Tuesday, March 20, 2012

SHAVING DOGS FOR SUMMER? - Consider This

Thinking of shaving your dog for the summer? Wait!


With warmer temperatures finally coming to Nevada County, many dog owners are exploring options to help their pets stay comfortable.

Shaving off all that hair is probably the most popular option. Indeed, for some coat types, this is an ideal solution. Not for all.

With the exception of hard-coated terriers, dogs come in one of two coat types: single coated and double coated.

Examples of single-coated breeds are poodles, shih-tzus, bichons, etc. This type of coat will continue to grow longer and longer, much like human hair, with genetics being the final determination in reference to length.

Double-coated or fur-bearing breeds have coats that grow to a predetermined length. They can be further separated into open coats and closed coats.

These breeds have a hard, protective outer coat (guard hairs) and a soft, dense undercoat. Examples of open, double-coated breeds are any of the spitz-type breeds, such as Siberian huskies, Pomeranians and chows.

This coat is designed to shed snow or ice and provide maximum protection against freezing weather.

Closed, double-coated breeds have noticeably longer guard hairs, which lay down over the undercoat, sort of like a blanket. While the outer, or guard, hairs get wet, the undercoat works to keep the dog's skin dry. Examples include golden retrievers, Australian shepherds and Newfoundlands.

Single-coated breeds can be clipped down to the skin, and the coat will grow back pretty much as it was before. The same is not true for double-coated breeds. For this reason, shaving these dogs down is not a solution to summer heat.

Think of a healthy double coat as an old-growth forest. There is a balance with different parts providing different benefits. If you clear-cut an old growth forest, there will be immediate regrowth of a lot of young trees very soon.

Unfortunately, they won't initially be the same kind as those you cut down. Instead, the forest has to start from scratch and spend decades, first growing ground cover and softwoods that provide an environment for slower growing hardwood varieties. It takes generations before the natural balance is restored.

While on a much shorter timeline, it's the same thing with a double-coated dog. Guard hairs represent old growth, and undercoat represents ground covering vegetation.

The act of shaving a double coat removes the dog's natural insulation and causes his system to kick into high gear. He'll now produce coat to protect himself from extreme temperatures, sunburn and sharp objects.

Since the top coat or guard hairs take a long time to grow, what the dog's body produces first is soft undercoat. That's why we hear people say, “I shaved my dog, and it grew back twice as thick and really fuzzy!”

In reality, what happens is that the original coat isn't restored at all. What grows in instead is thick, prolific undercoat mixed with short new guard hairs. We call it false coat or coat funk.

So, why is this bad? Picture this scenario:

It's 90 degrees outside. You're getting dressed to go work in your yard. Are you going to put on a light cotton T-shirt and sunblock or thermal underwear and a sweatshirt?

A dog's shaved-down false coat is like that sweatshirt. It's dull, soft and soaks up water like a sponge. Burrs and foxtails stick like Velcro. Above all else, it's way too thick for hot weather.

By the time that false coat grows out enough to protect the dog from sunburn, scrapes and bites (the usual job of the top coat), it is so thick that the poor dog might as well be wearing thermal underwear and a sweatshirt.

Remember, Mother Nature designed the undercoat to be extremely heat-retentive.

Do you take your dog to a grooming salon? You can request a bath and blow-out. Virtually all modern professional grooming salons have high velocity blow dryers in their work areas.

These powerhouses can literally blast the dead undercoat out of your dog's hair after a thorough bathing with minimal brushing and combing needed.

The benefit to your dog is a healthy, balanced coat you can both live with. Sure, you could opt for the shave-down, but you'll more than likely be back in a month or so for another “shave-down” because your dog is cooking in its own hair.

Then, if you're like most owners who fall into this cycle, you'll intentionally let your dog's woolly false coat grow out all winter “for warmth,” only to have it shaved off again in the spring.

In reality, all winter long while you're under the false notion that your dog is staying warm and dry under that thick layer of fuzz, his coat is matting, retaining water and mud and possibly even mildewing. It will stay cold and wet for hours. Do you see the vicious cycle that started?

In some cases, owners really don't have a choice. If there's an underlying skin condition, requiring removal of the hair, obviously shaving is the lesser of two evils.

Same applies if the coat is so matted that shaving is truly the most humane option, affording the owner a chance to start over and improve their brushing skills.

These are situations to thoroughly discuss with both your veterinarian and your groomer so you can make an informed decision.

However, if your sole motivation for shaving your dog in the spring is to “keep him cool,” you need to know that you're actually creating a far worse situation than you think.

Aside from destroying coat integrity, shaved dogs are susceptible to a multitude of complications, including, but not limited to, alopecia, heat stroke and skin cancer, specifically Solar-induced Squamous Cell Carcinomas and Dermal Hemangiosarcomas.

Sometimes, these complications are not reversible.

Nancy Bynes is a certified master groomer with more than 38 years of experience. She lives in Nevada City.
This article was originally published in the Nevada City Union, June, 2011.

14 comments:

  1. Whoops, I accidentally deleted a comment from K-Rose, TAF Intern, who wrote:
    I love this. I work at a big box grooming salon but I try to educate myself on the technical side of dog grooming. This is an awesome explanation on why some dogs do not need to be shaved during the summer. Our salon in inundated with Akita, Husky and Lab owners wanting to get in for a 10 all over summer cut. I'm using your forest metaphor in the future!

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  2. Hello, I have an Australian Sheopard, when we got her, she was a big fuzzball, she seemed uncomfortable, we live in North Texas. We shaved her, not quite to the skin, but close. Now two years later, we wondered why she has never gotten a coat that looks like a normal Aussie. After reading you article, I guess I know the reason. So, the question is...how do we get it back to normal?

    Thanks

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    1. You don't, your groomer should have informed you of the risk and let you choose if you wanted to continue. :(

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    2. It is "possible" but it requires a bit of "desheding" with furminator type product then using a coat king to take coat out ...don't go crazy with it this way can take a year to get the coat back. If your dog is altered (spayed or neutered) you may be stuck with icky coat but carding will help to returning the coat to its natural state. just groom often 1x-4x a month.

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  3. I hate to be the one to tell you (your groomer should have), BUT it may NEVER come back to a proper aussie coat. Close clipping these coats can cause permanent changes. It may come back in several growth cycles (as long as two years). The best thing to do is to give it time and keep raking out old undercoat in order to give the primary hairs room in the follicles to grow.

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  4. Excellent article! As a former groomer, I refused to clip down double-coated dogs and asked the owner to take the dog elsewhere.

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  5. Awesome reality based article, extremely well articulated. We keep 4-6 Newfs at a time and have heavy winters. We will use clippers only I'd a mat has become impossible to get out without tormenting the bitch. My special girl loves to lie on the glacier out back sn dc gets badly matted low chest and belly coat. Is there a bathing product that can be used to release these mats and facilitate retain as much coat as possible. Blowing and brushing after can also created wicked knots. What are your thoughts?

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  6. Deb Ball, dont know where abouts you are, but here in the UK we use Demelex to remove mats. Brilliant stuff that cam also reduce the drying time as well

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  7. Thanks, Sean! Demelex is indeed brilliant stuff! I looked into carrying it here in the US, but it was cost prohibitive. It is similar to Laser Lites WOW detangler, available through Jodi Murphy. In Australia, there is Progroom ProMagic. Chris Christensen Ice on Ice concentrate diluted 8:1 (instead of the mfgrs recommended 16:1) also works well. Spray these products into the partially dried coat and dry into the coat. Blow drying thick and long coats without creating knots is a matter of technique. It can be done by adjusting the angle of the air flow into the coat.

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  8. I am a groomer/dog walker. I have a dog walking client who has a 9 month old Samoyed who had never been groomed before. She was packed with undercoat and I was afraid she would overheat on our walks. The owner picked her up from the groomer(not me...I work too far away), they had clipped her to an inch all over. I was HORRIFIED!!! And he worst part is they didn't even remove the undercoat!!! I told them to have he undercoat removed and to give her a fish oil supplement to help. I hope it comes back ok.

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    Replies
    1. I am horrified as well. At 9 months, the Samoyed coat is not even fully developed. It is very possible that the coat will not grow in the same. This was so unnecessary. This poor puppy most likely has been shedding puppy coat as well as undergoing seasonal shedding. A double whammy. Rarely does packed undercoat have to be shaved, especially not on a virgin coat. Use of deshedding products, especially tons of conditioner or the Best Shot system, and a good powerful hv dryer, and this coat could have been brushed and blown out. I feel sorry for the owners, but OTOH, if they had been brushing this coat it would not have reached this point. Didn't they read the Owner's Manual?

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  9. A few weeks before they picked up their puppy, I had a 3 year old Samoyed in the shop for grooming. It was in absolute horrible condition. I spent 5 hours brushing it out. I showed the owner pictures I had taken of the before and after and explained the importance of starting grooming early and very frequently....I think it went in one ear and out the other.

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  10. I have a 2 year old norfolk terrier whom I adopted from our local animal shelter. I wish with all my heart that I had read your article earlier. The summers in the gulf are extremely horrible and he had an extremely thick coat. So we took him to a groomer ( whom we heard very good reviews about) and we told him to do what would be most convenient for our little one. He told us to leave as it would make it easier to groom without distractions. When we came back, to our horror, he had trimmed him within maybe a centimetre from the skin. Is this bad? I really need some advice as I am super worried that this is very harmful for my dog. We live in an apartment and only take him out to do his business. I would appreciate any suggestions and advice. thank you.

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  11. Some of us tell owners everyday not to clip too short. OWNERS DONT LISTEN, they just go to someone who will. Then years later they scratch their head and want someone to blame

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