Susie's Grooming Lounge

Susie's Grooming Lounge No longer located at 7920B Chesapeake Blvd.

08/06/2025

🐾🏠 August is Clear the Shelters Month! 🏠🐾
Looking to add a furry family member? There's no better time than now! Shelters are full of incredible pets waiting for their forever homes and holistic care can help them thrive once they’re in yours.

At Joy-Chi Veterinary Acupuncture, we’re here to support rescued pets with gentle, effective, and natural care as they adjust to their new life. 💚

✨ Holistic support for newly adopted pets can include:
🪡 Acupuncture for stress and anxiety
🌱 Herbal and nutritional therapy to support immune health
🐕 Gentle detox support for pets coming from shelter environments
💤 Natural calming remedies to ease the transition into your home

Adopting a shelter pet is a beautiful act of love and we would love to help you give them the healthiest, happiest start possible.

📞 Call/Text: 757-771-9480
📧 Email: [email protected]
💻 Website: www.joychivet.com
💚 Request a consultation: https://www.joychivet.com/request-appointment/
🎁 Explore Dr. Bross’s wellness picks: https://stan.store/DrAngelaBross

08/05/2025
Kobe is accepting snuggles until he finds his people.
07/27/2025

Kobe is accepting snuggles until he finds his people.

07/27/2025

Towel Plea!!!

We are in dire need of bath / beach size towels.
New or used doesn’t matter.
Color doesn’t matter.
We go through towels almost daily from washing animals to using in crates/cages.
And we use the towels for various species.

If you can help we have various drop off locations or you can order directly through our Amazon Baby registry.

https://www.amazon.com/baby-reg/evelyns-wildlife-july-2021-norfolk/2CCFCHJD9TFSS

Drop off locations:

Virginia Beach:
1203 Gunn Hall Drive
428 Becton Place

Norfolk:
Tubbs Used Auto Parts
2215 E Indian River Road

Chesapeake:
2702 Meadow Court
708 River Hollow Court

Suffolk:
2756 Lake Cohoon Road
5281 Deer Path Road

Newport News:
76 ScuffleField Road

Williamsburg:
200 George Wythe Ln

Thank you for helping us help the wildlife in need. Without all our wonderful supporters we would not be able to accomplish this mission ❤️

Welcome to Susie’s Fred 💕🐾✂️
07/09/2025

Welcome to Susie’s Fred 💕🐾✂️

This little guy is scheduled for surgery tomorrow and will be recovering and getting spoiled here until he is ready for ...
07/07/2025

This little guy is scheduled for surgery tomorrow and will be recovering and getting spoiled here until he is ready for adoption. I will share Kobe’s journey once he has arrived.

Happy Fourrh of July everyone. It’s gonna be a scary weekend for a lot of our babies. Please check your gates. Please be...
07/04/2025

Happy Fourrh of July everyone. It’s gonna be a scary weekend for a lot of our babies. Please check your gates.
Please be considerate to your neighbors 🐾💕🎇🎆

"That fireworks’ noise and light is disturbing and distressing to animals is well known to most pet owners. Noise phobia in dogs is a well-documented response to fireworks (e.g. Dale et al. 2010).

In a survey from New Zealand, owners reported that 74.4% of companion animals, from horses to small mammals, showed fear responses to fireworks (Gates et al. 2019). Horse owners reported increased running in response to fireworks, often associated with fence-breaking and injury (Gronqvist et al. 2016). Observation of several mammal and bird species in a German zoo before, during and after 6–8 min long firework displays over two evenings showed increased nervousness, movement, withdrawal to indoor areas (Rodewald et al. 2014).

Data from 3 years of weather radar in the Netherlands showed that thousands of birds take flight shortly after fireworks are lit at midnight on New Year’s Eve (Shamoun-Baranes et al. 2011). Hundreds of thousands of birds are disturbed in this way, flushing them from wetlands where they rest. Similar examples are global: in Poland, urban Eurasian Magpies (Pica pica) roost together in larger communal roosts than in ex-urban areas, but roost size sharply and suddenly declines on New Year’s Eve due to fireworks (Karolewski et al. 2014). On Lake Zurich in Switzerland, New Year fireworks can cause a 26–35% drop in swan, goose, and duck numbers overnight, the numbers recovering over 3–10 days (Weggler 2015). At Lake Constance in Germany, a firework display on the 13 September 2010 caused extreme flight reactions in multiple waterbird species, causing over 4000 waterbirds to flee from the area almost immediately. Many waterbird species are in wing-moult at this time of year, so it is significant that even temporarily flightless birds left the area and stayed absent for over 2 days. As Lake Constance is a recognised refuge for moulting waterbirds, this fireworks display has subsequently been banned (Werner 2015). At Beebe, Arkansas, USA, two powerful displays of New Year fireworks in 2011 and 2012 caused the deaths of thousands of Red-winged Blackbirds (Agelaius phoeniceus) that were disturbed from winter roosts at night and, in their flight, collided with each other (Chilson et al. 2012).

Fireworks cause pollution, releasing sulfur dioxide, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, suspended particles, aluminium, manganese etc., in a black smoke of potassium nitrate, charcoal and sulfur (Sijimol and Mohan 2014). The particulate matter released has a profound and immediate negative effect on air quality, but declines rapidly over the next 24 h (Singh et al. 2019). After firework displays, particles released can be five times higher than background levels (Cao et al. 2018). In New Zealand, a steep rise in particulate matter has been reported after fireworks, with much of it coming from small, hand-held sparklers (Rindelaub et al. 2021). Dangi and Bhise (2020) reported multiple respiratory and allergic responses in residents at a site after Diwali celebration. The toxicity of the particulate matter released is high – tests with mice and human cell cultures indicate high inflammatory responses and adverse effects on cells and lung tissue (Hickey et al. 2020). Of particular concern is the presence of the inorganic anion perchlorate (as potassium perchlorate and ammonium perchlorate), which contributes to the explosions and light associated with fireworks (Wu et al. 2011). Perchlorates are water soluble and stable, leaching into water bodies and being taken up by plants after release, and making their way into insects, mammals, amphibians and fishes (reviewed in Sijimol and Mohan 2014). Perchlorate is a major health concern as it inhibits thyroid function in amphibians, reptiles and mammals, decreasing thyroid hormone output – it also has a role in causing reproductive, neurodevelopmental, developmental, immunotoxic, and carcinogenic issues (Utley 2002)."

07/01/2025

Baby opossum calls are coming in for round two this season.
If you should find a small opossum alone please contact a licensed rehabilitor to assess the situation and to help make the decision on whether the opossum is in deed in need of help.

Remember:

It's extremely rare moms will come back for the babies if they fell off while she is traveling.

Smaller baby opossums require trained tube feeding.

Opossums are very prone to metabolic bone disease so are required a special diet.

Please follow this guide to help you make the decision to call a permitted rehabber. And always remember that in the state of Virginia it is illegal to possess or rehabilitate any wildlife without a license.

07/01/2025
Be considerate 💕
06/30/2025

Be considerate 💕

"That fireworks’ noise and light is disturbing and distressing to animals is well known to most pet owners. Noise phobia in dogs is a well-documented response to fireworks (e.g. Dale et al. 2010).

In a survey from New Zealand, owners reported that 74.4% of companion animals, from horses to small mammals, showed fear responses to fireworks (Gates et al. 2019). Horse owners reported increased running in response to fireworks, often associated with fence-breaking and injury (Gronqvist et al. 2016). Observation of several mammal and bird species in a German zoo before, during and after 6–8 min long firework displays over two evenings showed increased nervousness, movement, withdrawal to indoor areas (Rodewald et al. 2014).

Data from 3 years of weather radar in the Netherlands showed that thousands of birds take flight shortly after fireworks are lit at midnight on New Year’s Eve (Shamoun-Baranes et al. 2011). Hundreds of thousands of birds are disturbed in this way, flushing them from wetlands where they rest. Similar examples are global: in Poland, urban Eurasian Magpies (Pica pica) roost together in larger communal roosts than in ex-urban areas, but roost size sharply and suddenly declines on New Year’s Eve due to fireworks (Karolewski et al. 2014). On Lake Zurich in Switzerland, New Year fireworks can cause a 26–35% drop in swan, goose, and duck numbers overnight, the numbers recovering over 3–10 days (Weggler 2015). At Lake Constance in Germany, a firework display on the 13 September 2010 caused extreme flight reactions in multiple waterbird species, causing over 4000 waterbirds to flee from the area almost immediately. Many waterbird species are in wing-moult at this time of year, so it is significant that even temporarily flightless birds left the area and stayed absent for over 2 days. As Lake Constance is a recognised refuge for moulting waterbirds, this fireworks display has subsequently been banned (Werner 2015). At Beebe, Arkansas, USA, two powerful displays of New Year fireworks in 2011 and 2012 caused the deaths of thousands of Red-winged Blackbirds (Agelaius phoeniceus) that were disturbed from winter roosts at night and, in their flight, collided with each other (Chilson et al. 2012).

Fireworks cause pollution, releasing sulfur dioxide, carbon dioxide, carbon monoxide, suspended particles, aluminium, manganese etc., in a black smoke of potassium nitrate, charcoal and sulfur (Sijimol and Mohan 2014). The particulate matter released has a profound and immediate negative effect on air quality, but declines rapidly over the next 24 h (Singh et al. 2019). After firework displays, particles released can be five times higher than background levels (Cao et al. 2018). In New Zealand, a steep rise in particulate matter has been reported after fireworks, with much of it coming from small, hand-held sparklers (Rindelaub et al. 2021). Dangi and Bhise (2020) reported multiple respiratory and allergic responses in residents at a site after Diwali celebration. The toxicity of the particulate matter released is high – tests with mice and human cell cultures indicate high inflammatory responses and adverse effects on cells and lung tissue (Hickey et al. 2020). Of particular concern is the presence of the inorganic anion perchlorate (as potassium perchlorate and ammonium perchlorate), which contributes to the explosions and light associated with fireworks (Wu et al. 2011). Perchlorates are water soluble and stable, leaching into water bodies and being taken up by plants after release, and making their way into insects, mammals, amphibians and fishes (reviewed in Sijimol and Mohan 2014). Perchlorate is a major health concern as it inhibits thyroid function in amphibians, reptiles and mammals, decreasing thyroid hormone output – it also has a role in causing reproductive, neurodevelopmental, developmental, immunotoxic, and carcinogenic issues (Utley 2002)."

Prepare now….
06/29/2025

Prepare now….

🎆 4th of July Reminder for Pet Parents! 🎆

The 4th of July can be terrifying for our pets. Every year, shelters fill up with lost animals who’ve escaped due to fireworks and celebrations. 🐶🐱

👉 NOW is the perfect time to double-check your pet’s ID tags and microchip info!
✅ Make sure your contact info is up to date
✅ Ensure collars fit securely
✅ Get new tags if yours are worn or outdated

🛍 Many local pet stores have self-serve tag kiosks—quick, easy, and affordable!

Have a plan before the fireworks start:
💥 Keep pets indoors
🔒 Secure doors and fences
🎧 Create a calm, quiet space

Let’s keep our furry friends safe this holiday! ❤️

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Norfolk, VA
23518

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