Help with dog matting! Urgent!

Aug 31, 2021
47
39
56
This is my Australian shepherd who just had puppies 4 weeks ago. She’s a pretty active dog who loves running and rolling in the mud so we can never keep her fully clean, but lately with her feeding pups we noticed her fur started to mat and is now giving her terrible sores. We’ve given her a bath and cut off as much hair as we can on her chest and applied polysporin on her sores as well as bandaged the ones we can. Anyone have advice on what else I can do?
Also not sure if it’s related but the last bag of dog food I bought was not the regular brand I buy.

Our current vet just shut its doors and all other local vets won’t take any new patients unless it’s red flag emergency
 

Attachments

  • 94A70900-2A56-4F09-B27A-025964521B68.jpeg
    94A70900-2A56-4F09-B27A-025964521B68.jpeg
    437.4 KB · Views: 15
  • 4C50C199-2956-4482-B394-1BFE2036C31B.jpeg
    4C50C199-2956-4482-B394-1BFE2036C31B.jpeg
    566.2 KB · Views: 3
  • 53AC8924-0EA9-4ABD-9C2E-AE8F9C5CFED8.jpeg
    53AC8924-0EA9-4ABD-9C2E-AE8F9C5CFED8.jpeg
    444.8 KB · Views: 5
Oh poor thing! I've got an aussie too and his fur is doing the same under his collar. We had to take it off. I keep pulling out loose fur and cutting out knots. I don't have an answer but I hope someone does.

Our weather here has just been getting warm (Alaska) so I figure he is getting into really shedding his coat. My first summer with him
 
This is my Australian shepherd who just had puppies 4 weeks ago. She’s a pretty active dog who loves running and rolling in the mud so we can never keep her fully clean, but lately with her feeding pups we noticed her fur started to mat and is now giving her terrible sores. We’ve given her a bath and cut off as much hair as we can on her chest and applied polysporin on her sores as well as bandaged the ones we can. Anyone have advice on what else I can do?
Also not sure if it’s related but the last bag of dog food I bought was not the regular brand I buy.

Our current vet just shut its doors and all other local vets won’t take any new patients unless it’s red flag emergency
The area needs to stay dry for the most part. It might be better not bandaging them becaus you want a scab to form. Get some colloidal silver gel which you can get at Walmart. The silver gel is fantastic, it'll kill germs and you can't put too much on on it.
 
Sorry I just remembered with my rat terriers years ago.... you mentioned changing foods... my boys had terrible dry skin, like really bad. I wasn't sure what it was. But when I figured it out I started them on oil supplements (flax or olive, flax is better but olive is more common) and it cleared them up. Do she possibly have really dry skin?

Also, since she just birthed and is probably nursing, that is really demanding on the body. She needs extra nutrition and support.
 
This is my Australian shepherd who just had puppies 4 weeks ago. She’s a pretty active dog who loves running and rolling in the mud so we can never keep her fully clean, but lately with her feeding pups we noticed her fur started to mat and is now giving her terrible sores. We’ve given her a bath and cut off as much hair as we can on her chest and applied polysporin on her sores as well as bandaged the ones we can. Anyone have advice on what else I can do?
Also not sure if it’s related but the last bag of dog food I bought was not the regular brand I buy.

Our current vet just shut its doors and all other local vets won’t take any new patients unless it’s red flag emergency
I hate to say this but shave and start over will be them best option and to help her fur grow rub coconut oil on her skin it will moisten the dry skin and make new coat soft or you can put it in her water. Poor lady
 
Never get a matted dog wet, it causes the matted hair to shrink up even tighter against the skin. You need a good groomer who will carefully shave the mats away without clipping the tender skin. They must know their business. If the blades get hot they should stop and let them cool. A vet might be necessary to sedate the dog if it's painful. Tell them yes, it's a red flag emergency. You may need to keep this dog shaved down until it heals, and since it has a tendency to mat, may need to keep it in a short clip thereafter. Good luck! ❤️
 
Also, don't use scissors, too easy to cut the skin by accident.

Taste of the Wild is a good diet; add a spoonful of coconut oil to it, feed her a COOKED egg while she's feeding puppies and some nutritional yeast, all will help her condition. The yeast will increase her milk production and boost her B vitamins. You can get it at a GNC or health food store. A bit of plain yogurt wouldn't hurt either.
 
Never ever ever Cut Matting out. Those last 2 picture look like cuts from the scissors not sores from the matting. Which is the main reason you should never cut mats.
Use clippers to shave the matting out. With a #10blade. Don't use attachment combs it just snags. The safest humane way is to just shave them out.
Use Apple Cider vinegar on the hot spots but NOT on the open wounds. If you have vetrycin that will work for the open wounds.

See if you can find a mobile groomer to help you maintain her knots.

*Dog groomer for 13yrs*
If you want any tips on shaving/grooming yourself please feel free to message me I will help in anyway I can!

Also if the knots aren't too tight you can get whats called a mat breaker and use cornstarch it helps get simple knots out easily.
 
Never ever ever Cut Matting out. Those last 2 picture look like cuts from the scissors not sores from the matting. Which is the main reason you should never cut mats.
Use clippers to shave the matting out. With a #10blade. Don't use attachment combs it just snags. The safest humane way is to just shave them out.
Use Apple Cider vinegar on the hot spots but NOT on the open wounds. If you have vetrycin that will work for the open wounds.

See if you can find a mobile groomer to help you maintain her knots.

*Dog groomer for 13yrs*
If you want any tips on shaving/grooming yourself please feel free to message me I will help in anyway I can!

Also if the knots aren't too tight you can get whats called a mat breaker and use cornstarch it helps get simple knots out easily.
I was thinking the same thing about the wounds. Another long time dog groomer here. Don't beat yourself up @FarmsteadOn4thStreet that's easy to do when you don't know. I'd definitely get a professional on this.
 
I was thinking the same thing about the wounds. Another long time dog groomer here. Don't beat yourself up @FarmsteadOn4thStreet that's easy to do when you don't know. I'd definitely get a professional on this.
I agree it happens even to the best of us. Accidents happen and we learn and grow from them!
 

New posts New threads Active threads

Back
Top Bottom