#2, sometimes those "dreads" can have skin twisted up inside them - so there's every chance you will cut the cat's skin. Using pet nail clippers might be one of the most risky methods.
Maud, I'd like to add: As well as being painful for the cat. A "dread", as they call it, is hair that has tied itself into a knot, and is pulling on the cat's skin. If you try to use one of those clippers on such a knot, it'll pull harder on the hair and I can almost guarantee that the cat you so this to is going to scream in pain LONG before you've managed to cut it off, and it WILL scratch/bite you, as well. You're far better off using the beard trimmer shown in #12 , that's what I do to my semi-long haired cat, and it works wonderfully, without any discomfort for neither me or, most importantly, the cat.
As a side note, I'd like to mention that most of these "hacks" are sh#te, and aimed at people that shouldn't be outside without a guardian or supervisor.
As a side note, I'd like to mention that most of these "hacks" are sh#te, and aimed at people that shouldn't be outside without a guardian or supervisor.
how does the egg get into the whisk exactly? I'd also like to understand likelihood of someone not having a slotted spoon but they own a whisk. I'm pretty sure that if you don't have one, you don't have the other
#2, sometimes those "dreads" can have skin twisted up inside them - so there's every chance you will cut the cat's skin. Using pet nail clippers might be one of the most risky methods.
Maud, I'd like to add: As well as being painful for the cat. A "dread", as they call it, is hair that has tied itself into a knot, and is pulling on the cat's skin. If you try to use one of those clippers on such a knot, it'll pull harder on the hair and I can almost guarantee that the cat you so this to is going to scream in pain LONG before you've managed to cut it off, and it WILL scratch/bite you, as well. You're far better off using the beard trimmer shown in #12 , that's what I do to my semi-long haired cat, and it works wonderfully, without any discomfort for neither me or, most importantly, the cat.
As a side note, I'd like to mention that most of these "hacks" are sh#te, and aimed at people that shouldn't be outside without a guardian or supervisor.
As a side note, I'd like to mention that most of these "hacks" are sh#te, and aimed at people that shouldn't be outside without a guardian or supervisor.
how does the egg get into the whisk exactly? I'd also like to understand likelihood of someone not having a slotted spoon but they own a whisk. I'm pretty sure that if you don't have one, you don't have the other
#16 This would not have worked for me. When I had a cat, she liked to scratch the sides of the litter box.
I'd like to add:
As well as being painful for the cat. A "dread", as they call it, is hair that has tied itself into a knot, and is pulling on the cat's skin. If you try to use one of those clippers on such a knot, it'll pull harder on the hair and I can almost guarantee that the cat you so this to is going to scream in pain LONG before you've managed to cut it off, and it WILL scratch/bite you, as well. You're far better off using the beard trimmer shown in #12 , that's what I do to my semi-long haired cat, and it works wonderfully, without any discomfort for neither me or, most importantly, the cat.
As a side note, I'd like to mention that most of these "hacks" are sh#te, and aimed at people that shouldn't be outside without a guardian or supervisor.
Damn, you're right!
....I did vomit.
#7 Put sock on the baby