← Back to Wirehaired Pointing Griffon

Why Your Wirehaired Pointing Griffon Needs Professional Grooming

Wirehaired Pointing Griffon grooming
1100 words · 4 min read

Why Your Wirehaired Pointing Griffon Needs Professional Grooming

The Wirehaired Pointing Griffon -- affectionately called the "Supreme Gundog" by breed enthusiasts -- carries a coat designed for one purpose: protecting a hard-working bird dog from thorns, cold water, and harsh weather. That wiry, weather-resistant double coat is functional armor. And like any armor, it needs proper maintenance to keep performing.

If you are bathing your Griff at home and calling it grooming, you are missing the specialized care this coat actually demands.

The Griff Coat: Function Over Fashion

The Wirehaired Pointing Griffon's coat is a two-layer system:

Outer coat: Harsh, straight, wiry guard hairs that feel like steel wool. These hairs are medium length (1.5-2 inches) and stand slightly away from the body. They provide the first line of defense against brush, thorns, and weather. The texture should never be soft -- softness means the coat has lost its protective quality.

Undercoat: Dense, downy, water-resistant underlayer that provides insulation in cold water and winter conditions. This layer traps air close to the body, creating thermal protection.

Facial furnishings: Prominent eyebrows and a full beard give the Griff its distinctive expression. These are softer than the body coat but still wiry.

This coat was not designed to look pretty in a show ring (though it does). It was designed to let a dog crash through blackberry brambles, swim frozen ponds, and work all day in the field without injury or discomfort.

Why Professional Care Is Essential

Hand-Stripping Is Not Optional

The most critical grooming need for a Wirehaired Pointing Griffon is hand-stripping -- the manual removal of dead outer coat by pulling it out with fingers or a stripping knife. This is not something most owners can do effectively at home, and it is absolutely not replaceable with clipping.

What hand-stripping does:

  • Removes dead, dull outer coat at the root
  • Stimulates new growth of properly textured wire hair
  • Maintains the harsh, protective texture
  • Keeps the coat functional for fieldwork
  • Maintains proper color intensity
What clipping does instead:
  • Cuts the hair at the shaft, leaving dead roots
  • New growth comes in soft rather than wiry (the undercoat pushes through)
  • Coat loses protective texture permanently after 2-3 clip cycles
  • Color fades as softer coat replaces harsh wire
  • Coat becomes matting-prone rather than self-cleaning
A 2024 grooming industry survey found that hand-stripping services are offered by only about 15-20% of professional groomers, making finding a qualified professional essential -- and worth traveling for.

The Undercoat Needs Management

The Griff's dense undercoat does not shed completely on its own. Without periodic professional removal, dead undercoat compresses against the skin, reducing airflow and insulation efficiency. In humid conditions, trapped dead undercoat creates a breeding ground for bacteria and yeast.

Professional groomers use specialized undercoat rakes and hand techniques to remove dead undercoat without damaging the wiry outer coat. The distinction between undercoat removal and outer coat stripping requires trained hands.

Facial Furnishings Require Expertise

The Griff's eyebrows and beard are breed-defining features. They need regular shaping to maintain proper expression without obstructing vision. The eyebrows should protect the eyes during fieldwork, not hang into them. The beard should frame the muzzle, not drag into food and water.

Professional groomers who know sporting breeds understand the functional balance: enough furnishing to protect, not so much that it impedes.

Ear Care Is Critical

Wirehaired Pointing Griffons have medium-length pendant ears with minimal hair inside the canal. However, the fold of the ear traps moisture -- especially in dogs that swim or work in wet conditions. Professional cleaning every 6-8 weeks helps prevent the ear infections that plague all pendant-eared sporting breeds.

What a Professional Griff Groom Includes

A complete professional grooming session for a Wirehaired Pointing Griffon:

  • Assessment: Checking coat condition, identifying areas where dead coat is ready to strip
  • Hand-stripping the body: Removing dead outer coat section by section, working with the natural growth pattern
  • Undercoat thinning: Removing dead undercoat with appropriate tools
  • Facial furnishing shaping: Trimming eyebrows and beard to proper breed proportions
  • Ear cleaning and inspection: Thorough cleaning and hair removal from ear canal entrance
  • Leg and belly trimming: Tidying the harsh leg hair and belly furnishings
  • Foot and pad care: Trimming between pads, shaping feet
  • Nail trim: Maintaining proper length
  • Sanitary trim: Hygiene maintenance
  • This process takes 90 minutes to 2 hours in skilled hands.

    The Real-World Impact of Skipping Professional Grooming

    Griff owners who skip professional grooming see predictable consequences:

    • Coat softens within 3-4 months of no stripping (loses protective quality)
    • Dead undercoat creates hot spots during warm weather
    • Beard collects food, water, and debris without proper maintenance
    • Eyebrow hair grows into eyes, causing irritation and tear staining
    • Ear infections increase from lack of regular cleaning
    • The dog's distinctive look disappears as coat grows long and shapeless
    For working Griffs, a neglected coat means reduced field performance -- the soft, tangled coat catches on every thorn and bramble instead of shedding them.

    Grooming Schedule for Wirehaired Pointing Griffons

    • Every 8-12 weeks: Full hand-stripping session with undercoat work
    • Every 4-6 weeks: Facial furnishing touch-up and ear care
    • Weekly at home: Brush through coat with a bristle brush, check ears, beard maintenance
    • After field work: Check for burrs, seeds, and thorns (the wire coat usually sheds these, but check)

    Finding the Right Groomer

    The biggest challenge for Griff owners is finding a groomer who offers hand-stripping. Here is how to find one:

    • Ask breed clubs for recommendations in your area
    • Contact breeders -- they almost always know local hand-stripping groomers
    • Look for groomers who work with terriers (hand-stripping techniques transfer well)
    • Ask directly: "Do you hand-strip or clip wire-coated breeds?" The answer tells you everything.
    A groomer who clips your Griff is not saving you money -- they are destroying coat quality that took months to develop. The additional cost of hand-stripping ($20-$50 more per session) preserves your dog's coat function for their entire life. Use our free pricing calculator →

    Your Griff Deserves a Specialist

    The Wirehaired Pointing Griffon was bred to be the ultimate versatile hunting dog. Their coat is part of what makes them exceptional in the field and striking in appearance. Professional grooming -- specifically hand-stripping -- is what maintains that dual purpose. It is not vanity grooming. It is functional maintenance for a working coat.

    ---

    Ready to streamline your grooming workflow? PawOps Board Manager helps salons track every Wirehaired Pointing Griffon from check-in to pickup with real-time visibility. Start your free 30-day trial →

    Related Reading:

    Continue Reading

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How often should a Wirehaired Pointing Griffon be groomed?

    Full hand-stripping every 8-12 weeks, with facial furnishing touch-ups every 4-6 weeks. Weekly home brushing with a bristle brush between professional visits.

    Can you clip a Wirehaired Pointing Griffon instead of hand-stripping?

    You can, but it permanently damages the coat texture. After 2-3 clip cycles, the wiry protective outer coat is replaced by soft, non-functional hair. Hand-stripping is the correct method for maintaining the breed's coat.

    What happens if you never strip a Wirehaired Pointing Griffon's coat?

    The dead outer coat stays in place, becoming dull and soft. The undercoat compresses against the skin. The coat loses its harsh, self-cleaning texture and protective quality. Hot spots and skin issues become more likely.

    Do Wirehaired Pointing Griffons shed?

    Moderately. They shed undercoat seasonally and dead outer coat year-round (which hand-stripping removes). They shed less than smooth-coated retrievers but are not hypoallergenic.

    How do I find a groomer who can hand-strip my Griffon?

    Contact your breed club or breeder for local recommendations. Look for groomers who work with terriers (same technique). Ask directly if they hand-strip or only clip wire coats. Only 15-20% of groomers offer this service.

    Ready to streamline your grooming workflow?

    PawOps helps salons manage every breed from check-in to pickup.

    Try PawOps Free