- Cleaning up after your pup is quick and easy
- Lightweight pooper scooper made of washable plastic
- 1-handed spring action
- Works on grass, gravel, and cement
- 27 inches long to prevent excessive bending
Product Description
Keep your dog’s waste at arm’s length with this Poop Patrol jaw scoop from Lazy Pet…. More >>
Lazy Pet Poop Patrol Jaw Scoop
Tags: actionworks, Grass, gravel, pooper, pup, Scoop
#1 by Sean Yaakov Degidon on July 3, 2010 - 3:28 am
The Firstrax Poop Patrol Jaw Scoop has changed my life. Irritable bowels and fear of public restrooms left me a prisoner in my own home. But now, the world is my toilet!
I’ve finally visited all the places I always wanted to see: the Pyramids, Great Wall of China, the Taj Mahal, the Louvre Museum. And everywhere I go, people are excited to see me and my pooper-scooper. (I guess they’re jealous!) It doesn’t work as well on loose stool, but I’m sure that’s nothing the Capitol Rotunda hasn’t seen before.
And a bonus: the Jaw Scoop is perfect for accessing those hard-to-reach places, like the top shelf of your cupboard!
Rating: 5 / 5
#2 by J. Foster on July 3, 2010 - 4:39 am
We’ve been through two of these (not necessarily this brand) in the last six months (after paying full price–$25–at the local pet store.) Since these are made entirely of plastic, including the hinges that hold the scoop together, they break very easily. It just takes one knock and the knob breaks, rendering it useless. I am now shopping for something made of metal…probably the spoon and “fork” style scoop unless there’s a “jaws” style scoop in metal.
Rating: 1 / 5
#3 by Michael Davis on July 3, 2010 - 5:15 am
Cleaning up after the dogs is a grisly subject. Ever since my dad made a pooper scooper out of a stick screwed to a cut-up ham can, cleaning up after the dogs became my job. I dread this task. But, it has to be dung.
The little device I am reviewing here is like using the jaws of life on hardened brown gelatin.
Okay, in this scenario, it might work really well: Your dog goes poopy once a day, it dries instantaneously, it does it’s business in a discreet rectangular space with dimensions about the size of one-half postcard, on a dry and small-pebbled, nearly solid surface. In that case, this might be the ideal tool for this task: At most seven small, dry piles at the end of a week sitting on a dry, Mars-like surface.
But, outside of those narrow and pristine confines, such as where it has mushed into the grass, sunk into the snow, or is scattered in several to many piles twice a day, well, you’ll be ready for nursing home placement by trash pick-up day trying to get it all neatly out of the grass. Seriously, these jaws just pick up – and often break up – those special little reminders of your bundles of joy. If it’s made its way into the grass some of it will be broken up and left in the grass. It’s just a mess. Moreover, it’s tedious: Pick one up, bag it; pick another up, bag it; see what I mean? You literally have to pick them up and do whatever you’re going to do with it one at a time.
Now, can I still buy those cans of ham? I think I’m going back to my Dad’s way.
Rating: 2 / 5
#4 by Patrick B. Ossmer on July 3, 2010 - 8:15 am
Much stronger than the scoop I purchased in the big box retailer for almost the same money. It does the job well and has a good sturdy feel without being too heavy.
Rating: 5 / 5
#5 by A. Saechao on July 3, 2010 - 11:13 am
Concept of product is great, only problem with the item occurs when you’re using the lever to grab the waste, it is super stiff and after a few uses your hands are sore from the tension.
Rating: 3 / 5