Excerpted from Healthy Skin and Coat by Nancy Kerns et al.
One of my friends posted on Facebook the other day, โWhat works best for skunk spray? My dog Pepper got skunked right before we were leaving for work!โ (She gets to bring her dog to work โ usually!)
I immediately responded: โDonโt wash her!โ And my friend responded just as quickly, โToo late! Why?โ If your dog gets hit with skunk spray, DO NOT wash him with water (or tomato juice or anything else). Get thee to a bottle of hydrogen peroxide! And a box of baking soda!
Chemist Paul Krebaum gets the credit for applying his chemistry knowledge to the age- old need for a substance that can neutralize the smell of skunk spray. He researched the putrid oil (which skunks can shoot out of special glands under their tails as a potent defense mechanism) and determined that the chemical responsible for the distinctive odor was in a class called thiols. The human nose is extremely sensitive to these organosulfur compounds, and can detect them at 10 parts per billion. But if you subject the substance to just the right compound, you can inactivate the chemicals responsible for the odor, as fast as a chemical reaction can occur.
A FORMULA THAT REALLY WORKS
Krebaum came up with a formula โ a quart of 3% hydrogen peroxide and a 1โ4 cup of baking soda โ that would alter the thiols in skunk spray and render them odorless. He recommends using fresh peroxide (not an old bottle thatโs been open for years). Stir together in a bucket or large bowl โ NOT a bottle, as the mixture will bubble and produce gas bubbles (which could cause a plastic bottle to explode). A teaspoon or two of dishwashing liquid (such as Dawn) is added to make it easier to distribute the mix evenly through the dogโs hair.
He recommends you wet the dog thoroughly with the mixture, down to the skin. Be careful not to get any in your dogโs eyes (or cuts) however; it stings! Iโve used a sponge before to thoroughly wet my dogโs face without getting it in his eyes. (You can also put a sterile lubricant eye ointment โ such as Artificial Tears โ in your dogโs eyes first, which will help protect them from being stung by any of the mixture.)
After the dog is thoroughly wet, you shouldnโt be able to smell the skunk spray any more. If you can still smell it, you havenโt gotten every bit of the skunk oil wet with the mixture. Once the odor is neutralized, rinse the mixture off. I usually follow this rinse with a regular shampoo bath; even though you canโt smell the skunk spray any more, itโs still oily and a shampoo will help get it off the dogโs fur.
If you FIRST washed the dog with water (or tomato juice, or some other home remedy), sorry, this approach wonโt be as effective as it could be. Water also affects the thiols, making the stinky substance resistant to being chemically neutralized.
To learn more about ways to keep your dogโs skin and coat clean, download Whole Dog Journalโs ebook Healthy Skin & Coat.