4 Tips to Keep Pets Cool in the Summer
The best thing you can do for your pets when summer comes is help them keep themselves cool. To do that:
If your pet does overheat, act fast. Get your pet to a veterinarian right away — it could save your pets life.
Signs that your pet may be overheated include problems breathing, excessive panting, drooling, weakness, stupor, and an elevated heart rate. Symptoms can also include seizures, vomiting, a temperature over 104 F, and bloody diarrhea.
Why Shaving Your Dog’s Coat is Typically Not Recommended
As mentioned, your dog’s coat plays an important role in protecting their skin and regulating their body temperature. It’s important to keep your dog’s coat healthy and functioning properly to ensure optimal protection against external hazards. Any changes in their coat’s appearance may compromise its function and make the skin, and the dog, vulnerable to several health problems.
Shaving down your dog’s coat will expose their skin to too much solar radiation, increasing the risk of developing sunburn. If your dog’s skin is exposed to the sun for a prolonged period, it can damage and burn the outer layer of the skin which can result in severe pain, discomfort, and susceptibility to secondary infections.
Shaving can also make the dog’s skin susceptible to injuries and infections. The added layer of protection from the dog’s coat protects the skin from easily getting injured by external trauma. Shaving off your dog’s coat will make your dog susceptible to injuries that can cause wounds, abrasions, and bruising. Bacterial and fungal organisms can penetrate the skin through open wounds and cause infection.
Lastly, removing a significant length of the dog’s coat compromises its ability to properly regulate body temperature, especially in extreme weather conditions. This is more evident in double-coated breeds, where they rely heavily on their undercoat to help them keep warm during cold weather and cool off during hot, summer days. Without proper temperature regulation, dogs are more prone to developing serious health conditions due to extreme changes in temperature such as hypothermia and heatstroke.
Shaving Cats for Summer: Should You?
A pets coat is designed by nature to keep it cool during the summer and warm in the winter. By shaving your pet you usually interfere with this built-in temperature regulation.
Cats, in particular, are very good at regulating body temperature and “really get no benefit from being shaved,” says Mark J. Stickney, DVM, clinical associate professor and director of general surgery services at Texas A&M Universitys veterinary medical teaching hospital.
Because cats are “so much smaller relative to their exposed surface area, theyre just better at getting rid of extra body heat,” Stickney tells WebMD.
Cats are also almost always more mobile than dogs, so they can simply move to a shadier spot when temperatures rise.
Over the centuries, humans have bred some pets — specifically dogs — to have thicker coats than others, and these breeds can sometimes use a little help cooling off during summers heat, says Jean Sonnenfield, DVM, a veterinarian with Georgia Veterinary Specialists in Atlanta.
If you have a dog with a very thick coat who seems to suffer from the heat, some veterinarians suggest shaving them when the mercury rises. Resist shaving shorter-haired breeds because not only do they get no benefit from it, but they also run the risk of sunburn once shaved, says Stickney.
Actually, any dog can suffer sunburn, so if you do shave your thick-coated dog, be sure to leave at least an inch of hair to protect your pet from the suns rays.
You may also want to shave a dog that stays outside all the time, has a matted coat, and is likely to be wet often. In these circumstances, a dog can develop an unpleasant condition called myiasis — maggots in the fur. If your dog is prone to hot spots, a summer shave may be helpful, but discuss this with your vet first.
If you do plan on shaving your pooch for summer, groomers and vets offer these simple tips:
Sometimes We SHAVE Dogs That SHOULDN’T BE – Golden Retriever Summer Shave
“Just take it down, we like it short.” “We don’t like the shedding”. “We do it every summer, she gets so hot!”. “We don’t come to the groomer that often and really don’t want to mess with all the coat”. “My old groomer has been doing it for years!”
Welcome to one of the hottest “inside baseball” debates in the grooming profession. And thanks for listening to my education-explanation as to why we won’t do this at Love Fur Dogs.
Dogs need their coats for protection from the weather – both hot and cold. Coats need to be clean, well-conditioned, mat free, well brushed and combed, regularly de-shed, but they need their coats. A dog’s coat provides insulation both from hot and cold. It keeps them dry, and it protects their largest organ – the skin – from the external environment.
Even when a dog has a hair-type coat that can be cut and shaved without permanent damage, shaving does not keep them cooler, it can actually cause sunburn in the summer, overheating, and injury. A Dog’s coat is natural to them. And its a vital (and cuddly!) part of the pets we love. So I’m writing to help us all know how and why to EMBRACE THE COAT your dog has . . . and how to care for it and live with it in a way that gives your dog its best life possible.
Let’s understand first about a dog’s coat. Dogs have much thinner skin and more dense hair than you and I do. Their thin skin without its natural coat protection, is at risk – no matter what season of the year.
And whereas we have ONE hair per follicle, dogs have on average between 5 and 22 hairs per follicle. They have primary hairs and secondary hairs that lack a cortex. Their hair/fur is in a constant state of rotation between the three growth stages – anagen, catagen, telogen. That is new hairs growing in, old hairs falling out, and mature hairs resting in between. Lots of activity all going on inside one follicle.
To complicate this, there are approximately 9 general categories of dog coat, with some sub-types, thanks to years of human genetic engineering of the dog and its functions. These coat types include: Smooth (Boxers), Long (Shih Tzu), Flat (Golden Retrievers), Curly (Poodle), Hard or Wire (Scottish Terrier), Corded (Puli), Hairless (Chinese Crested), Combination (Doodles), and the most common type – Double Coat – that has a fluffy insulating undercoat and a weather-resistant outer coat. Double-Coated breeds come in short (Labradors, German Shepherds); medium (Siberian Huskies); and long (Samoyeds, Collies) varieties.
Additionally, all dog coat falls into two major categories – undetermined length (UDL) and predetermined length (PDL). Some people use the terms HAIR (UDL) and FUR (PDL) to distinguish between these two types. The length of Hair, like ours, will just grow and grow until it is cut. Fur will grow to a certain length and stop.
Long hair on dogs needs to be cut regularly because without regular haircuts, the dog may be carrying around tons of matted coat, leading to misery for the dog as well as the owner. This is especially important in the winter – wet snow and dry air means the hair mats more easily. Pet owners who think that a trip to the groomer in the winter is bad because their dog’s weather protection will be cut off NEED NOT WORRY – we don’t do that at Love Fur Dogs. More than any other breeds, dogs with long and curly hair need regular professional grooming, especially in the winter. Clean, dry, mat free hair is a dog’s best protection from the elements.
To go directly to the topic of this blog, cutting long and curly HAIR on those breeds, even cutting it short, should not cause damage. If you want to shave down your Poodle or Shih Tzu and can protect it from the elements using other tools such as a jacket of sorts, you will not cause any long term problems for your dog’s coat and skin.
But clipping short ANY double coated breed, even once, can and often does cause serious permanent, irreversible damage to a dog’s beautiful natural coat. Further, using clippers to take off a smooth coat, flat coat or wire coat is also not recommended as it can cause other kinds of problems.
Double-coated dogs are different. This is the natural self-care coat that a wolf has, and you see it in many breeds, in fact 80% of dogs worldwide, according to the World Health Organization. They shed, especially seasonally, out their undercoat. Their topcoat grows on a much slower cycle and must be protected for the health of the coat and skin.
Shaving off a double coat can lead to a kind of alopecia in the hair follicles, depending on where in the cycle of rotation of the hair follicle the clip down occurs in, that can lead to permanent loss of hair or change in the texture of the coat. Soft undercoat does need to be shed out, but it should NOT be shaved down. As pictured here with the little black and tan Pomeranian mix, the coat that grows back is harsh, and cannot become the double coat it once was with a shiny, weather-resistant outer layer and an insulating undercoat. Its just all like a Brillo pad one uses on pots in the sink – undercoat trying to be both top and bottom coat. Its a tragic outcome for both pet and owner.
The clippers cannot differentiate between the undercoat and the outer coat. The undercoat as it grows back will try to “become” the outer coat but it will be harsh, scratchy, and the beautiful smooth shiny soft water resistant outer coat may be lost for good. A good brushing and combing, and blowing out after a vigorous bath and condition – those steps WILL differentiate on a double coated dog between the fur that needs to come out and the fur that needs to stay on the dog.
Shaving a double coated dog does not stop the shedding – it only makes the hair that is shed shorter. Little spikes of hair laying around your house can be even harder to deal with than the regular length hair that is shed off your Best Friend!
Love your double-coated dog. Know that to DE-SHED it is easier, healthier and more effective than shaving it down. Brush and comb it and regularly bathe and condition it. Better yet, send it to us for regular grooms. Best of all, we at Love Fur Dogs have set very low prices on weekly maintenance so that the shedding hair ends up in our place, not your home.
Many is the time that I wished there was law in place to require more guidance to people who buy and own dogs regarding their needed and proper grooming care. I have spoken to devastated pet owners of breeds such as Bernese Mountain Dogs whose coat was permanently ruined by being clipped down. Read what a group of Siberian Husky owners have put out on the internet to protect their beloved breed:
What we ARE supposed to do with double coated breeds is brush out that undercoat! Obviously they shed alot – it is natural and extremely healthy and functional for their coats to do just that! Their coats do an amazing job of protecting them in all sorts of weather. Yes, their undercoat needs to come out – often and regularly – and is easily brushed and combed out. Its also easily removed with the high velocity dryers that we use at Love Fur Dogs. You can see in the photo how easily the undercoat of a double coated breed blows out when a professional groomer properly grooms this coat. Its so much better that your double-coated dog’s undercoat ends up all over our bathing and drying room, rather than your living room!
To summarize the proper care of the various kinds of coats: shaving down HAIR on long and curly coated breeds usually is not a problem and can be done by owner discretion. Our preference is to leave some nice fluffy coat on long and curly coats, but we can do whatever cut your prefer on those breeds. Veterinarians recommend leaving ideally an inch of hair to protect the skin’s immune systems from dangers of sun exposure.
But we will not shave a double coat (unless medically necessary, in consultation with your veterinarian). We are grateful you took the time to let us tell you why.
We will advise against shaving down any fur-type dog, such as a flat coat, like a Golden Retriever, because as it grows back the coat will be less sleek, more fuzzy, and will not lay flat as before once clipped. When deciding whether or not to clip wire or hard coated breeds like Westies, Schnauzers, Cairn Terriers, etc, we will discuss options with the owners advising them that clipping the coat will soften the wire coat and even cause it to fade. However many terrier owners make the decision that they don’t mind the softened, faded coat that comes with clipping a wire/hard coated breed and some prefer not to commit to a lifetime of handstripping wire coats, which is what it would take to preserve that hardness. At Love Fur Dogs we WILL HANDSTRIP wire coats – we know how to do it and we know what kind of coat benefits from that. But many wire coats that are clippered, with the softened and faded coat that results, still usually live happy, comfortable lives and still look closely like what their breed standard calls for.
We found this fun chart on the internet and are sharing it with you in helping make the shave-down decision. Its a bit tongue-in-cheek but you get the idea.
The grand exception to all this is a pelted coat (extremely matted in a solid sheet close to the skin) where there is no humane choice for the dog’s comfort but to clip it off. For a haircut type dog, there is no humane option but to shave. But for Fur Type dogs, there are techniques that will allow the natural coat to be mostly saved. We hope that this option is never forced upon you. We would be proud and happy to spend a few minutes in the lobby with you any time to discuss what kind of coat your dog has and what is the long term best care plan for your beloved dog.
Thanks for loving your natural dog, nose to tail! Love Fur Dogs professionals are a great asset to you in a lifetime of a loving happy household with a well-cared for dog.