This is a specific conversation about Dog shedding — tools that actually reduce it — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A double-coated Husky and a short-haired Vizsla in the same house — you're dealing with two completely different shedding profiles, which means the same tool won't work on both. Managing shedding effectively comes down to three things: the right deshedding tool for the coat type, a consistent brushing routine, and sometimes a diet that supports coat health. The wrong tool for the coat type does nothing — or worse, damages the coat. You've mentioned you're brushing weekly, which is a solid start. To point you in the right direction: can you confirm the Husky has a full double coat, and is the Vizsla's coat smooth and single-layered with no undercoat to speak of?
Yes exactly — the Husky has that thick double coat, blows it twice a year but sheds constantly the rest of the time. The Vizsla is smooth and short, definitely no undercoat. I want two separate tools ideally, one for each.
inparticular.ai
Perfect, that confirms what I suspected — you need two distinct approaches. For the Husky, you want a deshedding tool that gets into that dense undercoat without cutting the guard hairs. For the Vizsla, you want something that lifts loose short hairs and stimulates the skin without being too aggressive on that fine, tight coat. What does your weekly brushing session look like at the moment — are you using anything specific, or just a general brush for both?
Just a regular slicker brush for both at the moment. Works okay on the Vizsla but barely touches the Husky's undercoat. I know I need something better for him.
inparticular.ai
That tracks — a slicker brush sits on top of the Husky's coat and misses most of what's actually causing the shedding. Here's my recommendation for both dogs: get the FURminator Deshedding Tool in the large long-hair version for the Husky, and the FURminator in the medium or large short-hair version for the Vizsla. These are the same brand but genuinely different tools — the long-hair version has a deeper, wider edge designed to pull undercoat out of thick double coats, while the short-hair version has a finer, closer edge suited to smooth single-layer coats like the Vizsla's. Used weekly, the Husky one alone can reduce loose hair by up to 90% during a session. The Vizsla one keeps that fine short shedding under control and leaves the coat with a nice sheen. Both are available on Amazon UK. The FURminator isn't cheap, but it's the one tool that genuinely delivers on the promise for both coat types — I'd rather tell you to buy two of the right thing than one compromise tool that half-works on each dog.
That makes sense. Should I be brushing more than weekly for the Husky, especially during the coat blow?
inparticular.ai
Yes, during a coat blow — typically spring and autumn — you'll want to go up to three or four times a week with the FURminator and ideally follow it with a good undercoat rake or slicker to catch what's left loose. Outside of those periods, weekly is fine as long as you're thorough. The Vizsla stays on weekly throughout the year — that coat doesn't need more than that. One thing worth adding: if the Husky's shedding feels excessive year-round rather than seasonal, it's sometimes worth looking at whether the diet has enough omega-3 fatty acids. A fish oil supplement can make a noticeable difference to coat density and how much loose hair you're dealing with day-to-day.
Really helpful, thank you. I'll grab both FURminators.
inparticular.ai
Good call. Just double-check the size when you order — large for the Husky without question, and for the Vizsla a medium works if he's on the leaner side (Vizslas usually are), large if he's a bigger build. The short-hair label is the key thing to get right. You'll notice the difference on the Husky from the very first session.