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 newborn in the house and an Alaskan Malamute — that's a lot of fur in the air, and I completely understand why the nursery is the priority right now. 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 does nothing — a slicker brush on a Malamute's undercoat is basically decorative. Before I point you at anything, tell me a bit more: how old is the dog, is this a full double coat, and how often are you currently brushing? One paragraph is plenty.
He's 8 years old, classic thick double coat, we brush maybe once a week but honestly since the baby arrived two weeks ago it's slipped completely. There's fur floating through the whole house and I'm terrified it's getting into the nursery. The baby is sleeping in there and I need to actually fix the air quality, not just groom more.
inparticular.ai
Right, so you have two separate problems here and it's worth being clear about that. The first is the source — a Malamute in blow-coat with almost no brushing is producing an enormous volume of loose undercoat every day, and that needs addressing with a proper deshedding tool. The second is the airborne fur already in the nursery, and that's the urgent one with a newborn. Can I ask — is the Malamute going into the nursery at all, or is it more that the fur migrates under doors and through the house generally?
He's not allowed in the nursery but the fur still gets in somehow. It's like it travels. And I can see it floating when the light catches it. The baby is two weeks old so I'm probably being anxious but I'd rather just fix it.
inparticular.ai
You're not being anxious — airborne pet hair is a genuine irritant for newborns and Malamute undercoat is particularly fine and light, which is exactly why it travels so well. Here's what I'd do in your position, and I want to be direct about priorities. For the nursery air quality right now, the single most effective fix is a proper HEPA air purifier running continuously in that room. The one I'd point you at specifically is the Levoit Core 300S — it's compact enough for a nursery, runs quietly on its lowest setting, has a true HEPA filter that catches particles down to 0.3 microns, and it's genuinely affordable for what it does. Run it on low 24 hours a day with the door mostly closed and you'll see a real difference within a day or two. That handles the symptom. For the source, you need a Furminator Undercoat Deshedding Tool in the large long-hair size — that's the right tool for a Malamute double coat and nothing else comes close for pulling out loose undercoat before it becomes airborne. Ten minutes every two days right now, outside if you can, will dramatically cut what's circulating in your house within a week.
That makes sense. Should I be doing anything else — like, is there a grooming routine I should restart properly now or is that secondary?
inparticular.ai
Get the air purifier running in the nursery today — that's the immediate win and honestly the most important step for the baby right now. Then restart the Furminator sessions this week, outside if the weather allows, to cut what's being shed at source. Once things stabilise in a few weeks, you can build back to a proper routine — Malamutes do best with a full brush-out two or three times a week during coat blows, which happens twice a year, and once a week otherwise. At 8 years old his coat is mature and well established, so consistent grooming will make a real difference to what ends up in your air. You've got the right instinct here — fix the air now, fix the source next, and the problem becomes manageable quickly.
Perfect. I'll order the Levoit today. Thanks for being straight with me about what to do first.
inparticular.ai
Good. The Levoit Core 300S is genuinely one of the best value HEPA purifiers on Amazon UK right now for a room that size — you're making a solid call. Keep the nursery door mostly closed while it runs, change the filter every six months or when the indicator tells you, and you'll have clean air in there consistently. Good luck with the new arrival — and with the Malamute, who is probably very confused about all the changes.