ad to say weezy is right and then when they are all hatefully thick having not been pulled they jump in a grand prix or antions cup and decide they will have them plaited after all!!
They cut them - if you get a pair of really sharp, good quality scissors, and cut upwards into the hair then (with patience and practice) you get a neat, pulled look but unfortunately with bulk.
Some just cast the scissors aside and take trimmers to the ends!
You do NOT need to put up with the bulk - use a shedding blade (put mane over onto the opp side that it usually lays on, shed to thin, then put back - voila, no bulk).
I sometimes cut my TBx's mane - she's such a pain to pull. I usually cut it and feather it but as I don't show her or anything it doesn't really matter
My sons friend works for top show jumper and they use hair straightners and sissors. We have tried it and it works perfectly.If you are going to a two day it will stay straight for both days. Strange but true
My pony doesn't let me pull his mane, scissors are the only thing for it! I have perfected it though. All my other horses have pulled manes and any straggly bits get the scissors at the end. It is not the tools, it is the fools holding them!
I pull my lads and then take the scissors to all the whispy ends gives a very straight neat finish(providing you are very good at pulling manes,which i am
,lol)!!
However i have been known to cut my boys with scissors
(only because he dosnt particularly like being pulled,so gives him bit of a break)and it looked great,however the trick is to chip in to all the ends
The showjumpers that have thinned the mane and then used scissors looks good,however thick mane and scissors a no no!
I use thinning scissors on my girls' manes. I can pull really neatly (used to do it for showing) but find that if I comb it with a pulling comb, then use the thinning scissors a few times, I get a pulled effect without the grief.
Which reminds me; I need to do them all again.
S