Shih Tzu - Coat Handling Techniques
The pins of your brush should make contact with the skin at the
beginning of the brush stroke. From there, make a straight
stroke outward to the ends of the hair. Try to teach your dog
(and I say this in a "do as I say, and not do as I do," because
this is a very hard thing for me to teach my dogs to do....but
that is me....and I need more practice. So with practice it can
be done, and if you are planning to have the long coat of hair
on your shih tzu, you will need to teach the dog to lie still on
his side. Brush one layer at a time, then pull another layer and
repeat the process until you have brushed to the center part of
your dog. So the dog is on its side and you begin brushing at
the lower end of the body and work your way up to the top part
of the body to the part. Once you complete one side, turn the
dog over and repeat the process.
Start out slow, and start midway in the body. Do the legs, the
tail, the feet, the head and stomach area last. These can be
some of the touchiest areas on the shih tzu.
If you run into static electricity you can try a mixture of two
tablespoons or less of your favorite creme rinse mixed with two
cups of water in a spritzer bottle and lightly spray that on
each layer as you are brushing. Put on some relaxing music for
the both of you and try to make an enjoyable time of "bonding."
After thorughly brushing the dog, run a wide tooth comb through
the layers. What I do is have several types of combs on hand. I
have one very wide tooth comb, a regular comb and a very small
comb that is actually best to use on the face or the feet. With
a comb, you can then get even closer to the skin and drag at
each and every tangle. Not really drag out, but gently remove
the tangles that get very close to the skin. And if you keep up
on your brushing daily you won't have a big problem running your
combs through the coat slowly and gently.
After the bath,when blow drying your shih tzu, turn the
temperature down as the hair begins to dry. You can put your
shih tzu in a cage with a dry towel in the bottom after they
have bathed and you have toweled dried. Allow the dog to shake
out as much extra moisture as possible. Turn the dryer in the
direction of the cage to blow-dry some of the moisture from the
coat while you are not brushing. This can reduce the brushing
time and takes some of the stress out of brushing and drying the
hair at the same time. You will have a nicer affect if you
finish the drying process out of the cage while you brush the
hair out.
Now for that beautiful, finishing touch - the topknot and bow.
The absolute best way to become a pro at this would be to watch
a pro do it, such as a professional dog groomer or handler.