Why Your Old English Sheepdog Needs Professional Grooming (Yes, Even Under All That Fur)
Why Your Old English Sheepdog Needs Professional Grooming (Yes, Even Under All That Fur)
Let's start with the number that puts this breed into perspective: a fully coated Old English Sheepdog can carry up to 15 pounds of hair. Fifteen pounds. That's more than some entire toy breeds weigh.
If you own an Old English Sheepdog, you already know the coat is a commitment. But there's a significant gap between knowing it theoretically and understanding exactly why professional grooming isn't just helpful for this breed -- it's genuinely necessary for your dog's health and comfort.
The Sheer Volume of Coat Is Beyond DIY
The Old English Sheepdog's double coat consists of a coarse, waterproof outer coat and a dense, soft undercoat. Both layers grow long. Both layers mat. And when they mat together, you get felt -- essentially, the hair compresses into a solid, unbrushable sheet against the skin.
Professional groomers have tools that most owners don't:
- High-velocity dryers that separate the coat layer by layer and blast out loose undercoat
- Professional-grade dematting tools designed to split mats without tearing skin
- Hydraulic grooming tables that adjust to accommodate this breed's size and weight (60-100 pounds of dog plus all that coat)
- Specialized rakes and undercoat tools that reach through the outer coat to the dense undercoat beneath
The Health Consequences of Neglected OES Coats
Here's where it gets serious. An Old English Sheepdog with a neglected coat isn't just unkempt -- they're at genuine health risk.
Matting pain. When the undercoat and outer coat mat together, the mat tightens over time. Every time the dog moves, the mat pulls on the skin. It's like wearing a hair elastic that's too tight -- except it covers their entire body and never comes off. Dogs in severely matted coats often have bruised, raw skin underneath when the mats are removed.
Skin infections. Mats trap moisture against the skin. In Houston humidity or after a rainy walk, that moisture has nowhere to go. Bacterial and fungal infections thrive in these conditions. Professional groomers regularly discover skin infections hiding under matted OES coats that owners had no idea existed.
Parasite concealment. Fleas, ticks, and even fly larvae can establish themselves deep in a matted OES coat without the owner ever seeing them. A professional groom includes thorough skin inspection that's physically impossible through an ungroomed OES coat.
Heat stress. This is the one that surprises people most. A matted coat doesn't insulate properly -- it traps heat instead of allowing air circulation. A properly groomed OES coat actually keeps the dog cooler in summer than a matted one. Shaving isn't the answer either (more on that below), but regular professional maintenance keeps the coat functioning as designed.
What Old English Sheepdog Professional Grooming Actually Involves
A thorough OES grooming session is extensive. Here's what a groomer works through:
- Pre-bath brush-out and dematting (45-90 minutes) -- Working section by section through the entire body, splitting mats, removing loose undercoat
- Bath (30-45 minutes) -- Multiple lathers with penetrating shampoo that reaches through the dense coat. OES coats can hold an astonishing amount of water
- Conditioning treatment -- A good conditioner makes the coat easier to maintain between visits and reduces future matting
- High-velocity blow dry (60-90 minutes) -- This is the longest single step. The coat is so dense that thorough drying takes significant time. Leaving moisture in the coat causes the exact problems grooming is supposed to prevent
- Full brush and comb-out -- Line brushing through every section of the body, verifying no tangles remain
- Trim and style -- Face trim for visibility (OES eyes need to see), paw pad trim, sanitary trim, optional body outline shaping
- Ear cleaning -- Those pendulous ears trap dirt and moisture
- Nail trim -- Hidden under all that paw fur, nails can grow too long without anyone noticing
The Shaving Question
Let's address the elephant in the room. Many OES owners eventually ask: "Can't I just shave the whole thing off?"
You can. But you should know what you're trading.
The OES double coat regulates body temperature in both directions -- warmth in winter, cooling in summer. Shaving removes that regulation. A shaved OES is more vulnerable to sunburn, insect bites, and temperature extremes.
More importantly, the coat may not grow back correctly after shaving. The undercoat often returns faster than the outer coat, resulting in a permanently altered texture that mats even more easily than the original.
Some owners maintain their OES in a shorter "puppy cut" -- trimmed to 1-2 inches -- which preserves some of the coat's protective function while dramatically reducing grooming time. This is a legitimate middle ground that your groomer can help you with.
But if you want the full, flowing OES look? Professional grooming on a strict schedule is the only path.
How Often Does an Old English Sheepdog Need Professional Grooming?
For a full-coated OES:
- Professional grooming: Every 4-6 weeks, absolutely no longer
- Home brushing: Every single day. Thirty minutes minimum. This isn't an exaggeration or an ideal -- it's the real requirement.
- Quick mat checks: Daily, focusing on behind the ears, under the legs, around the collar, and the chest
- Professional grooming: Every 6-8 weeks
- Home brushing: 3-4 times per week
- Mat checks: Every few days
Finding a Groomer Who Can Handle an OES
Not every groomer takes Old English Sheepdogs. Some salons decline the breed entirely because the appointments are so long and intensive. When looking for an OES groomer:
- Ask specifically about their OES experience
- Ask how long they block for the appointment (if they say less than 2 hours for a full coat, that's a red flag)
- Visit the salon and check that they have appropriate drying equipment
- Ask about their matting policy -- a good groomer will be honest about when a shave-down is the humane option
Here's a piece of breed history that puts the grooming commitment in perspective: Old English Sheepdogs were originally sheared once a year along with the sheep they herded, and their clipped hair was actually spun into yarn. The breed was literally designed to grow a heavy, continuous coat that needed regular removal. Your groomer is just doing what shepherds did 200 years ago -- with better tools and climate-controlled rooms.
Your OES deserves a coat that works properly. That takes professional hands, the right tools, and a consistent schedule. No shortcuts.