremony involved. In order to accept the award, we must do the following:

1. Copy and paste the award on our blog.
2. Link back to the blogger who gave us the award.
3. Pick our five favorite blogs with less than 200 followers, and leave a comment on their blog to let them know they have received the award.
4. Hope that the five blogs chosen will keep spreading the love and pass it on to five more blogs.”

 

How exciting!

I’m sure Snoopy already has the Liebster award many times over, but one more time won’t hurt right? Snoopy is one of our favorite reads.

I know Basset Momma already got the award, but I don’t know that many people in the blog world, so…you get it from me too! ^^

You Did What With Your Weiner

We WA people need to stick together! After all, if I say “Small pink house on the side of the road with a scantily clad woman inside,” she’s probably the only other person here who’d think “Coffee!!”

Minnie and Mack also deserve a mention, especially since they are now hosting an ADORABLE black pug which someone should take home!

Last but not least, Goose, for all those fun walks we love reading about. ^^

 

Thank you Prudence for this wonderful award!

 

 

 

Rocco and Leia go to the Park

January 7, 2012 in Dog Grooming

"Are you kidding me?"

I’m feeling better now, and I’m trying to make up for a rather long hiatus my dogs have had from their walks. With the flu dragging me down I just could not drag myself out of bed to get them their exercise. Leia loved the lack of exercise, but Rocco is one of those dogs who could run a marathon and then bounce around the winners circle wanting more. He’s such a high energy dog.

Washington weather isn’t known for being cooperative, but Rocco and Leia both have super warm jackets to protect them from the elements. Unfortunately it was so wet and gloomy, that was the only picture I got that didn’t have too many rain droplets on the lens!

Oh well. Maybe next time!

Another little update, Leia is going to the vet on the 17th for an exam. We’re starting to think some of her behavioral problems have less to do with being a naughty little girl, and possibly something a bit more serious. >.< We’ll let you know what the doc says.

Brushing Your Dog’s Teeth: Toothcare Tips from Leia

December 1, 2011 in Dog Grooming

Hello Everybody!

My mommy and I had a talk about teef brushing this morning. She says a dogger-wogger at work made her sad-sad because of its teef. No one took care of them for so long and the dogger-wogger was so old, it pawed its own teef out trying to get rid of da pain! Mommy says it was a Chihuahua like myself, and she doesn’t want that to happen to me, so I have to have my teef brushed from now on.

Yuckity yuck! She tried some mintsy toof paste first. Think I’d rather have my teef fall out! She also says my ‘gums’ are bleeding so I have to go see a vet about it, even though I’m less than a year old. Hmph. I say if she never started messing wif my mouf, she never would have seen it!

She called her vet, and her vet said to try their toofpaste. It’s chicken flavored. Um…yum! Da only problem wif it is I only get my teef brushed once a day…or I’m supposed to. Mommy is a dogger-wogger groomer and she’s still not brushing my teef regularly! What’s wif da hold up mom? Don’t you want my teef shiny clean? Hand me dat chiiiiiiiiicken!!!!

Okay, okay, sheesh.

As you can see, Leia’s pearly whites are just fine right now. She doesn’t have a trace of yellow on the teeth itself, and aside from some bleedy gums her oral health is fine. I’m the one that’s not fine. I brush my dogs teeth daily…okay weekly…okay whenever I remember to. >.< The point is, at some point I stick a toothbrush in my dogs mouth and swill toothpaste around on their teeth. Unfortunately, Leia has never had her teeth brushed up until this point, and my first dog had toothbrush introduction from day one. It’s not easy convincing a dog they want to have their teeth brushed, but I have a few tips for those who want to brush their dogs teeth. (And if you don’t want to brush your dogs teeth, that’s fine! I’m doing it cause I witnessed someone else’s bad experience, and don’t want it to happen to my dogs.)

Step one: Get your dog used to the idea.

My first mega-mistake was to just put toothpaste on a toothbrush and stick it in Leia’s mouth. After all, it worked on dog #1, why not dog #2? Leia is old enough to know her own mind however, and that makes introducing strange new things quickly not as easy. When she rejected the toothbrush, I started by letting her lick the toothpaste off my finger, (Expensive top-of-the-line toothpaste #1: Rejected. Cheapo $8 toothpaste the vet chucked at me: Best treat EVER.)

I also practiced rubbing her mouth, opening and closing the lips, touching her gums with my fingers, and rewarding everything with a treat. It’s shameless bribery, but it worked.

Step two: Introduce brushing slowly.

Since she was fine with my fingers, but not fine with the toothbrush, I started by putting the toothpaste on my finger and ‘brushing’ that way. As she got used to having her head handled, I slowly added in the toothbrush. This worked because she wanted the yummy toothpaste, and toothbrushing was a way to get it. YAY!

Step three: Check teeth often.

Even if you can’t brush your dogs teeth, or won’t for that matter, it’s still a good idea to check your dogs teeth for decay. If they start looking brown, or you can see a broken tooth, take it to the vet. I found a brown spot on my dogs tooth, but it actually brushed off. Unfortunately we’re still looking at a vet trip because of the bleedy gums. 10 month olds should not have this problem!

Step four: When all else fails, cheat.

I’m sorry. I know there are plenty of people who brush their dogs teeth daily, and an equal amount of people who think brushing a dogs teeth is stupid. I want my dogs teeth brushed because I don’t want them to have yucky, rotten teeth. At the same time…I don’t want to brush their teeth all the time, and even though my goal is daily, it usually happens every 10 days or so. To mitigate this, I got an oral health additive for their water. Every time they take a drink, they’re killing bacteria in their mouth. Not only does it help keep their teeth clean and perfect, I don’t have to do anything more than dump a capful in their water! YAY!

also can’t help but notice it got rid of Leia’s Death Breath, and even toothbrushing didn’t do that!

Dog teeth brushing made easy

 

Leia and I hope you enjoyed our article on dog teeth brushing. Thanks for stopping by!

 

47 and Leia

P.S. You can try Rocco and Leia’s toothpaste here:

And our Water Additive here:


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