CHRISTIAN Salem has added a string to his bow while on the Maroochydore camp, with a set of clippers responsible for his newly found craft.

On Monday, the 23-year-old utilised his spare time to help out some teammates with a few free haircuts and says it was pretty funny how it all came about.

“It went up on Instagram and a few boys started rolling in and the next minute I started cutting five or six boys’ hair,” Salem told Melbourne Media.

Drawing inspiration from Angus Brayshaw’s new look, Salem dished out some classy looking haircuts to his lucky teammates.

James Harmes, Jay Kennedy Harris, Clayton Oliver, Christian Petracca and Joel Smith were all on the receiving end of Salem’s masterclass, and the self-proclaimed hairdresser believes his clients are more than happy with the outcome.

“I haven’t had any complaints at this stage,” Salem said.

“I don’t know about some of their girlfriends, but we’ll see what happens.”

Salem’s barber shop was so successful he sees a future for himself in the field.

“Stevie May and a couple of others are booked in, but I didn’t have time to fit them unfortunately,” he said.

“But I’ve already booked in with a few boys for next week so I might have a little side business going on I reckon.”

Aside from the barber shop activities, the boys did take full toll of the training camp.

The Demons returned home from Maroochydore on Tuesday afternoon following seven days of hard work.

“It’s always enjoyable getting up there but the main thing is just getting away as a group and continuing to build on relationships,” Salem said.

“Obviously games aren’t too far away now so it was an important camp for us to nail the game plan and training as well.”

It was an early start for Salem on Tuesday morning, with his alarm sounding at 4:45am before heading to the training ground just 45 minutes later.

“It was a pretty early start because we had an early flight, but it was alright – once we were up, we were fine,” Salem said.

The final session of the trip was a challenging one, capping off a solid week of training under the Queensland sun.

“We had a main session and everyone trained pretty well,” Salem said.

“The sessions were tough but they’re the sessions you look forward to.

“It was good to keep rolling out the game plan and the chemistry.”

The humidity is never easy for the players to deal with, but Salem enjoys training in the different climate.

“It’s always good fun, it’s something a bit different,” Salem said.

“We’re all pretty used to it now so it’s good to get up in that environment and have some fun on the track.”