K9 BLOG

Routine-first dog care, written for real life

This blog is a working library for everyday dog comfort routines: post-walk itch, skin and coat upkeep, nose and paw maintenance, and simple reset steps after play and training. No hype. No chaos. Just repeatable habits you can actually stick with.

Want the fastest path to the right lane? Use the Solution Finder or browse the K9 Advanced collection.

Shop the K9 essentials

These are the products most K9 posts reference. Start here if you want the simple version.

Hot Pavement and Summer Walks: Dog Paw, Nose, and Coat Checks After Heat
K9 Complete Care Routine Bundle for summer dog paw nose and coat care
  • Dog Care
June 5, 2026

Hot Pavement and Summer Walks: Dog Paw, Nose, and Coat Checks After Heat

A practical K9 Advanced™ guide for checking your dog’s paws, nose, belly, coat, collar zones,...
The Daily Dog Skin and Coat Check Every Active Dog Owner Should Do
K9 Complete Care Routine Bundle for daily dog skin coat and nose care
  • active-dogs
June 4, 2026

The Daily Dog Skin and Coat Check Every Active Dog Owner Should Do

A practical K9 Advanced™ guide for checking your dog’s skin, coat, paws, nose, and common...
Post-Mow Dog Coat Check: What to Do After Fresh Cut Grass
K9 lavender dog shampoo for post-mow coat checks after fresh cut grass
  • AEO
June 3, 2026

Post-Mow Dog Coat Check: What to Do After Fresh Cut Grass

A simple K9 care routine for checking paws, belly, coat, and bath needs after dogs...
Dog Dirty After a Trail Walk? What to Check Before Bath Time
Draw It Out® K9 Advanced Relief Spray for post-walk dog care
  • AEO
June 2, 2026

Dog Dirty After a Trail Walk? What to Check Before Bath Time

Trail dust, burrs, sweat, and damp spots can hide small comfort issues on dogs. Here...
Dog Nose Dry After Sun and Wind? What to Check First
Draw It Out® K9 Hydrating Nose Balm for dry dog nose care after sun and wind
  • AEO
May 31, 2026

Dog Nose Dry After Sun and Wind? What to Check First

Dry dog noses can show up after sun, wind, dust, travel, or long outdoor days....
A Simple Daily Dog Care Routine for Active Dogs
K9 Complete Care Routine Bundle for active dog daily care routines
  • Active Dogs
May 31, 2026

A Simple Daily Dog Care Routine for Active Dogs

A practical, no drama dog care routine for active dogs, barn dogs, truck dogs, and...
Dog Care Before a Summer Road Trip: What to Pack and Check First
K9 Complete Care Routine Bundle for dog road trip care and travel grooming kits
  • AEO
May 29, 2026

Dog Care Before a Summer Road Trip: What to Pack and Check First

A simple dog travel-care routine for summer road trips, barn weekends, camping trips, and long...
Dog Care After Boarding or Daycare: What to Check When They Come Home
Draw It Out® K9 Advanced Relief Spray for dog care after boarding or daycare
  • AEO
May 28, 2026

Dog Care After Boarding or Daycare: What to Check When They Come Home

A practical dog care routine for checking skin, paws, coat, nose, movement, appetite, and behavior...
Dog Sore After Hard Play? What to Check First
Draw It Out K9 Advanced Relief Spray for dogs after outdoor play
  • AEO
May 27, 2026

Dog Sore After Hard Play? What to Check First

Hard outdoor play can leave a dog moving a little differently. Here is a calm,...
Dog Routine Reset After a Holiday Weekend
K9 Advanced care routine products for a dog routine reset after a holiday weekend
  • AEO
May 26, 2026

Dog Routine Reset After a Holiday Weekend

A simple post-holiday dog routine reset for checking paws, coat, skin, hydration, appetite, energy, and...
Dog Care Before a Backyard Cookout: A Simple Holiday Weekend Checklist
Draw It Out® K9 Advanced Relief Spray for post activity dog care routines
  • AEO
May 24, 2026

Dog Care Before a Backyard Cookout: A Simple Holiday Weekend Checklist

A simple, practical dog care checklist for backyard cookouts, holiday weekends, guests, heat, noise, paws,...
Honoring Military K9s This Memorial Day Weekend
Angus Angels dog image honoring loyal dogs and Memorial Day remembrance
  • AEO
May 23, 2026

Honoring Military K9s This Memorial Day Weekend

A respectful Memorial Day weekend tribute to military K9s, their handlers, and the loyal working...

Start here

If you do not want to scroll, start with one lane. These routes match the most common reasons people land on the K9 blog.

Itchy after walks
Find the pattern, reduce exposure, and build a calm routine.
Fast routing
Answer a few questions and get pointed to the right lane.
Shop the K9 line
See all K9 Advanced products in one place.

Common terms you’ll see here

Post-walk itch

That delayed scratching window after grass, weeds, dust, or pollen exposure.

Barrier routine

Thin protection for noses, paws, and bellies during weather swings and rough ground.

Reset steps

Small habits after play or training that keep a dog comfortable without overdoing it.

Routine-first

Pick one lane, run it consistently, then adjust based on what your dog actually does.

Ask the Expert: Jon Conklin

Jon Conklin, Founder of Draw It Out® Horse Health Care Solutions

Founder Jon Conklin answers real-dog questions about comfort routines, skin and coat care, and what to do when your dog gets itchy after walks, weather swings, or hard play. If you’ve got one for him, send it in. It might show up right here.

Ask Jon a Question
My dog gets itchy after walks. What’s the first thing you check?

I start with exposure and timing. Grass, weeds, dust, pollens, and even sidewalk residue can sit on the coat and trigger a reaction when they warm up at home. The simplest first move is a repeatable post-walk reset: wipe down legs, belly, and chest, then watch if the itch window shortens. If it does, you have your culprit lane.

Is K9 Advanced meant to be a daily routine or only “as needed”?

Routine wins. Most problems feel random because the routine is random. For dogs that flare after exposure, I like a simple daily baseline and then a small step-up after walks, hikes, or play days. Consistency gives you clarity on what’s working.

How do you use a relief spray without making the coat greasy or sticky?

Less, more often. Start with a light mist, then work it in with your hand or a soft cloth so it lands where it matters. If the coat looks wet, you used too much. The goal is comfort and control, not soaking the dog.

What’s your go-to “weather swing” routine for noses and paws?

Keep it boring and repeatable: a quick clean, then a thin barrier layer. The mistake most people make is waiting until the nose is already cracked or the pads are already tender. Small maintenance beats big rescue.

What’s the biggest mistake people make when chasing dog skin comfort?

Changing five things at once. New shampoo, new treats, new wipes, new spray, new everything. You lose signal. Pick one lane, run it for a short window, then adjust. If you want the fast path, use the Solution Finder so you’re not guessing.