The Wysiwash treatment, explained
What hospital-grade hypochlorous acid actually is, and why we use it on every visit.
Let's get the honest truth out of the way first: a dog that guards its yard isn't a deal-breaker. Not for us, anyway. If you're reading this because you'd love to stop scooping but you're picturing your dog losing its mind the second a stranger touches the gate, keep reading. We've built our whole process around exactly that dog.
When a dog won't let workers in the yard, it usually isn't stubbornness or "bad training." It's instinct. The yard is theirs. You're their person. A stranger walking in is, from the dog's point of view, a situation that needs handling.
In the homes we serve around Utah County, we see it come from a few places, and honestly, usually a blend:
Whatever the mix, here's the part nobody says out loud enough: this is incredibly common. If you feel like your dog is uniquely difficult, I promise you they're not. We meet "furry security guards" constantly.
I'll be straight with you. The thing that actually stops people from signing up usually isn't the dog's behavior. It's the embarrassment about the dog's behavior. People apologize before we even arrive. They feel judged. They assume a company will take one look and decline.
I understand that feeling personally. My own dog, Nodi, is reactive: fine with people, but a real handful around other dogs. I've done the standing-there-wincing thing while my dog puts on a show. So when I say there's no judgment here, I mean it from experience, not from a script. A reactive dog is still a great dog. It just has strong opinions and no inside voice.
We don't skip reactive-dog homes. Full stop.
I can't speak for our competitors, but I'll say this: the fact that so many people search this exact question tells me some companies probably do quietly avoid these yards. I think that's a mistake on their part. Those owners tend to become some of the most loyal, long-term customers once they find someone who'll actually show up.
There's just one rule, and it exists purely for safety:
Your dog needs to be inside or securely restrained during the visit.
Here's my honest reasoning. If a dog nips me, I'll get over it. But if a dog bites one of my field techs, that stops being a "whoops" and becomes a legal headache for both my company and you, the homeowner. The restraint rule isn't red tape. It's the thing that keeps a bad two seconds from turning into a bad month for everyone.
We don't wing this. There's a system.
Our intake form asks about your dog's temperament. The moment you tell us your dog is reactive, that's flagged on our end, and we plan accordingly instead of getting surprised at the gate.
You get an "on the way" message. Tucked right inside it is a friendly reminder to bring your dog inside or get them restrained before we pull up. Need more lead time? Just tell us on the intake form that you'd like an hour's notice and we'll honor it.
If you're not home and your dog is out roaming the yard, we won't barge in. You'll get a kind text letting you know we couldn't safely finish that day, and we'll offer to swing back once your dog is secured. No lecture, no drama.
It's a calm, repeatable rhythm. Predictable for you, safe for us, and zero surprises for the dog.
I'd rather be honest than slick here. The genuinely fair way to handle billing and rescheduling when a visit gets missed, without us eating the cost every single time, and without us nickel-and-diming a good customer over an honest mix-up, is something we're still fine-tuning internally. What I can promise is the principle behind it: common sense and good faith, every time. We will always rather keep a happy customer for years than squeeze one visit.
If the only thing standing between you and a clean, stress-free yard is a worry that your dog is "too much," let me put it to rest. They're not. I own this company, and I'm in the exact same boat with my own dog.
We'll take great care of your yard. All we ask is a couple of simple, common-sense safety steps.
And your first cleanup is completely free. No risk, no pressure. Secure your pup, let us handle the mess, and see for yourself how good it feels to look out at your yard and not see a single thing you have to deal with.
Secure your pup, and we'll handle the rest. We serve Utah County and Salt Lake County, and we're genuinely glad to work with the dogs other companies quietly pass on.
Weekly visits, a calm and predictable routine, and trained eyes on every pile. Reactive dogs welcome. Your first cleanup is free.