calliecritturs
Posted : 5/14/2006 4:11:37 PM
I know I'm in the minority, but I don't like oatmeal. Oatmeal stimulates, and stimulates oil production and most of the dogs I've had suffered *because* of oily skin and dampness-related problems (yeast and staph).
I use very very gentle soaps (not necessarily dog soaps, in fact usually NOT dog soap) -- like Dr. Bronner's Lavender (it's a very gentle castile/hemp soap that you dilute seriously before using -- like I'd dilute maybe 1/4 teas in a quart of water!!). Then in the rinse AFTER washing, I would use essential oils like lavender and tea tree -- maybe 30-50 drops in 2 gallons of water as a *final* rinse to help cool down the skin and condition the coat.
I don't use "conditioners" -- they stay on the coat and typically hold dust which is an allergy-dog nightmare.
if the skin is staph-y I will use Benzoyl Peroxide shampoo (like Oxy-Dex if I'm using a dog shampoo) and if the skin is yeasty, I've used - at my vet's suggestion - Selsun Blue (don't leave on long -- and rinse copiously). But again with the same essential oils in water 'final' rinse.
And yep- this is for MY skin-challenged English cocker.
And another thing I often use is chammomile tea (both adding the tea and the wet herbs to his food AND simply making up a gallon of it to use as a rinse). Chammomile is very soothing and helps reduce inflammation and itch.
Also-- for 'shampoo' I often use baby shampoo but my favorite is Baby Magic's lavender/chammomile soap -- it's very gentle and doesn't leave a film. But I always dilute ANY soap before I put it on them.