Pet Care OdditiesApril 5th, 2008
My daughters still love to razz me for having vacuumed off Daisy's coat after she wallowed in the black gumbo marsh mud down here. I hosed her off first, as best I could, and she was still pretty gritty even after she dried off, sooo... It made perfect sense to me to try the curtain attachment with our trusty Kenmore cannister vac. I would stress that she didn't seem to mind my ministrations, and WAS acceptably clean to resume life indoors afterwards. Well, today's good news is that Ann has introduced a fun, new, weird pet care technique. This morning she rubbed Daisy's fur with dryer-sheets... If your next question is "Why?", I'd be delighted to provide an answer, but I think I'll ramble a bit in this run-on sentence to create a bit of suspense in the matter. It comes down to this: Daisy HATES thunderstorms, and we have a day full of rumble-busters in the forecast, and Ann had heard from a neighbor-friend that it is as much the static-discharge from the storms as the thunder and lightning which upsets pets during storms. Dryer-sheets contain a substance which releases static-charge build-up in your clothes, and that will also work on your pet's fur. This is supposed to put the animal at ease when storms approach. For Daisy, who has a history of leaping through screened windows during a storm, this might be a good thing. Take a look at Thunderstorm-phobia, a web-page on the subject, which mentions the dryer-sheet trick. And to see a dog being vacuumed clean visit the PetVac2 website... (I always knew it was an ok idea!)
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