Sandy paws pet grooming

Sandy paws pet grooming we are a full service grooming salon, located in old town yucca valley..

2 girls still avaliable..Call the shop
11/18/2025

2 girls still avaliable..
Call the shop

Don't step in the PUDLE..Pile of pudle puppies
11/18/2025

Don't step in the PUDLE..

Pile of pudle puppies

11/17/2025

I'm tired of groomers being blamed for every thing... when it's usually OWNER NEGLECT..
groomers find lumps, bumps, ear infections, cuts, bruises, broken nails, nails grown into pads etc, Then get blamed for causing these things.
I'm sick of OWNERS not brushing their pets for 7 months, then blame the groomer for "shaving" the dog for "no reason"
I'm tired of OWNERS not socializing or training their pets then blame the groomer when the animal is terrified of the bath /dryer/ clippers..
I'm sick of owners watching a 30 second commercial, then proceed to tell me how to do my job..

PLEASE DO BETTER.

TO THE GREAT CLIENTS.
THANK YOU🩷YOU ARE GREATLY APPRECIATED 🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷🩷

11/17/2025

My passion as a groomer didn’t die, it was stolen.

In the wake of ā€˜Groomer appreciation day’ I’d like to talk about how hard it is to enjoy that day anymore...Because I don’t feel appreciated, in fact...I barely feel anything for my career anymore and unfortunately, I’m not the only one. So let’s talk about that, but first, let’s talk about where my passion came from.

My passion used to be...dogs. Oh, I was obsessed with them. Animals of all kinds, but especially dogs. I can’t remember a time where I didn’t love dogs and if you ask my family, they couldn’t either. I was so crazy about them, I would tell people I wanted to be one. Obviously, that was impossible, so there had to be a way to make my life all about...dogs.

My passion used to be...art. I wasn’t great, I was good though! I could look at something and draw it, paint it or sculpt it. It wouldn’t be perfect, but it was fun and I thrived to get better, to be able to do something creative and fun. Something to use that skill, to use my hands. I always wanted to draw animals, but even more so, I loved to draw or paint...dogs.

My passion used to be...grooming. Finally, finally! I found a way to bring my two biggest loves in the world...together. To have dogs in my life every day AND express a creative skill of my own. I found grooming.

Even better? I was exceptional at it from the beginning. I soared through academy, I picked it up like I was born to hold those scissors, like I was born to be a groomer. I couldn’t imagine doing anything else, all I could talk about was grooming.

This was no longer just a job, I was never talented at anything. I never thought I’d have a career, just passing jobs. I was okay at drawing, I was good at writing and reading, but this? I was amazing. This was a career, not just a job. I wanted to be someone, something important in this industry. I wanted to be someone that people recognized, that they asked for advice, complimented, loved. I wanted to make an impact in the career I so desperately enjoyed.

There was nothing that could take this from me. I spent thousands of dollars on equipment and continued education, I learned from everyone I could. I loved what I found.

So what happened? Why did it all change? That burning passion became a flame that burnt everything away and now...Now I dread getting up in the morning. I wonder why I look at my grooms don’t look exciting, I no longer look at them and think ā€˜wow...I created this!’.

I used to think this sudden change in excitement was my fault...Did I stop caring what they looked like? Am I not putting in enough effort? What am I doing? Maybe in some ways the loss of passion is my fault, but the more I think about it...the more I think...my passion didn’t die, it didn’t disappear...it was stolen.

My passion was stolen by...greedy business owners. Those that don’t know a thing about grooming or the industry, yet they still see that there’s a need for grooming and there’s good money in it, so they insert themselves where they shouldn’t. With no research and no compassion.

They want more, more, more. If you’re sick, groom. If you’re tired, groom. If you’re injured, groom. No matter what is wrong, be at work. No matter how you do it, get it done. It’s a factory. The schedules are piled on to you. Dog after dog after dog. You no longer know their names or their quirky personalities. You no longer stop to get a kiss on the cheek or scratch their ear. There’s no time for that. One dog becomes another which becomes another.

They melt into each other, you barely think. You just….groom.

My passion was stolen by uneducated pet parents. Those that buy dogs that are high maintenance, but they decide not to care for those needs. They expect the impossible, but we cannot achieve it and when we don’t...we are degraded and ridiculed.

This isn’t a real job! You play with puppies all day! It’s your job to brush them out! My fluffy wouldn’t harm a soul!

One star reviews, a bashing facebook post….Degradation and shame that can destroy someone’s entire career. All because they didn’t take a brush to their dog every day, like they do their own hair.

We’re called lazy, except...it’s grueling on my back to stand there for an hour picking through your dogs pelted body to safely removed it from it’s fur casket.

We’re being unfair...Because we give your dog sweet relief instead of caving to your vanity.

We’re abusive...Because those mats caused knicks and bruises, because your dog is shaking since he’s now exposed and cold.

I’m so worried now that I have them sign multiple disclosures and show them pictures of exactly what their dog will look like...I’m afraid to help your dog...because your single facebook post can end my income, it can end my career.

My passion was stolen by untrained dogs. The ones that I can’t blame...because it’s not their fault. It’s the one holding the leash that failed them. But I cannot say that. If I say that, I upset you...You will yell, you will blame me and again...you can end my career.

So I cannot blame your dog, but I cannot blame you...So I do my best to work with him. As he wiggles and turns. When he screams and bites. Your words can end my career, but so can his teeth.

I do not blame him, but I am tired...I am sore. He is making me want to go home.

My passion was stolen by my body. I’m not yet 30, but I might as well be 60 with the way my wrist aches. The way my back screams when I pick your ā€œlittleā€ Bella up. My body can’t keep up with the demand, but I work through it.

Only five more hours...another tylenol will make it through the day and if I wash that back with some coffee...I won’t be so tired anymore. I only kid myself, as my ankles creak in pain and my neck twinges when I turn it.

One carpal tunnel surgery will set me out of work for at least a week...that’s a large impact on income, but maybe that surgery will give me some relief to push through another 10 years of this.

But then again...we just play with dogs all day.

Don’t get me wrong...I still love my job. I still love dogs and I still love art. I WANT my passion back. I deserve that passion. I deserve to be good at something, to be great! I deserve your respect and your kindness.

I should be allowed to tell you that your dog is difficult and we have to train him to get better without you thinking I must have hit him to make him bad.

I should be allowed to shave your poor, matted dog without you screaming at me for his naked, bruised body.

I should be allowed….to be passionate for the career I once loved.

Appreciate your groomer and understand that we are also humans.

————————————

10/06/2025

If You Think Crate Training Is Cruel, You’re Probably Doing Everything Else Wrong Too

Every few days someone tells me, ā€œI’d never crate my dog , it’s cruel.ā€ I understand where that comes from. Nobody wants to harm their dog. But here’s the truth that may sting a little:

Crates aren’t the problem. Your lack of structure is.

If you believe a crate is automatically mean, it usually signals a bigger misunderstanding about what dogs actually need to feel safe, calm, and connected.

A Crate Is Not a Cage — It’s a Bedroom for the Canine Brain

Humans see bars and think prison. Dogs don’t.

Dogs evolved from animals that slept in dens, enclosed, predictable spaces where they could fully let down their guard. The limbic system (the emotional brain) is wired to feel safe in a contained space when it’s introduced correctly. That safety lets the autonomic nervous system shift out of hyper-arousal and into rest.

When I say ā€œkennelā€ or ā€œcrateā€ in my house, I mean bedroom. It’s the place my dogs retreat to when they want zero pressure from the world , to nap, chew a bone, or just exhale. My German Shepherds and Malinois will often choose their crates on their own when the house is buzzing with activity.

Why So Many Dogs Are Stressed Without Boundaries

Freedom sounds loving, but for many dogs it’s chaotic and overwhelming:
• Hypervigilance: They scan every sound and movement because no one has drawn a line between safe and unsafe.

• Over-arousal: Barking, pacing, and destructive chewing are the brain trying to find control in a world without limits.

• Problem behavior rehearsal: Every hour a dog practices bad habits (counter surfing, jumping, door dashing) is an hour those neural pathways strengthen.

From a neuroscience standpoint, the prefrontal cortex — the impulse-control center — is limited in dogs. They rely on our structure to regulate. A dog without clear boundaries burns out its stress response system, living in chronic low-grade cortisol spikes.

A structured dog isn’t ā€œsuppressed.ā€ They’re relieved , free from the constant job of self-managing a complex human world.

Crates Give the Nervous System a Reset Button

Here’s the part most people miss: A properly introduced crate isn’t just a place to ā€œputā€ a dog. It’s a tool for nervous system regulation.

• Sleep: Dogs need far more sleep than humans , around 17 hours a day. A crate gives them uninterrupted rest.

• Decompression: After training or high stimulation, the crate helps the brain down-shift from sympathetic (fight/flight) to parasympathetic (rest/digest).

• Reset: Just like humans may retreat to a quiet room to recharge, dogs use the crate to self-soothe and recalibrate.

But here’s the catch: PLACEMENT MATTERS!!! My crates in my bedroom are for Little Guy, Ryker and Walkiria, Garage is for Cronos, Guest Bedroom for Mieke and my bathroom is for Rogue and my Canace is in my Shed.

Stop Putting the Crate in the Middle of the Storm

Most people stick the crate in the living room because that’s where they hang out. But think about what that room is for your dog: constant TV noise, kids running, doorbells, guests coming and going, kitchen clatter.

That’s not decompression. That’s forced proximity to stimulation with no way to escape.

If you want the crate to become a true bedroom, give it its own space , a quiet corner of your house, a spare room, a low-traffic hallway, garage , shed. Somewhere your dog can fully turn off. The first time many of my clients move the crate out of the living room, they see their dog sigh, curl up, and sleep deeply for the first time in months.

Why Some Dogs ā€œHateā€ Their Crate

If your dog panics, it’s almost never the crate itself. It’s:
• Bad association: Only being crated when punished or when the owner leaves.
• No foundation: Tossed in without gradual acclimation or positive reinforcement.
• Total chaos elsewhere: If the whole day is overstimulating and unpredictable, the crate feels random and scary.

I’ve turned around countless ā€œcrate hatersā€ by reshaping the experience: short sessions, feeding meals inside, rewarding calm entry, keeping tone neutral. In a few weeks, the same dogs trot inside happily and sleep peacefully.

Freedom Without Foundation Hurts Dogs

I’ve met hundreds of well-intentioned owners who avoided the crate to be ā€œkinderā€ , and ended up with:
• Separation anxiety so severe the dog destroys walls or self-injures.
• Reactivity because the nervous system never learned to shut off.
• Dangerous ingestion of household items.
• A heartbreaking surrender because life with the dog became unmanageable.

I’ll say it plainly: a lack of structure is far crueler than a well-used crate.

When we don’t provide safe boundaries, we hand dogs a human world they’re ill-equipped to navigate alone.

How to Introduce a Crate the Right Way
1. Think bedroom, not jail. Feed meals in the crate, offer a safe chew, and keep the vibe calm and neutral.

2. Give it a quiet location. Not the busiest room. Dogs need true off-duty time.

3. Pair exercise + training first. A fulfilled brain settles better. Every Dog at my place get worked at east 4-5 times per day (yes this is why I am always tired)

4. Short, positive sessions. Build up time slowly; don’t lock and leave for hours right away. (I work my dogs mentally for max 15 minutes, puppies shorter, physical activity and play around 20 minutes, when I take dogs for a workout walk around 1 hour walk )

5. Never use it as AVERSIVE punishment when conditioning. The crate should predict calm, safety, and rest. When you are advanced eventually we can use the crate as "time out" to reset the brain after proper conditioning has taken place.

6. Create a rhythm: Exercise → training → calm crate nap. Predictability equals security. ( I have 10 dogs on my property right now so every dog works about 15 minutes x 10 dogs = 150 minutes = 2 1/2 hours. Every dogs get worked every 2 1/5 hours, I do that minimum 4 times per day = 600 minutes or 10 hours. yes this is why I wake up so early and go to bed late lol )

The Science of Calm: What’s Happening in the Brain

When a dog settles in a safe, quiet crate:
• The amygdala (fear center) reduces activity.
• The hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis down-regulates, lowering cortisol.
• The parasympathetic nervous system engages: heart rate slows, breathing steadies.
• Brain waves shift from high-alert beta to calmer alpha/theta — the same pattern seen in deep rest.

This is why dogs who have a true den space often become more relaxed and stable everywhere else in life.

The Bottom Line

If you think crates are cruel, you’re missing the bigger picture. The crate isn’t about punishment — it’s about clarity, safety, and mental health.

A dog without structure lives in a constant state of uncertainty: Where should I rest? What’s safe? Why am I always on guard? That life is stressful and, over time, damaging.

A well-introduced crate says: Here is your safe space. Here’s where you rest and reset. The world makes sense.

Kindness isn’t endless freedom. Kindness is clarity. And sometimes clarity looks like a cozy, quiet bedroom with a door that means you can relax now.

Bart De Gols

Address

7324 Pioneertown Road
Yucca Valley, CA
92284

Opening Hours

Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9:01am - 5pm
Saturday 9am - 4pm

Telephone

(760) 228-1233

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