
The Smart Post-Ride Horse Recovery Routine for Spring Show Season
A practical post-ride horse recovery routine for spring show season, now routed directly to the live What Does My Horse Need page, Prehab...
K9 Advanced™ Dog Care
A simple post-walk routine for dogs that run through grass, weeds, brush, pastures, ditches, fence lines, and barn lots.
Short answer: After your dog runs through tall grass, check the paws, toes, belly, armpits, groin area, ears, collar line, tail base, and coat for burrs, seed heads, ticks, dampness, redness, rubbing, and repeated licking.
The goal is to find small things before they become buried in the coat, worked between toes, trapped under a collar, or missed until your dog starts chewing at the same spot later.
Tall grass looks harmless until your dog comes back with burrs in the coat, seed heads between toes, a tick tucked near the ear, or damp skin under the belly that nobody notices until bedtime.
Outdoor dogs do not need fussy care. They need repeatable care. Same check. Same order. No drama.
Tall grass, weeds, brush, and pasture edges create a perfect hiding place for small debris. Dogs push through it with their chest, belly, legs, face, ears, and tail. That means the problem areas are often underneath the dog, not on top where owners look first.
The practical rule: if your dog came through grass taller than their ankles, give them a quick hands-on check before they settle in.
Spread the toes gently and look for seeds, burrs, mud, tiny sticks, gravel, redness, or damp hair.
Check the pads, dewclaws, and feathering. Grass awns and burrs can hide where coat changes direction.
Lift the front legs gently and look underneath. Damp grass, pollen, mud, and friction can collect in warm hidden areas.
Look around the outside of the ears and ear edges for ticks, seed heads, burrs, and scratching. Do not push anything deep into the ear canal.
Remove gear and part the coat. Debris and moisture can sit under straps, especially after a long walk or truck ride home.
Dogs brush through weeds with their rear end and tail. Check the tail base, backs of legs, and longer coat behind the thighs.
| Area | What to look for | First move |
|---|---|---|
| Between toes | Seeds, burrs, mud, redness, licking | Remove debris gently and dry the area |
| Belly | Damp coat, weeds, dirt, irritated spots | Clean, dry, and recheck later |
| Armpits | Friction, trapped moisture, harness rub | Remove gear and part the coat |
| Ears | Ticks, burrs, scratching, head shaking | Check outside and call vet for deep ear concerns |
| Collar line | Debris, odor, rubbed hair, pressure marks | Remove collar during rest when safe |
| Tail base | Chewing, burrs, flakes, irritation | Part coat and check closely |
Tall grass and brush can increase tick exposure. Check the ears, face, neck, collar line, armpits, groin area, between toes, and tail base after outdoor time.
If you find a tick, remove it carefully with proper tick removal guidance or call your veterinarian. Watch the area afterward and contact your vet if your dog becomes lethargic, sore, feverish, swollen, lame, or otherwise off.
Outdoor dog care should start with looking, cleaning, and drying. Products support the routine. They do not replace the check.
Draw It Out® K9 Advanced Relief Spray fits quick topical comfort checks after normal outdoor activity, travel, grooming, or hard play.
Draw It Out® K9 TheraMud Skin & Coat Conditioner fits the slower, hands-on side of coat and skin care when you want a more focused routine for localized areas.
Draw It Out® Soothing Lavender Dog Shampoo fits wash days after dirt, odor, grass, outdoor buildup, or routine grooming.
For the full routine, start with the K9 Advanced™ Dog Care collection or the K9 Complete Care Routine Bundle.
Call your veterinarian if your dog has swelling, bleeding, discharge, strong odor, obvious pain, a foreign object stuck in the skin, a suspected grass awn, deep ear irritation, sudden limping, fast-spreading redness, or repeated chewing that does not stop.
Also call if your dog is lethargic, feverish, not eating, vomiting, unusually weak, or acting seriously off after outdoor exposure.
For nearby topics, read Dog Skin Fold Check Routine, Dog Licking Paws After Walks, Dog First Aid Kit Checklist, and The Daily Dog Comfort Routine.
Check between the toes, paw pads, belly, armpits, groin area, ears, collar line, tail base, and longer coat for burrs, seeds, ticks, dampness, dirt, redness, or repeated licking.
Licking can come from debris, dampness, irritation, friction, allergies, insect exposure, discomfort, or a foreign object. Repeated licking in the same spot deserves a closer look.
Yes. Burrs can pull hair, create mats, rub the skin, or hide closer to the body than they first appear. Remove them gently and check the skin underneath.
Not always. Sometimes a hands-on check, debris removal, wipe down, and drying are enough. Bathe when the coat is dirty, sticky, smelly, muddy, or carrying outdoor buildup.
Call your veterinarian for swelling, bleeding, discharge, strong odor, deep ear irritation, sudden limping, a stuck foreign object, suspected grass awn, fast-spreading irritation, or if your dog acts sick or unusually uncomfortable.
Where to go next: Build your routine around the full K9 Advanced™ Dog Care collection, then keep the check simple enough that you will actually repeat it.

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