I also want to mention that outside of the
sheepcoat, it doesn't matter what coat your Airedale was born with,
unless you strip the coat, you will most probably end up with a soft
coated dale with somewhat faded colouring. However, a lot of the times
you can still get the wire/colour to come in if you stripped the soft
coat. Nothing will come in if you stripped the sheepcoat, and you
probably wouldn't even be able to pull
the haire out! I know if I were to clip my boy Jaffa, he would become a
soft coat and his colours would fade. I witnessed it with his sister who
was born with an even wirier coat than him. She was stripped at first
which allowed her to maintained the gorgeous colouring and texture. Then
we began clipping her, and she went soft and faded. There has been the
rare exception where the dale was born with an extremely wiry coat where
the leg/facial furnishing take forever to come in. Some of them never
get full furnishing because the haire breaks off due to its extreme
wiriness. Those dogs you could probably get away with clipping and still
maintaining colour and texture.
My experience from grooming
the dales has been that some have very little undercoat and is extremely
wiry (20% undercoat, 80% wire coat etc.) while others have more soft
undercoat and less wiry (60% undercoat, 40% wire coat etc.). The more
undercoat a dog has, the softer and lighter colour the dog is. Undercoat
also grows faster than the top coat, that's why a clipped dog needs
grooming every 2-3 months and a stripped dog only needs a strip every
5-6 months. Of course, the sheepcoats, being all undercoat, grow coat in
a blink of an eye. They require grooming every 4-5 weeks.
ANOTHER INTERESTING POST FROM ELAINE HU
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