Big dogs are the reason most standard scoopers end up cracked in a garage corner by spring. Here's what's actually built for the job.
Updated July 2025 · A1 Scoop Warriors
If you have a lab, a shepherd, a golden, a great dane - you already know that standard scoopers are a joke. The jaw is too narrow to get under a full deposit cleanly, the plastic hinge bends and eventually snaps, and you end up doing two or three grabs per pile anyway. It's not you. It's the tool.
We clean large-breed yards all the time across North Texas and there's a clear difference between what works and what ends up in the trash. Here's the short version.
The jaw on a budget jaw clamp opens to about 3-4 inches. A large breed deposit is often 5-7 inches across. You do the math. You're also putting more physical force through the hinge with heavier deposits, which is exactly what cheap plastic hinges aren't designed for. Most budget large-dog scooper failures we see are cracked hinges or snapped handles from a single dropped load.
Look specifically for "large dog" or "heavy duty" versions of jaw clamps. They open to 6+ inches and use reinforced plastic or aluminum at the hinge. The Arm & Hammer Swivel Bin and Rake large version is widely available and well-reviewed. Nature's Miracle also makes a heavy-duty model worth looking at if you want something with a wider pan capacity.
This is what our techs would use for a large-breed yard if they were doing it at home. A wide metal rake (not plastic - plastic tines bend on heavy deposits) and a deep tray that holds multiple deposits before you empty it. The Bodhi Dog Pooper Scooper and the Doody Digger are both solid picks. The Doody Digger specifically gets good reviews from large-dog owners for how well the tines hold up.
Large dogs eating high-fat or raw diets sometimes produce very soft, spread-out deposits that are genuinely hard to pick up with any tool. The rake-and-tray handles this better than a jaw because you slide under rather than try to close around it. A little dry soil or grass clippings on a soft deposit, left for 10 minutes before you scoop, will firm it up enough to lift cleanly. It sounds annoying but it actually works and it's faster than the alternative.
A 70-pound dog produces roughly a pound of waste per day. That's 7 pounds per week sitting in your yard. Two large dogs is 14 pounds a week. If you're doing a weekly cleanup rather than daily, that's a significant session with a lot of deposits. A rake-and-tray combo handles that kind of volume faster than a jaw clamp because you're not doing individual grab-and-release cycles for every deposit.
If you've got multiple large dogs and a big yard and you find yourself spending 20+ minutes on cleanup every week, it's worth at least looking at what a professional service costs. It's less than most people assume.
Big yards, big dogs, no problem. We handle all of it on a weekly or bi-weekly schedule. First clean free, no contract.
See My Price →Great dane and St. Bernard owners face this specifically. The rake-and-tray is really the only practical tool for very large deposits - a jaw clamp simply can't open wide enough. A 12-inch wide tray and metal tines will handle even the biggest deposits cleanly in one pass.
Double-bagged in your regular trash bin is the standard approach. For very high weekly volume from multiple large dogs, some people use a dedicated yard waste digester buried in the ground - it breaks down waste in place without odor. The Doggie Dooley and the Doggy Do Good are both popular options on Amazon for this.
We get it. That's literally why we started this business. A1 Scoop Warriors picks up your yard on a weekly or bi-weekly schedule so you never have to think about it. First clean is free. No contracts. We serve 15 cities in the Fort Worth area: