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25th July 2013, 12:39 PM #1
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- Feb 2010
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- Norfolk,UK
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MC's seem to have different types of coats,my red & white boy I only normally show him the comb on the very odd occasion or just do his bib as he likes it ,Merlyn RIP in between showing I never had to touch him but the others it varied between very little & as required,what I did do though to keep the bonding going was always have a slicker brush close by to "fluff" them up a bit & stimulate the old skin & they luv that as they don't associate it with a good grooming but more of a relaxing stimulation {just shows how thick a MC can be sometimes bless them},plus it does help lift out some of the dead coat so I would say try doing as little as you have too but if it is like most of us at the moment it is still quite a lot & then yes afterwards just take a damp piece of paper & remove the hair that is still sitting on top,unlike cats such as a persian that are very high to maintain coat wise a MC can be unbelievably low key & if you are lucky it is only the knickers & sometimes belly fur that needs the most attention once they grow up a bit & don't ruffle that coat quite so much....xxx
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25th July 2013, 08:13 PM #2
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- Mar 2011
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- Dallas Texas USA
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Could not resist posting this video
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25th July 2013, 10:42 PM #3
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- Apr 2013
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- central belt in Scotland
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Frazer is just a babe just now and i am bonding with him using a sliker brush, he seems to like it, so so far so good !! lol
Chris X
"a cats eyes are windows enabling us to see into another world"
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28th July 2013, 04:29 PM #4
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- Jul 2011
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- United States
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Whiskey has a love hate relationship with the brush. He hates the process. But he'll tolerate being brushed for the treat payout afterward. He even knows the routine of being brushed after he spent time outside. When he comes in he immediately lays down & rolls about for me to brush him so he can't get his treat. I use a slicker brush 1st and finish up with a boars hair bristle brush to soften & silken his coat. He is 2 and just coughed up his 1st hairball the other day.
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29th July 2013, 07:58 AM #5
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29th July 2013, 09:22 AM #6
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- Jun 2013
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Little Pyggie has already been introduced to the brush, I think, as when he saw it coming he flopped over and purred like a ferrari for the entire process. He hasn't had the hairball problem, (yet), but he does get his whiskers caught in his mouth which make him cough and heave like a hairball until it un-bends back out of his throat. I am not entirely sure how he manages to do that! I have heard of a hairball paste that you can mix with food that apparently works, but I've not seen any in the store or used it myself.
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21st August 2013, 09:10 AM #7
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- Jun 2012
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Sidney came back from the cattery at the start of August in the middle of a massive moult - up till then the house had been hair-free for a year. He took against being groomed early on and seemed to keep himself in good condition so we let him deal with it.
However, he is now like a car driving through the desert - everywhere he goes he is followed by a plume of fluff that drifts off him with every step. He is now getting scruffed and brushed, I have tried a slicker brush and the damp tissue paper but two weeks later it is still coming out in handfulls and he is hairballing everywhere. He even managed to clog up the Dyson with white fluff!
I found what I thought was a rather large dead mouse on the hall carpet last week. We have MC-proofed the back garden so I assumed Sidney had finally managed to catch something other than a butterfly! When I picked it up I realised it was a hairball. At least 3 inches long and about an inch wide. Grim.
So, I think bald is probably better right now and I am going to try a furminator. I just got out of the shower, he brushed up against my damp shin and now I look like a werewolf. Enough. Worst case scenario: he can wear the woolly jumper that I knitted him for winter walkies.
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27th March 2014, 05:27 PM #8
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I to did not like the furminator. Kitty did not either. I just brush daily and that has really helped with the furballs.
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