aerial1313
Posted : 6/29/2009 11:45:23 AM
Welcome to the forum! Below is how I got my new dog, Sammy, to let me clip his nails. He would run away when I brought them out, so he was obviously afraid of them.
You need to basically de-sensitize her to the nail trimming. This will be a slow process, so be patient. You have to do this in baby steps, and the premise is to make her associate nail trimming with awesome stuff.
Get some really, super yummy treats. My boys go nuts for hot dogs, which I cut up into little pieces and use for training. Anything really yummy and "special" that she loves will do. So, you wanna start slow, by letting you touch her feet, which you said she's now skittish about. As you touch her feet, talk to her in a nice, calm voice, and feed her the treats at the same time. "Ooh, good girl! Human touching feet means yummy treats appear!" Do this a couple times a days over several days, just a couple minutes at a time. Put the super special treats away for the next time.
After you are sure she is okay with this step, move on to touching her nails with your fingers. Repeat same process as above.
Next step would be to introduce the clippers. She probably knows what they are by now, and so she needs to realize they also make the yummy super-special treats appear. Do the same thing with the clippers just laying near her. Make sure she sees them, so she knows what the deal is. Let her sniff them, and give her treats if she does.
Then you can move on to touching her on the paws with the clippers. Again, the super-special yummy treats come out for this step.
When you are confident in all the above steps, you can try and clip a nail. This could be a month or more from the start of this process, but, like I said, patience is key to making this work. Just clip one nail, and if she is good about it, do what we call throwing a party. Lots and lots of treats, kisses, rubbins, etc. Just do one nail that day. The next day, do another nail, and so on.
Any time you feel she's had a breakthrough and succeeded in any step along the way, throw a party. If she acts afraid or overwhelmed by any step, back it up to the last step and start over from there. You want to make her more confident in the process; confident that she doesn't have to be afraid, and confident that you won't hurt her.
You have to desensitize them in a similar way to the dremel. It's loud and feels funny on their feet, so it's a similar process.
Good luck!