Clipping - the full works, with eventer Wayne Garrick!

  • 17m 0secs
  • Views:6361
  • Rating:Video Rating - 5 stars
  • Posted: 16/10/2008
About this video
This is a clipping masterpiece! 3* event rider, hunt groom (and outrageous blogger), Wayne Garrick provides a demonstration on the beautifully mannered Travis (owned by Horse Hero's Lucy Graham). Wayne takes us progressively through the range of clips from a basic bib clip, to trace, blanket and hunter clips, providing a host of invaluable tips along the way and a little of his inimitable humour!
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Wayne's Garrick clipping advice

  • There are four main types of clip ranging from a minimalistic 'bib' clip, to a trace, blanket and full (or hunter) clip. Each exposes more of the main muscle groups of the horse and thus will aid with cooling for horses in work. If your horse lives out, is rugged and is in light or moderate work, you would use a bib or a trace clip. Horses living in who are in heavier work, will usually have a blanket or full / hunter clip.
  • Generally, it's only the full clip where all the hair on the head is also removed, otherwise hair is only taken off the sides of the face.
  • A full clip can retain a saddle patch for extra comfort under the saddle, or take all the hair off the back. A full or hunter clip may or may not remove the hair from the legs. If you are hunting, it's best to leave 'the legs on' as this helps to stop thorns from penetrating too deeply.
  • You will need the following: Clippers (fully charged if you are not clipping on mains) with sharpened blades and fitted with a circuit breaker, clipper oil, small clippers for the head if your large clippers are noisy, chalk, a brush, a headcollar with an open-fronted noseband, something safe to stand on, a helper for the fiddly bits and possibly a lip twitch when you come to the head. Wayne suggests using a twitch for the eyes upwards if you taking off all the hair on the head. You also need a bathed and dried horse and a clean, sheltered area to clip in.
  • Comments

    pepper93 8 Jun 2009 Great!! Thanks for the advice. Never would have thought of charcoal!
    ohdear!! 8 Jun 2009 Charcoal works great! x
    pepper93 8 Jun 2009 Just thought of another question! How would you mark the lines on a grey horse? Does the chalk still show up, even faintly?
    ohdear!! 7 Jun 2009 Hi Pepper, I would personally play it by eye, if you see a natural line you can follow, go for it. I try to go behind where the girth sits though, just to save sweat rashes and the like from appearing. So think of starting behind the elbow and jush forward from there! Good luck.
    pepper93 7 Jun 2009 On a bib clip, how do you clip in between the legs? Do you just randomly shave in between without any sort of shape or do you taper it off to a point etc?

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