Tail Talk Grooming Chronicles with Hound Therapy

Why We Don’t Shame Clients, We Educate Them

11 min · 15 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Why We Don’t Shame Clients, We Educate Them

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Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455080/fan_mail/new] A matted coat, overdue nails, or an anxious pup can make even great dog parents dread the grooming appointment and not because they don’t care, but because they’re expecting judgment. We don’t work that way. Shannon and Tanya from Hound Therapy [https://www.HoundTherapy.com] sit down with co-host and producer Sophia Yvette to explain why “humanity over vanity” is more than a motto, and how a shame-free pet grooming salon can change outcomes for dogs and the people who love them. We talk about the biggest misconception in professional dog grooming [https://www.HoundTherapy.com]: that groomers are there to criticize. Instead, we share how honest, supportive conversations help us create safer grooming plans, especially when life gets messy. You’ll hear what we want owners to understand when a dog comes in matted, what questions we ask to figure out what went wrong at home, and how a quick demo with the right brush and comb can clear up months of confusion. We also cover why kindness matters most at pickup, because embarrassment can keep families from returning and the dog pays the price. Then we get practical. We break down how to build a simple dog grooming routine that fits your lifestyle, when to lean on pros for nail trims [https://www.HoundTherapy.com], and how consistent practice over a few months can help your dog feel calmer and more cooperative. If you’re a pet parent in North Texas or a groomer who wants better client trust, this is your roadmap. Subscribe, share with a dog parent who needs a reset, and leave a review so more people can find humane, education-first grooming. To learn more about Hound Therapy visit: https://www.HoundTherapy.com [https://www.HoundTherapy.com] Hound Therapy 3509 E Park Blvd. Plano, TX 469-367-0009

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64 episodios

episode Student Edition: Christi’s Week 6 Update — Confidence, Patterns, and Progress artwork

Student Edition: Christi’s Week 6 Update — Confidence, Patterns, and Progress

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455080/fan_mail/new] Six weeks can feel like nothing until you watch a brand-new grooming student go from hesitant to handling clippers and scissors without flinching. We sit down with Christi for a week-six update from Hound Therapy’s Grooming Academy [https://www.HoundTherapy.com] and trace the exact moment the work starts to “click” at the grooming table, from early nerves to real momentum. Christi shares what stands out most so far: moving beyond bathing and prep into clipper work, scissoring, and complete grooms on real dogs. We talk through practical milestones like finishing multiple dogs head to toe, learning symmetry and consistency, and even tackling styles like a lamb cut. Along the way, we unpack the mindset piece every new groomer wrestles with: overthinking, fear of getting it wrong, and the surprise of realizing you are capable of more than you assumed. We also get honest about the online-versus-hands-on debate. Books, videos, and TikTok can’t replace working with live dogs, learning safe handling, and getting coached on the “tiny” details that make the biggest difference, like brushing out knots before clipper work, nails and pads, and body positioning that protects your back and wrists. If you’re looking into dog grooming school [https://www.HoundTherapy.com], grooming academy training, or a career in pet grooming in North Texas, this is a clear look at what real progress feels like. Subscribe for more updates, share this with someone considering grooming school, and leave a review with one skill you’re trying to master right now. To learn more about Hound Therapy visit: https://www.HoundTherapy.com [https://www.HoundTherapy.com] Hound Therapy 3509 E Park Blvd. Plano, TX 469-367-0009

Ayer11 min
episode Comfort Over Cute: Grooming Decisions Are A Lifestyle Choice artwork

Comfort Over Cute: Grooming Decisions Are A Lifestyle Choice

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455080/fan_mail/new] Your dog’s comfort isn’t a “nice to have” and it definitely isn’t a luxury. It’s the baseline for healthy skin, easy movement, and a calmer, happier life and it starts with grooming choices that match real life, not just a cute look. I’m in the studio with Shannon and Tanya, professional groomers at Hound Therapy [https://www.HoundTherapy.com], with producer and co-host Sophia Yvette guiding the conversation. We unpack what it really means when we say “your dog’s comfort is a lifestyle choice,” and why a long, fluffy coat can be unfair if no one is washing, brushing, and maintaining it. Our motto is humanity over vanity, and we use it to talk honestly about matting, coat condition, paw pads, and the simple truth that dogs do not care about being Instagram ready if they’re uncomfortable. We also get practical about dog grooming [https://www.HoundTherapy.com] between appointments, especially in summer. Swimming, lake days, hiking, travel, boarding, and busy schedules can quietly create knots, odor, and irritation. Shannon and Tanya explain when a shorter “pool cut” makes sense, how sweaters in winter change coat needs, and what early warning signs to watch for before a small issue becomes a vet visit: smell, ear gunk, the comb not gliding, and nails clicking on the floor. We share easy at-home maintenance tips like ear checks, nail trims, basic bathing and brushing, and when to ask your groomer or vet for help with safe products and technique. If you care about dog comfort, coat maintenance [https://www.HoundTherapy.com], and preventing matting and ear infections, this one is packed with actionable grooming tips for pet owners. Subscribe for more, share this with a fellow dog parent, and leave a review with the one grooming habit you’re going to improve next. To learn more about Hound Therapy visit: https://www.HoundTherapy.com [https://www.HoundTherapy.com] Hound Therapy 3509 E Park Blvd. Plano, TX 469-367-0009

2 de jun de 202610 min
episode Explaining Your Dog’s Grooming Needs in Plain Language artwork

Explaining Your Dog’s Grooming Needs in Plain Language

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455080/fan_mail/new] “Just make him cute” sounds harmless until you pick up your dog and realize you and your groomer pictured two totally different haircuts. We’ve heard it all at Hound Therapy [https://www.HoundTherapy.com], and we’re sharing how to get the look you want without needing grooming terms, blade numbers, or salon jargon. We talk through the biggest communication traps pet parents fall into, including the infamous “puppy cut” that can mean anything from fluffy and rounded to short and smooth. We explain how to give clear direction using simple, everyday language and why a recent photo is often the fastest way to get on the same page. We also get honest about expectations: coat condition, matting, and how much brushing you’ll really do at home directly shape what’s possible and what will last between appointments. From “low maintenance” versus “high maintenance” requests to asking for a “comfort groom [https://www.HoundTherapy.com]” for senior dogs, we keep it practical and dog-first. We even break down the small details that cause the most mix-ups, like beard versus mustache, ear length that stays out of the water bowl, and how to describe face and ear shapes in ways any groomer can interpret. If you’re in North Texas and want better grooming results with less stress, this is your roadmap. If this helped, subscribe, share it with a fellow pet parent, and leave a quick review so more dogs get grooms that match their comfort and their family’s lifestyle. To learn more about Hound Therapy visit: https://www.HoundTherapy.com [https://www.HoundTherapy.com] Hound Therapy 3509 E Park Blvd. Plano, TX 469-367-0009

29 de may de 202610 min
episode Clicking, Slipping, Pawing: What Your Dog’s Nails Are Trying to Tell You artwork

Clicking, Slipping, Pawing: What Your Dog’s Nails Are Trying to Tell You

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455080/fan_mail/new] That little “click click click” you hear behind you might be more than an annoying soundtrack. Long dog nails can change how a dog stands and walks, trigger discomfort, and snowball into posture and mobility problems over time. We walk through the clearest signs your dog needs a nail trim [https://www.HoundTherapy.com], including the noise test, curled nails, and subtle stance changes that are easy to miss when you can’t get a close look at paws. We also get practical about how nail trimming actually works. We explain the quick (the vein inside the nail), why it’s harder to shorten nails when the quick has grown out, and what to expect with dark nails where the quick isn’t visible. You’ll hear why we often combine a quick clip for overgrowth with Dremel grinding [https://www.HoundTherapy.com] to smooth everything out, reduce sharp edges, and make the finish more comfortable for dogs and safer for your skin. Then we tackle the real-life complications: dew claws that never touch the ground, nails that wear unevenly based on gait, and why activity level and walking surfaces matter more than breed. If your dog hates nail trims, we share simple desensitization ideas like handling paws daily and introducing vibration and sound safely, plus honest reassurance about what “quicking” looks like and why it’s usually less dramatic than it feels. If this helped, subscribe so you don’t miss the next grooming and pet care deep dive, share this with a fellow dog parent who dreads nail day, and leave a review with your biggest nail-trim question. To learn more about Hound Therapy visit: https://www.HoundTherapy.com [https://www.HoundTherapy.com] Hound Therapy 3509 E Park Blvd. Plano, TX 469-367-0009

26 de may de 202612 min
episode Why Dogs Shake at the Groomer: What Their Body Language Is Telling You artwork

Why Dogs Shake at the Groomer: What Their Body Language Is Telling You

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2455080/fan_mail/new] Your dog starts shaking the second you pull into the grooming parking lot and suddenly you’re wondering if you’re doing something wrong. We get it and we’re unpacking what that trembling can actually mean, from totally normal excitement to real signs of panic that should change how the appointment goes. Shannon and Tanya from Hound Therapy [https://www.HoundTherapy.com] talk through dog grooming anxiety [https://www.HoundTherapy.com] in plain language. Grooming isn’t “just a bath.” It can be sensory overload: loud high-velocity dryers, new smells, other dogs barking, water, clippers, standing still, and being handled by someone unfamiliar. Then there’s the part most of us miss: dogs mirror our emotions. If drop off turns into a long, worried goodbye, your dog may interpret that as danger and shake even harder. We also dig into how to tell fear from anticipation and overstimulation, why a consistent grooming schedule (often every four to six weeks) helps dogs build confidence, and how routine supports desensitization [https://www.HoundTherapy.com]. Shannon and Tanya explain their “humanity over vanity” approach, including when “straight through” grooming is the safest option for elderly dogs, medically fragile pets, and highly anxious or reactive dogs. Finally, we share the red flags that go beyond mild stress: excessive panting that never stops, heavy drooling, dilated eyes, self-harm behaviors, and repeated diarrhea especially if it becomes bloody. If your dog shows these signs, choosing a groomer who understands your dog’s needs can make all the difference. Subscribe for more practical pet grooming tips, share this with a nervous-dog friend, and leave a review, then tell us: what does your dog do at drop off? To learn more about Hound Therapy visit: https://www.HoundTherapy.com [https://www.HoundTherapy.com] Hound Therapy 3509 E Park Blvd. Plano, TX 469-367-0009

22 de may de 202610 min