If you mean clipping as we would call shaving on humans, then it is really up to the individual, not all horses are clipped. but if they are clipped, and you want them to stay that way, just clip them when their fur is longer than you want.
Well this would depend on which form of bridle path you are asking about. There are two. The first is the area behind a horses ears that is clipped to allow the bridle to sit more comfortably on the horses head. The mane is typically clipped off in a inch long strip (Taking care not to clip the forelock). The other 'bridle path' is a trail system designed for horses, though this term is not as frequently used nowadays. They should be wide enough to allow two horses to pass one another, other than that the appearance will vary according to location.
Horses are generally clipped when they are in hard work during the winter and really sweating, though it's not necessary. Clipping is rarely NECESSARY, though many owners of horses with cushings disease will clip their horses for their comfort in the summer months.
If the horse is clipped you can lay a quarter sheet or cooler over the horses hindquarters while you tack up. If the horse is not clipped then it most likely is not cold while tacking up.
The way the horses face is clipped can cause the eye to look a little bigger. Also using vaseline or baby oil around the eye helps.
It is better to not clip your horse, because this leads to blankets, and these cause so many problems. Horses that do get clipped get clipped for 3 reasons: 1. The rider doesn't want to spend much time cooling off the horse 2. The owner/rider thinks it looks better 3. The owner/rider doesn't know better and thinks you just have to do it.
A bridlepath is the section of a horses mane that is clipped from behind the ears a few inches back. Different breeds have different lengths of bridlepaths. Most horses bridlepath should be about the length of the horses ear. Arabians bridlepaths are about and ear and half length. The longer bridlepath accentuates the horses neck which should be arched in Arabs.
Clipped was created in 1991.
No. Clipped is not a noise. It is an action.
Once a month unless you need it done before a show. :]Horses don't realy need to be clipped. if your horse is a show horse the horse must be clipped weekly, or when ever you see whisker, or long hair growth. an average horse, meaning outside, trail rides, or like a pasture horse, doesn't need to be clipped, but if you like you can. unless you are proffesional, you should not clip a horse for the first time on your own. make sure you have assistance from someone who knows what they are doing. h
No, "clipped" is not an onomatopoeia. Onomatopoeias are words that imitate sounds.
I think the Comanche had the horses first?