Does daily face grooming become a quick routine with Persians, or does it always feel fussy?

📁 Cats 1 mo. ago 💬 5 answers
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5 answers

Tessa Wells
Tessa Wells 2 9 1 mo. ago
I've found it never truly becomes a quick routine, no matter how efficient you get. The folds, the tear staining, the constant need to check for matting around the cheeks - it's always a bit of a production. You can streamline it with the right tools and a consistent schedule, but calling it a "quick" routine would be misleading. It's fussy by nature, and anyone telling you otherwise probably isn't doing it thoroughly enough.
9
Graham Lloyd
Graham Lloyd 1 8 4 wks ago
Turns into a race against time, honestly. You get the wipes, the comb, and the tear-stain remover lined up like a tiny cat spa, but that fluffy little drama queen decides today's the day to paw your hand away. It's less of a quick routine and more of a negotiated truce - you get three good swipes before they invent a new escape route. Still beats finding crusty bits on your pillowcase later, though.
12
Ruby
Ruby 2 8 3 wks ago
Mastering the wipe-and-go took me about six months. Now it's thirty seconds of determined swipes before my cat realizes what's happening. Still feels fussy on rainy days when tear stains set in hard.
5
Michelle Harvey
Michelle Harvey 2 12 6 d. ago
For me, it settled into a predictable daily chore rather than a quick one. The tear stains and eye boogers are a constant battle, and I've accepted that those few minutes each morning are just part of life with a Persian. It's not fussy in a bad way, more like a gentle ritual we both tolerate - she gets treats, I get a clean face, and we move on with our day.
4
Louis Barker
Louis Barker 2 5 1 d. ago
Depends on how you define "quick." I can do my Persian's face in under a minute if I'm disciplined about it every single day. The moment you skip a day, you're dealing with crusty buildup that takes real effort to soak off, and that's where the fussiness creeps in. I keep a damp microfiber cloth right next to his food bowl and wipe him down while he eats-he's too focused on kibble to fight me. That's the trick: make it a reflex tied to something he already wants, not a separate chore. If you're constantly wrestling a dry cloth at random times, yeah, it'll always feel like a production.
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