Here's a breakdown
of what I do to keep up my
hair daily, weekly, monthly, and every so often (I called it quarterly here to simplify) that, in my own experience and in my experience coaching others, all contribute to a vibrant,
curly mane.
But smaller breeds have their problems as well, like the Bashkir
Curly where many breeders continue to use and promote the use of hairless (extreme / baldy *) horses in breeding based on the anecdote that they are homozygous for the curly coat gene; these are horses who are defenseless to weather extremes (head & cold) and bugs (no manes, no tail hair, many times large swaths of their body hairless as w
Curly where many breeders continue to use and promote the use
of hairless (extreme / baldy *) horses in breeding based on the anecdote that they are homozygous for the
curly coat gene; these are horses who are defenseless to weather extremes (head & cold) and bugs (no manes, no tail hair, many times large swaths of their body hairless as w
curly coat gene; these are horses who are defenseless to weather extremes (head & cold) and bugs (no
manes, no tail
hair, many times large swaths
of their body hairless as well).