Poodle Forum banner
21 - 30 of 30 Posts
Oh yes I have, and it’s very important to make sure you won’t. Before doing my dogs’ nails, I trim the hair on their feet. I give them poodle feet, just below the second knuckle. I also trim Beckie’s hair around the dewclaws, as that’s where I had the hair get stuck. I push the hair upwards and clip and it doesn’t show.

It takes 10 minutes more per dog but it gives me peace of mind.
Great advice, I'll make sure to trim his paws, thanks for all the helpful tips!! Now if he'll just let me near his feet again after our night last night with the clippers.......
 
Thank you for the tips! Have you ever gotten hair from the paw caught in the dremel? That's my biggest fear and the main reason I've stuck with the nail clipper (even though I make at least one of my toy's nail's bleed every time with the clippers....ugh.)
I have a pet dremel, and I accidentally got it caught in starlas flank hair! I felt horrible, but it stopped immediately on its own. I quickly shut it off and untangled it. It ended up being no big deal. She didn’t act like it hurt at all, it didn’t end up pulling out her hair, and she was just the same with the dremel after. I mean, I don’t recommend it, but it wasn’t the end of the world when it did catch fluff.
 
Pork chop, thanks for posting this.

This came up at an opportune time. I’m clipping my puppies nails with cat claw trimming scissors, but I was shocked how quickly his nails are becoming thick sturdy adult poodle nails.

I‘m thankful to find this in time to start training him to accept the dremel. I quicked one of my cats, dreadful experience trying to keep her calm and waiting for the powder to stem the bleed, then as she walked away it started to bleed again. I quicked Babykins once with millers forge clippers and quickly moved to just using the dremel. I don’t want to quick Theo and ruin the work I’m doing to desensitize him.
 
Discussion starter · #24 ·
Thank you for the info Dechi. From what I've read online at several retailers, the 8050 micro is discontinued. It seemed like the model a lot of groomers were using, too. I'm a bit surprised they discontinued it. Maybe I'm wrong, I hope so....

I just ordered the Dremel made for pets, which has set speeds of 8,000 and then 14,000. I've heard 10,000 is the ideal speed for trimming dog's nails, but it doesn't give that option. I don't mind starting at a slower speed anyway until l figure out how to use it. I'll give it a try and see.
[/URL]

Thanks again!
If I didn’t have the dremel 8050, that’s probably the model I’d get, the 7760. But wouldn’t bother with the model that comes with a pet nail guard to get a lower price since I think it would get in the way more than help.
Positives: because of the lithium ion battery and it’s the next lightest weight dremel. the plug in charging is likely superior.
it looks like variable speeds, which is also a major plus so you’re not stuck on one that’s too low or too high. 10,000-15,000 rpm is where you want to be.
(Edited to add, the 7760 has variable speeds of 8,000-25,000 according to the dremel website)
But slightly less is ok while you learn. It won’t take much length off each pass. It has the potential to heat up the nail more because you’d have the sanding wheel spinning on it for a longer time to be able to take off length. You also may find yourself pressing it to the nail much harder because it’s not taking off enough length.

Having a dedicated on off switch separate from the speed switches is important to me because it’s much easier to quickly shut off and not accidentally just move a slider to a different speed instead of shutting off.
I was using the dremel 7700 that belonged to my boyfriend for a short while (like the 7300 but with a stronger battery). I really liked it, except that quickly shutting it off to treat was more difficult. It’s also heavier than the 8050 or the 7760.

They’re probably discontinuing the 8050 because so many people have had their drop in charger fail on them. I have only had mine 4 months and thankfully it’s still functioning fine.

Just trust yourself, you will be able successfully dremel and not hurt your dog! It’s not as intimidating as you think.
Expect desensitization to be slow. Like, months before you get to a place where you can do all the nails. It is going to take a long time to desensitize since it sounds like your poodle wants nothing to do with you touching feet and nails, which is totally understandable! As long as you don’t rush progress it will happen with an otherwise well adjusted dog.
If you can get to a professional during the desensitization time to maintain nail length you won’t feel as stressed to make progress on overgrown nails.

good luck, and update us after you’ve had some time to try it out!


@Starla, it’s encouraging to hear there wasn’t any injury to hair getting caught in the dremel. It’s something that is bound to happen at some point to all of us. Shorter paw hair hopefully wouldn’t be a problem. I wonder how super long hair (like my own) would react with a dremel. Hopefully I won’t find that one out.


@Skylar, I couldn’t imagine clipping a cat’s nails. Let alone trying to hold styptic powder on a quicked nail. Cats are wild!
If/when I get a new puppy in the future, I won’t even bother with the clippers. Straight to the dremel since it works for me! Those puppy nails turn thick and hard so fast.
You said that you do Babykin’s nails exclusively with the dremel. Out of curiosity, is there a reason you started Theo with clippers? Also, how old is he and are there any pics? :)
 
I trim my cats nails with a regular people nail clippers. He kneads on my lap and I can’t take it if his claws are sharp, even with a blanket! The people nails clippers make it quick and easy. Back feet I don’t typically mess with because he hates it, but his front ones he doesn’t mind having clipped.
 
If I didn’t have the dremel 8050, that’s probably the model I’d get, the 7760. But wouldn’t bother with the model that comes with a pet nail guard to get a lower price since I think it would get in the way more than help.
Positives: because of the lithium ion battery and it’s the next lightest weight dremel. the plug in charging is likely superior.
it looks like variable speeds, which is also a major plus so you’re not stuck on one that’s too low or too high. 10,000-15,000 rpm is where you want to be.
(Edited to add, the 7760 has variable speeds of 8,000-25,000 according to the dremel website)
But slightly less is ok while you learn. It won’t take much length off each pass. It has the potential to heat up the nail more because you’d have the sanding wheel spinning on it for a longer time to be able to take off length. You also may find yourself pressing it to the nail much harder because it’s not taking off enough length.

Having a dedicated on off switch separate from the speed switches is important to me because it’s much easier to quickly shut off and not accidentally just move a slider to a different speed instead of shutting off.
I was using the dremel 7700 that belonged to my boyfriend for a short while (like the 7300 but with a stronger battery). I really liked it, except that quickly shutting it off to treat was more difficult. It’s also heavier than the 8050 or the 7760.

They’re probably discontinuing the 8050 because so many people have had their drop in charger fail on them. I have only had mine 4 months and thankfully it’s still functioning fine.

Just trust yourself, you will be able successfully dremel and not hurt your dog! It’s not as intimidating as you think.
Expect desensitization to be slow. Like, months before you get to a place where you can do all the nails. It is going to take a long time to desensitize since it sounds like your poodle wants nothing to do with you touching feet and nails, which is totally understandable! As long as you don’t rush progress it will happen with an otherwise well adjusted dog.
If you can get to a professional during the desensitization time to maintain nail length you won’t feel as stressed to make progress on overgrown nails.

good luck, and update us after you’ve had some time to try it out!


@Starla, it’s encouraging to hear there wasn’t any injury to hair getting caught in the dremel. It’s something that is bound to happen at some point to all of us. Shorter paw hair hopefully wouldn’t be a problem. I wonder how super long hair (like my own) would react with a dremel. Hopefully I won’t find that one out.


@Skylar, I couldn’t imagine clipping a cat’s nails. Let alone trying to hold styptic powder on a quicked nail. Cats are wild!
If/when I get a new puppy in the future, I won’t even bother with the clippers. Straight to the dremel since it works for me! Those puppy nails turn thick and hard so fast.
You said that you do Babykin’s nails exclusively with the dremel. Out of curiosity, is there a reason you started Theo with clippers? Also, how old is he and are there any pics? :)
Thanks for all the tips! It's interesting.... the Pawcontrol Pet Dremel is the 7760, but with the added pet guard (which I won't use). It comes off easily, so it wasn't a big deal. They are also priced exactly the same at around $50. So you can buy a plain Dremel 7760, or the Dremel PawControl, which is the 7760 with the added pet guard and the instruction booklet that's geared toward pets.

One thing I wanted to add is that it looks like from the booklet that it's very important to wear safety goggles when using the dremel. If the spinning unit comes flying off by accident, it could take out your eye!
 
An update....as you can see from the prior posts, I am new the Dremel and had used it only a few times, for a few seconds at a time. Well, I got my toy poodle's tail caught in it and I almost had a heart attack!! He was not happy and I was panicked, but I managed to untangle it taking a lot of puffy tail hair with it. Also, I didn't like that my toy kept trying to sniff the dremel while I was using it on him, which made me feel like his ear hairs would be next to get caught in the rotator. I'm just not skilled at this...

So, I've put the Dremel away (maybe for good) and am now using a heavy duty nail file, one that is 80/80 grit, which is a tough grit to be used on human acrylic nails and apparently also works very well on dogs nails! I'm happy to report that my toy is accepting the nail file much better than either the clippers or the dremel, and since it's a pretty heavy duty nail file it does the job fast. Here's the link from Amazon in case anyone is afraid of both the clippers and the dremel like me. :)
 
Goodness, I’m so sorry you and your poodle had that experience. It sounds like you’ve found a solution that works for you with the nail file. Good job putting in the effort to care for his feet!

When I grind Violet’s nails I put her on the grooming table with a grooming loop to keep her in place, then I put a snood on to keep her ears out of the way. It helps to have a grooming set up. Not everyone can sit on the sofa and grind nails. I certainly can’t.
 
21 - 30 of 30 Posts