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Guide

Your furry friend needs you during shedding season

Patrick Vogt
12.5.2023
Translation: Eva Francis

Spring is pollen season – and shedding season. It’s when dogs and cats change from their winter to their summer coats. This can be exhausting for your pet. Luckily, you can help.

Many mammals change their coat twice a year. In the autumn, they grow thick winter coats that helps them stay warm. In the spring, they shed all that extra hair. The transition from thick winter coat to thin summer coat doesn’t happen overnight. It usually takes between six and eight weeks. So it’s perfectly normal if your dog or cat is currently losing more hair than usual.

If, however, the increased hair loss doesn’t stop after a certain period of time, I recommend going to the vet. Shedding isn’t the only reason why pets lose hair. Hormonal changes after neutering, stress or the wrong diet could also be causing these symptoms.

Shake your hair for me

Regular shedding, however, is good for your furry friend. This doesn’t mean it’s easy or happens automatically without any problems. Dead and loose hairs often don’t fall to the ground immediately, but get caught in the fur and feel prickly. This causes itching and makes your dog shake a lot more and your cat groom more frequently and intensively. Not to mention that both scratch themselves more often.

Especially long-haired dogs and cats often struggle with further problems during shedding season. If old hairs become tangled and matted with the new ones, there’s a risk of unpleasant knots in the coat and even painful inflammations.

The pleasantly scratchy brush

Grooming isn’t only necessary during shedding season. Depending on the animal breed or the length and amount of hair, your pet will be happy if you brush, comb or groom it regularly. Having said that, some cat breeds don’t need grooming for obvious reasons.

I pledge to do better

Do you regularly brush your dog or cat’s fur? Which brush does your furry friend like best? Let me know in the comments.

Header image: Shutterstock

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I'm a full-blooded dad and husband, part-time nerd and chicken farmer, cat tamer and animal lover. I would like to know everything and yet I know nothing. I know even less, but I learn something new every day. What I am good at is dealing with words, spoken and written. And I get to prove that here. 


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