Last Updated on March 8, 2024 by Denise Leo. Post first published on February 22, 2023.
Do you find Dachshund’s long, sleeky, and wavy hair adorable? Want to know more about their coat? Let’s explore when a long-haired dachshund gets its full coat.
Long-haired Dachshunds, on average, take 18 months to 12 years to develop their full coat, depending on their bloodlines.
Long-haired Dachshunds have been a famous dog breed since their origin in Germany in the 16th century. They are intelligent dogs with curious and a bit stubborn temperaments. Their soft and wavy hair, among other genetic traits, is their most attractive feature. You can see those shiny fringes, making it a super adorable pet in your family.
Dachshunds are 12 to 14 inches tall dogs with medium fur lengths, which you’ll see in varying tones from cream to black. Referring to their long wavy hair, they are frequent and require grooming.
Most new owners are concerned about when a long-haired Dachshund gets its full coat. If you are one of those who have recently adopted one, this article is for you.
How To Tell If A Dachshund Puppy Is Long Haired?
If you are willing to adopt a long-haired Dachshund puppy but can’t distinguish between the breeds, here’s how to tell if a dog is long-haired. They have varying forms of hair lengths and fur colors. First, you need to observe the hair texture. Long-hair Dachshunds have wavy textured hair and fluffy fur. Also, their skin is visible through the fur on the back or stomach.
Another way to know if a puppy is a long-haired Dachshund is to know its parent’s breed. If both of a puppy’s parents are long-haired Dachshunds, chances are higher for your puppy to be like its parents.
Hair growth and texture can be observed when a Dachshund puppy is one month old. By observing it at four weeks of age, you can predict whether your Dachshund’s fur length will be short, medium, or long. If your newly adopted pup has long hair, it may develop into a full-grown long-haired dachshund. Moreover, the Dachshund breed possesses four types of fur:
- Smooth – It is sleek, short in length, easy to care for, and the most common type of fur.
- Wired hair is dense and needs daily brushing because mats and ticks can colonize.
- Long Hair – The hair shaft is long and flowing and requires attentive grooming, which is not difficult to manage because of the soft and plush texture.
- No Coat – Dachshunds also come without fur. Such Dachshunds are known as Dapple because they have unique patterns all over. Their grooming is hassle-free due to the absence of shedding.
The hair fully grows at three to six months of puppy age. Trimming a puppy’s hair before they are fully grown can put the developing skin of your puppy under stress.
What Does A Long-Haired Dachshund’s Hair Look Like?
Dachshunds are similar in structure, given that their hair length is their distinguishing feature. A long-haired Dachshund coat has visibly long and denser hair on the puppy’s ears, tail, legs, and skirts. In addition, long-haired Dachshunds have solid colors such as black, red, cream, and isabella. Coat color combinations, such as black and tan, and chocolate and tan, come with patterns like dapple or piebald.
Dachshund Fur FAQ
- Long-haired Dachshunds have been a famous breed since origin in Germany in the 16th century; they are intelligent and have curious, stubborn temperaments.
- Long-haired Dachshund puppies can be identified by their long, thick hair on their ears and fringe regions at four weeks old.
- They have wavy hair and come in varying fur colors and lengths.
- Hair growth of Long-haired Dachshunds can be observed when puppies are one month old; they take 18 months to 12 years to develop their full coat.
- Long-haired Dachshunds get their full coat by the age of 2.
- Observing the hair texture, knowing parents’ breeds, and predicting fur length at four weeks can help determine if a puppy is long-haired.
- Long-haired dogs need daily brushing, bathing once a month or three, and frequent trimming for proper grooming.
- They shed heavily when the season changes from winter to spring, spring to summer, and after female dachshunds’ regular heat cycles.
- Training puppies with positive reinforcement makes them easier to groom and train.
Shedding In A Dachshund Dog
Dachshunds shed because of their dense coat, and shedding in a Dachshund may take weeks to a few months. Usually, a Dachshund develops its full coat in 3 months, and little shedding is expected after this interval.
The long coat of a Dachshund starts getting thinner when it reaches puberty, growth hormones being the greatest triggers. When a Dachshund puppy ages one month, its coat is rapidly growing. However, the growth process doesn’t last long until the puppy comes to a solid diet.
At the age of six to eight months, there is 50% growth of a Dachshund’s fur, which groups to 25% at the age of one to two years. A Dachshund dog’s coat grows thicker with age but is the densest puberty.
How To Groom A Long-Haired Dachshund
Whether you are about to be a long-haired Dachshund parent or have recently adopted one, you must know that it needs attentive grooming, and a routine should be set for the “fur care.” Training your puppy to sit still while brushing, bathing, and trimming is better because it can be too difficult with an untrained, long-haired dog. Your new furry guest may not like you touching its paws at the start, but daily lessons and attention can make it feel comfortable.
Grooming a newly adopted old dachshund can be challenging because it might not like new hands grooming it. So, take baby steps on a daily basis to put your dachshund at ease. Then, you can groom your long-haired Dachshund dog by brushing, bathing, and trimming.
Brushing
Being a long-haired dog, a dachshund’s fur will likely get entangled and matted more frequently. So, it is understood that you need quick brushing daily, which will help limit the shedding process and save your home surfaces from extra fur too. However, they don’t need a bath too often; it is enough to bathe them once a month or three. This is because of the hair’s sleek texture.
It would be best if you watched where the direction hair grows and brush following the direction. This will easily detangle the hair and facilitate blood flow—brush by starting at the head and descending the tail by detangling the top and undercoat.
Picking the right brush is also essential in caring for a long-haired Dachshund’s fur. All brushes are not for every kind of fur. First, use a slicker brush to remove all the mats, dead hair, and tangles. Then, continue brushing by switching to a bristle brush.
This will get your dog a smooth and shiny texture of hair. You can also use a pin brush and get an adorable fluffy look by teasing the hair in the opposite direction. Put a sheet on the surface below wherever you are brushing your dog because of heavy shedding while brushing.
As brushing the long, wavy hair can be challenging, divide hair into sections using sectioning clips. Then, brush each divided section by removing the clips individually so the detangling procedure remains gentle to your canine.
Bathing
Although a Dachshund’s coat doesn’t need frequent baths and is essential to grooming, you can’t ignore it. Long-haired Dachshunds need a bath within three months unless they seem dirty. Make sure you bathe your dachshund with lukewarm water.
Use a fragrance-free dog shampoo and conditioner to avoid skin reactions and make your pooch smooth and easily manageable.
Trimming
Long-haired dachshunds need frequent trimming of their fur. The fringes region requires the most frequent trimming. This includes the region around the ears and feet. Trimming makes brushing easier for you, for which you need a pair of scissors with which you need to trim a small quantity of fur at a time.
History Of Long Haired Dachshund
At the time of the origin of long-haired Dachshund dogs, there was a cross-breeding done with some long-haired dogs with a Dachshund dog. It is believed that the long-haired dog used in the Dachshund breeding was a small spaniel. The small spaniel was dominant from the pair who introduced the long-haired gene in this breed.
The breeders in those times adored those doggie faces with the sleeks of long and wavy hair, and they started keeping this breed. As the cross-breeding of a Dachshund was made with a spaniel, the temperament of a spaniel is observable, usually in short-haired to wire-haired dachshund breeds.
Temperament Of A Long-Haired Dachshund
Long-haired Dachshunds are joyous, stubborn, curious, intelligent, treat loving and energetic dogs, and stay determined. They dig and jump a lot to keep them engaged whenever left alone.
Dachshund comes from one long-haired dachshund parent, and both short-haired dachshund parents have different temperaments. Long-haired dachshunds are calm, easily obey commands, and make good family companions.
Pros
- They are loyal to the family.
- They are of a spaniel nature.
- They are intelligent so they can be easily trained.
- They are affectionate pets.
- They are adorable due to their short height and long wavy hair.
Cons
- Long-haired Dachshunds need attentive grooming.
- They can be too stubborn at times.
- Heavy shedding, especially with the changing seasons and hormonal shifts.
- They may smell bad if not groomed properly.
- Can dig up your entire backyard if left alone.
Long-haired dachshunds are easier to train than the other breeds because of their spaniel origin, who love to please their owner. Whichever the coat type is, the Dachshund breed is stubborn. In the case of long-haired Dachshunds, they show stubbornness when they want something and can’t get it.
Therefore, it is favorable for a dachshund parent to start training it at a young age with positive reinforcement so that its grooming and temperament building may become less challenging for you. One pro tip here is that Dachshunds are big fans of FOOD! Just give them a treat and see them obeying you.
FAQs
Q. When do long-haired dachshunds get their full coat?
Getting a long-haired dachshund coat depends upon the breed’s bloodline, food intake, and coat care. When a long-haired dachshund completes its one year, it starts losing its fur, which then grows again into the adult coat. They develop fully-grown coats by the age of 2 years.
Q. Do long-haired dachshunds shed?
Long-haired dachshunds are likely to shed due to long hair shafts and dense fur. You’ll observe heavy shedding in your dachshund when the season changes from winter to spring and then spring to summer. Female dachshunds lose their fur after their regular heat cycles.
Q. How to tell if a dachshund puppy is long-haired?
The easiest way to know a dachshund’s breed is to know its parent’s breed. For example, if both parents are long-haired, your puppy is a long-haired dachshund. A breeder learns about the hair type of his dachshund when it reaches four weeks and starts getting long, thick hair on its ears and fringe regions.
Q. Does the hair type of long-haired dachshunds determine their stubbornness?
Hair type does not necessarily define to what extent a dachshund will be stubborn. However, long-haired Dachshunds have been seen as calmer than short-haired dachshunds. Stubbornness is a trait of this breed, whether it’s a short, long, or medium-haired dachshund.
Q. Is the long-haired dachshund the right pet to keep?
Dachshunds are easy-going dogs who love playing and obeying their owner. However, if you can’t spend time on routine grooming or dog shedding bothers you, they might not be the right choice. Moreover, they tend to get a dog smell if you increase the bathing gaps. So, if you can do attentive pet grooming, you should go for a long-haired Dachshund dog.
When Do Long-haired Dachshunds Hair Grow Conclusion
Ultimately, this breed has determined hunting capability and a remarkable drive to get their prey. Coming in short and standard sizes with varying colors and patterns, all Dachshunds are cute dogs. The lifespan of a long-haired Dachshund is between 12 to 15 years on average.
With super excitability towards playing, these small human pals come in smooth, wired, long, and coatless fur.
Dachshunds would not get tired of playing with toys and enjoying treats. But they can be stubborn at times. However, you can make them obey you by positive reinforcements such as consistently giving repetitive commands.
Your long-haired Dachshund Doxie will need more attention because its long hair demands daily brushing and frequent trimming. So if you adore a long-haired Dachshund Doxie to the extent that you can dedicate some time grooming it, you must adopt one!
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References and Further Reading:
[1] American Kennel Club, Dachshund Information.