We are going to bath Sam now who is a show dog and he used to being bath on a regular basis. Hairs are really thick coat and so I’m going to have to soak it and make sure that the water goes right through the skin. He’s not worried about being—normally, standing quite still and have a lot of coat growing underneath the belly as well and so you have to get right under that.
Again, starting at the back end—that’s really up to the level which way I start but then I do like to start at the back giving a chance to keep the head dry a bit longer.
Okay, just going like that and all I need is just wet the top coat and underneath you’d find that it would be quite y but. This is a natural Tibetan Terrier protection from where they come from, in fact you could have find that the Tibetan Terrier will stand out in the pouring rain and they really want to be very wet and you can leave this coat, this top coat so they have a double coat.
You’re going to spend too much time with that as you know is because being dogs they don’t know how to breathe out—at the right moment. And you can go obviously into—and another thing is to shampoo, it just specifically is the dogs with black coats. Other shampoos has a herbal cream shampoo hair which should be probably as good and another is the shampoo which is conditioning shampoo but they don’t have a conditioner as well. I’m going to use this shampoo which is for dogs with black coats. You can dilute it and get an even mixture all even but it doesn’t seem that thick and I do like to actually feel the—down the inside of his legs coat. This may even necessary. He does turn to get a little bit soiled allowing the angulations of the height of legs both sides his—alright going down to the sit and there’s a lot there on the feet—you’ll see amongst the cats there he hasn’t got any experience on pieces of mat. End of the tail and tip of the tail, some has a more or less front feet and I’m going to take kind of a lot of combing.
Next into the head, there is they tend to get very dirty because he is now two and a half and he’s approaching his natural coat—giving the charms will grow in quite long and so every time he eats they are going into food and some people do put—things on them to protect the ears but we don’t. I have to make sure they are washed. Just take closer not as water to get the excess out, you cannot think that you’ve done and you should squeeze it I think and you’ll have it. If you leave another a soap in there, it can have a flaky skin so you need to be quite careful to rinse it thoroughly.
He is looking quite measurable that is normal for some and it tends to way and say what comes next. Now—squeezing it gently down to the end of the muscle. Now, I’m going to add the conditioner just easy to acquire in a pet shop but this one can be just left in the coat, it’s one that you can dilute 1 to 15. The Tibetan Terrier has a coat which has a texture of normal hair. And this one—condition him and unless they’re—they have such wet hair, I will squeeze it quite hard, they don’t mind the stroke—a lot of excess coming out. If you don’t do this, it will just take you much longer to dry him, that leaves—--
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