My papillon and I really enjoyed Woof, even though it was our first experience with grooming. I was worried that the dog would be nervous while combing, because at home he doesn't like to do it and resists. But we decided to try, they picked up an appointment for a free day when there are no other animals in the salon, discussed all the details with the groomer and the administrator, and everything went fine. Especially cool is that the staff took a first aid course for animals and are able to track stress signals in dogs. There is even a book about cruelty-free grooming in the waiting area
I don't usually write reviews, but I couldn't help myself. So ugly and crooked, as in this salon, my dog has not been cut in any salon in her entire long life. Despite repeated attempts to explain to the girl how to cut the dog, the animal eventually looked like a chupacabra trimmed with an axe, which was cut by a 5-year-old child. For the first time in my life, I was ashamed to walk my dog down the street and had to trim her muzzle at home myself, since the groomer did not understand at all what was required of her. The work was done completely crookedly, despite the fact that the dog only needed to be completely shaved and the head carefully trimmed. The master, a young girl, apparently cut a dog for the first time in her life, and the prices in the salon are not a bit democratic at all, twice as high as in Moscow. Dear salon, please teach your masters the art of grooming before you put them on animal grooming for a full price. Once again, my dog has not been sheared worse than here.