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Understanding Your Redbone Coonhound's Coat: What Every Owner Should Know

Redbone Coonhound grooming
1180 words · 5 min read

Understanding Your Redbone Coonhound's Coat: What Every Owner Should Know

That rich, deep red coat is usually the first thing people notice about your Redbone Coonhound. It is stunning -- a uniform mahogany that catches the light and gives the breed its name. But understanding what that coat actually is, how it functions, and what it needs will make you a better owner and keep your Redbone more comfortable.

Let us look under the surface.

Coat Structure: Two Layers Doing Different Jobs

The Redbone Coonhound has a smooth, dense double coat consisting of:

Outer coat (guard hairs): Short, straight, hard-textured hairs approximately 1/2 to 1 inch long. These are the red hairs you see. They lie flat against the body, creating that sleek appearance. Guard hairs provide the first line of defense against sun, rain, brush scratches, and insect bites.

Undercoat: A softer, denser layer of fine hairs sitting close to the skin. The undercoat provides insulation -- keeping the dog warm in cold weather and, counterintuitively, helping regulate temperature in heat by creating an air buffer between the environment and the skin.

The dual-layer structure is why Redbones shed more than single-coated breeds of similar appearance. You are dealing with two coats' worth of hair turnover.

The Color: Why Redbones Are Red

The Redbone's color comes from a high concentration of pheomelanin, the pigment responsible for red and yellow tones in mammalian hair. The breed standard calls for a rich, deep red -- ideally a dark mahogany with minimal white markings (a small amount on the chest and feet is acceptable).

Color-related coat facts:

  • Puppies are often lighter and darken as they mature over the first 1-2 years
  • Sun exposure fades the red over time, particularly on the back and top of the head where UV exposure is highest
  • Diet affects color intensity -- coats lacking adequate copper, zinc, and tyrosine (an amino acid) may appear lighter or develop a washed-out quality
  • The darker the individual hairs, the slightly coarser they tend to be -- densely pigmented guard hairs have marginally more texture than lighter ones
If your Redbone's coat appears to be losing its rich color despite good health, diet is the first place to investigate. A 2023 study in the Journal of Animal Science found that supplementation with copper and zinc improved coat color intensity in red-coated breeds by measurable colorimetric values within 8 weeks.

Oil Production: The Defining Feature

More than any other coat characteristic, oil production defines the Redbone grooming experience. Coonhounds have denser sebaceous glands than most breeds -- a trait that served them well as working water-crossing hounds but creates challenges in home environments.

The oil serves multiple functions:

  • Water repellency -- the oil coating on guard hairs causes water to bead and run off
  • Skin protection -- the lipid layer protects against minor irritants and environmental damage
  • Coat flexibility -- oil keeps the coat pliable rather than brittle
  • Scent distribution -- for a scent hound, skin oil carries the dog's own scent profile (which is why they smell stronger to us)
The downside: Oil accumulates. On fabric, it leaves stains. On the dog, it creates that distinctive hound musk as bacteria metabolize the accumulated lipids. Research from veterinary dermatology journals indicates that scent hound breeds produce sebum at rates 30-50% higher than the average dog breed.

Oil production is not constant -- it increases in response to:

  • Warm weather (higher temperatures stimulate sebaceous glands)
  • Stress or excitement
  • Hormonal fluctuations (intact dogs produce more)
  • Skin irritation (the body's defense response)

Shedding: What to Realistically Expect

Redbones shed year-round. There is no getting around this. The shed follows a pattern:

Baseline shedding (year-round): Guard hairs and undercoat hairs complete their growth cycle and fall out individually. You will find red hairs on everything you own. The stiff texture means they embed in fabric rather than sitting on top where they can be easily removed.

Seasonal blow (spring and fall): The undercoat responds to changing daylight hours by either thickening (fall) or thinning (spring). During the spring blow, you will notice dramatically increased shedding for 2-4 weeks as the winter undercoat releases. This is the most intense shedding period.

Stress shedding: Redbones can shed excessively in response to stress, illness, or major environmental changes. If shedding suddenly increases outside of seasonal patterns, investigate the cause.

Quantitatively, a healthy Redbone Coonhound produces enough shed hair to fill a standard sandwich bag every 1-2 weeks during normal periods, and a quart-sized bag weekly during seasonal blows. This is based on owner reports and groomer estimates for the breed.

What a Healthy Redbone Coat Looks Like

Learn to read your dog's coat as a health indicator:

Healthy:

  • Deep, consistent red color with natural sheen
  • Smooth, flat-lying guard hairs
  • Coat feels slightly oily but not greasy when you run your hand along the body
  • Skin underneath is light pink to pale, no redness
  • Even coverage with no thin spots
Warning signs:
  • Color fading or uneven patches -- possible nutritional deficiency, thyroid issues, or fungal infection
  • Excessive oiliness with odor -- may indicate seborrheic dermatitis, allergies, or skin infection
  • Dry, flaky skin underneath -- over-bathing, environmental allergies, or dry climate effects
  • Hair loss patches -- allergies (especially contact or food), mange, or hormonal imbalance
  • Dull, rough texture without shine -- often the first sign of internal illness or poor nutrition

Climate and Environment Effects

Southern/warm climates: The Redbone was developed in the southern United States and handles heat reasonably well. The coat will be thinner year-round in warm climates, with less pronounced seasonal changes. Oil production increases, making more frequent bathing necessary.

Northern/cold climates: The undercoat thickens substantially. Redbones can tolerate cold better than their short coat suggests, but they are not cold-weather specialists. Below 25 degrees Fahrenheit, protection is needed for extended outdoor time.

Humid environments: Humidity amplifies hound odor by preventing oil from evaporating and creating optimal conditions for skin bacteria. Redbones in humid climates typically need bathing every 2-3 weeks rather than the standard 4-6 weeks.

Dry environments: Low humidity can dry the skin and cause flaking, despite the natural oil production. A humidifier in the dog's primary living area helps in very dry climates.

Nutrition and Coat Quality

The Redbone coat responds visibly to diet quality within 4-6 weeks:

Essential for coat health:

  • Omega-3 fatty acids (fish oil, flaxseed) -- regulate oil production and reduce inflammation
  • Omega-6 fatty acids (chicken fat, sunflower oil) -- maintain skin barrier function
  • High-quality animal protein -- provides amino acids for keratin production
  • Zinc -- critical for skin cell turnover and coat quality
  • Copper -- supports pigmentation (important for maintaining red color depth)
  • Biotin -- strengthens hair structure
A Redbone on a cheap, grain-heavy diet with low-quality protein sources will show it in their coat within a month. The coat becomes duller, oilier (the body overproducing to compensate for poor lipid quality in the diet), and sheds more.

Home Care Between Professional Grooms

Daily and weekly maintenance keeps the coat functional between professional appointments:

Daily (2-3 minutes):

  • Ear check -- lift the flap, look and sniff for early infection signs
  • Quick visual scan for ticks, scratches, or irritation after outdoor time
Weekly (5-10 minutes):
  • Brush with a rubber curry brush or hound mitt to distribute oils and remove loose coat
  • Wipe down with a damp grooming cloth if the dog has gotten into dirt
  • Check paw pads for cracks or embedded debris
As needed:
  • Spot-clean with waterless shampoo between baths for odor management
  • Ear wipe with vet-approved ear cleaner if wax is visible
You do not need an arsenal of tools. A rubber curry brush ($6-$10), a pack of grooming wipes ($8-$12), and ear cleaning solution ($12-$15) cover all home maintenance needs.

The Bottom Line

Your Redbone's coat is a working system, not just an aesthetic feature. It regulates temperature, repels water, protects skin, and signals health status. Understanding how the oil, shedding, and double-coat structure work together helps you provide appropriate care rather than fighting against what the coat naturally does.

The goal is not to eliminate hound coat characteristics -- it is to manage them so your Redbone is comfortable, healthy, and pleasant to live with indoors.

PawOps helps groomers assess hound coat condition accurately, determining whether a Redbone needs a basic maintenance bath or a full de-shedding and odor treatment -- so every visit delivers exactly what the coat needs.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What type of coat does a Redbone Coonhound have?

Redbone Coonhounds have a smooth, dense double coat. The outer layer consists of short, flat-lying guard hairs that provide weather protection. The undercoat is softer and provides insulation. This double-coat structure combined with high oil production defines the breed's grooming needs.

Why is my Redbone Coonhound's coat losing its red color?

Color fading can result from sun exposure (UV breaks down pheomelanin pigment), dietary deficiencies in copper and zinc, or aging. Ensuring adequate copper, zinc, and tyrosine in the diet can improve color intensity within 8 weeks. Limiting prolonged direct sun exposure on the back also helps preserve color.

How much do Redbone Coonhounds shed?

Redbones are moderate to heavy shedders year-round with seasonal increases in spring and fall. During normal periods, expect enough loose hair to fill a sandwich bag weekly. During seasonal coat blows, shedding increases dramatically for 2-4 weeks. The short, stiff hairs embed in fabric and are difficult to remove.

Should I shave my Redbone Coonhound in summer?

Never shave a double-coated dog. The Redbone's coat system insulates against heat as well as cold by creating an air buffer between the environment and skin. Shaving removes this protection and exposes skin to direct sun damage. It also disrupts the natural growth cycle and the coat may not regrow correctly.

What food helps a Redbone Coonhound's coat?

High-quality animal protein, omega-3 fatty acids (fish oil), omega-6 fatty acids, zinc, and copper are all essential. A diet rich in these nutrients produces a shinier, better-colored coat with healthier oil production within 4-6 weeks of switching. Avoid cheap, grain-heavy foods with low-quality protein sources.

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