I have experience with giving a cat a "lion cut". When we adopted Whisper, he had a couple of patches that had been unceremoniously whacked off, and because of his unregulated diabetes, his fur was just greasy, icky and matted. I know it hurt him. HOWEVER, he is so sweet, that when we took him to our vet's groomer, I held him while she did the cut. Don't get me wrong, he didn't love it, but we got the job done and no blood was shed from me, the groomer or Whispy. That's a WIN! Also, we went into it with the attitude that we would stop whenever Whispy was "done" - even if he would look like he'd been trimmed with a weedwhacker. But now I have Wahl pet clippers and I just maintain it at home one patch at a time (so he does look rough for about a week until we finish). The first day or two he kept twitching and wondering why he felt drafty, but he adapted quickly and I really do believe he felt better.
Ok so that might not help your situation much, but I offer this:
- Our groomer was a certified cat groomer. Obviously cats can't just be groomed like small dogs, so I think that helped because she knew that and had cat experience. Here we have a couple of associations like National Cat Groomer's Association of America, Professional Cat Groomer's Association of America, and maybe others. So I would check to see if there are any equivalents in Canada.
- I would strongly suggest clippers rather than scissors, it should be safer and faster to get under the mats without nicking the skin.
- I think that it is important, whether you are there or not, or you try it yourself, to not think that you have to get it done in one shot. Do a bit, take a break, and come back to it.
- However, if Sam is that bad, and he isn't contraindicated for anesthesia, perhaps the better route is to have your vet (or another vet in town), put him just a tiny bit under and have the techs just shave him down, with the understanding that comfort is the goal, not necessarily a perfect groom. They obviously have experience shaving for surgeries, and that is all that you really expect as far as appearnces are concerned. Maybe your vet would be willing with those ground rules. Had Whispy not been cooperative, that is what we were going to do. I think that I would personally take that route rather Xanax unless Sam just can't do anesthesia because of age or medical issues. He shouldn't have to be under very deep or very long. Does he need a teeth clean? Maybe could just combine the two.
- Once the base shave is done, you might be able to maintain it yourself like we do.
Best of luck whatever you decide. But I absolutely believe that getting Sam shaved would be a good idea for his health and happiness. It was for Whispy.
Sandi&Whisper.