What’s the difference between dandruff and dander?
Dander is normal microscopic shed skin cells. Dandruff is visible white flakes from dry or irritated skin. One’s expected, one isn’t.
Dander is normal microscopic shed skin cells. Dandruff is visible white flakes from dry or irritated skin. One’s expected, one isn’t.
Strongly not recommended. Cat skin is thin and lifts with the mat. Use a comb, a groomer or vet clippers instead.
Small mats: a wide-tooth comb and patience. Big mats: a professional groomer, not scissors. Why DIY scissors are the wrong move.
Short sessions, calm timing, light pressure and food rewards. The setup that turns brushing from a fight into a routine.
Most cats never need a bath. The exceptions: long-haired cats with mats, seniors who can’t groom, hairless breeds, medical conditions.
Daily for long-haired, weekly for short-haired, more during heavy-shed periods. Why frequency matters more than tool choice.
Not really. Some breeds produce less of the protein that triggers most reactions, but no breed is allergy-free.
Damp rubber gloves on furniture, a lint roller for clothes, and a vacuum with a pet attachment. The setup that beats the hair.
Yes, but no breed is shed-free. Sphynx, Cornish Rex, Devon Rex, Siamese and others shed less; care for hair you can’t see still matters.
Indoor cats shed year-round because indoor temperature and lighting don’t vary. Heavy winter shedding is usually normal.