How we work
The Process
Your dog needs a bath. That is the job. Here is what happens while we are doing it.
See it work
Pressure that adapts. Suds that get all the way down.
The bath in motion. The sound is part of the proof; tap the speaker on either clip if you want to hear it.
None of the systems Paul could buy did everything he wanted in one machine.
So he built the one that does. Years working with the commercial wash systems taught him what to keep and what was missing, and he put all of it into a single rig tuned exactly the way he wants to bath a dog.
The Hurricane Bath is the result, and it is still being refined. Dog Gone Clean is bath only (no haircuts, no styling); the bath itself is built to do one thing very well: get a dog genuinely clean, calmly, without leaving home.
We are incapable of doing this halfway. The bath is broken into the steps below, in the same order, every time. Not because that makes it interesting. Because the result is measurably better when the work is repeatable.
Defined steps.
Same sequence, every dog.
Peak flow. About what you get from city water, in a mobile rig.
Typical wash and rinse. The power is in how water moves, not how much.
The protocol
Six steps. Every dog.
Each step addresses a specific thing about getting a dog actually clean. Skip one and it shows up in the next.
- 1
Set up
We pull into your driveway, level the trailer, and bring the climate controlled interior up to working condition. Air conditioning, dehumidifier, and high velocity dryers are ready before your dog steps in.
- 2
Soak
A dry double coat shrugs full pressure right off. So we start soft, dialing the nozzle down to wet the dog through and lift the worst of what is on the surface before the real wash starts.
- 3
Drive water to the skin
With the dog wet, pressure dials up and the recirculating system pushes water and shampoo through the coat down to the skin, where a real clean actually happens. The lever stays in our hand the whole time. Faces, eyes, and sensitive spots get the soft setting; the rest of the dog gets what its coat needs.
- 4
Flush if filthy
When a dog is genuinely caked, the wash water turns to a mud puddle. We flush the whole system, refill with clean water, and wash again. As many times as it takes. The system is fast enough that a second or third pass is no trouble. The dog washes up the way an already clean dog does.
- 5
Clean tank finish
Every dog finishes the same way: a fresh water rinse from a separate tank. The recirculation gets the work done; the clean tank ends it.
- 6
Dry in the trailer
Drying is a one two punch. The dehumidifier pulls moisture out of the air so it lifts off the coat. The high velocity dryer pushes the rest off. Inside a trailer held around 30 percent humidity, drying time falls by more than half. Your dog walks out dry, not damp.
The standard
The standard does not belong to a person.
It belongs to the process.
Every Hurricane Bath follows the same six steps. Water dialed to the coat. The system flushed when it has to be. The finish on the clean tank. Drying in the climate controlled trailer.
That is the point of writing it down: a bath that holds the same standard whether Paul or anyone trained on the system is the one running it. Today, Paul runs the Villages route. As the route grows, every operator who joins is trained to the same protocol, and you will know by name and face who is coming to your driveway.
See the offer in The VillagesWhy a process
A bath looks simple from outside the trailer. Inside, doing it well is a sequence of small judgments about pressure, water, coat type, and time, made on every dog.
Writing the sequence down does two things: it makes every bath repeatable across operators, and it makes the bath holdable to a standard that does not depend on whose hands are on the nozzle.
Your dog. Genuinely clean.
The Hurricane Bath, in your driveway. Lock in the founders rate while spots last.
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