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
Managing shedding effectively comes down to three things — the right deshedding tool for the coat type, a consistent brushing routine, and in some cases a diet that supports coat health. The wrong tool for the coat type does nothing. To point you toward what will actually work, can you tell me what breed your dog is, what the coat is like (single or double, long or short), and how often you're currently brushing?
She's a 6-year-old Weimaraner. Short single coat. We moved house about six weeks ago and she's been shedding way more than usual ever since. I'm brushing maybe once a week with a rubber mitt but it doesn't feel like enough.
inparticular.ai
That timing is a real giveaway — stress shedding after a big environmental change is very common in dogs, and Weimaraners are particularly sensitive to disruption. The good news is this usually settles once she acclimatises. The rubber mitt is the right instinct for a short single coat, but there are a couple of things worth adjusting. How is she during brushing at the moment — relaxed, or a bit on edge? And is the shedding spread all over, or heavier in certain areas like the flanks or neck?
She's definitely on edge generally — more clingy and a bit jumpy. The shedding seems pretty even all over. She tolerates the brushing but she's not relaxed during it the way she used to be.
inparticular.ai
That makes sense. When a dog is in a low-level stress state, grooming sessions can feel like just another source of stimulation rather than something calming — which is worth addressing directly. For a short single coat like hers, the tool I'd recommend is the Kong ZoomGroom. It's a soft rubber brush that removes loose hair very effectively from short coats, but the real reason I'm suggesting it here is the massage action. The flexible rubber nubs stimulate circulation and have a genuinely calming effect on anxious dogs — it's one of the few grooming tools that can shift a dog from tense to relaxed mid-session rather than winding them up further. Used in slow, deliberate strokes for five to ten minutes every two to three days, it'll pull out the loose undercoat more thoroughly than your current mitt while also helping her nervous system settle. Once the stress period passes, the shedding will come back down — but in the meantime this will keep it manageable without adding to her anxiety.
That actually sounds perfect. Is there anything else I should be doing alongside it, or is the brush enough for now?
inparticular.ai
The brush is the main thing. If you want to support her from the inside as well, omega-3 supplementation — fish oil capsules or a dedicated dog omega supplement — can help coat quality during periods of stress, but I wouldn't layer too much on at once. Get the grooming routine established first, let her settle into the house, and give it another three to four weeks. If the shedding hasn't reduced by then, it's worth a vet check to rule out anything hormonal — but based on what you've described, this reads as classic relocation stress and it should resolve on its own with the right support.
Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.