My poor cat Groucho becomes extra shaggy in the winter and as a result has endless trouble with snarls in his coat. And he hates having them combed or trimmed out. Oh, well. Fur's twirled problems.
Does Barry accept brushing? Makali'i, my fluffy part-Persian, loves the brush. Several times a day she jumps onto my bed and whines until I stop work and brush her.
I brush him when he's curled up next to me (which admittedly is very often), but I can't get the tangles out without a furminator or similar, and he doesn't like those.
His fur is about 1.5 inches long right now; it was longer but I have a groomer coming by every four months now. (He did not like the bath, and he did not tolerate the hair dryer, so he was moist and smelled of shampoo for a couple of days.)
Makali'i had a nasty attack of flea eczema a year ago. Her coat was tangled, dirty, and interspersed with bloody raw patches and scabs. (She would NOT let me apply flea meds; I finally managed to dose her, sneaking up on her while she was eating.) I managed to clear all that up, eventually, but it was a long process. It started with a small flea comb, over which I had more control than I did over the brush. I could comb lightly over scabs and avoid raw patches. Perhaps Barry would tolerate flea-comb detangling.
no subject
Date: 2016-04-19 11:40 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2016-04-19 11:42 pm (UTC)His fur is about 1.5 inches long right now; it was longer but I have a groomer coming by every four months now. (He did not like the bath, and he did not tolerate the hair dryer, so he was moist and smelled of shampoo for a couple of days.)
no subject
Date: 2016-04-19 11:59 pm (UTC)