The bare spot where you shave a horse behind the ears is called a "bridle path". It has that name because it clears a path on the horse's neck for the bridle to be worn without getting tangled in the mane. There are different styles of bridle paths, from only cutting a tiny bare spot, to shaving the mane from ears to half-way down the neck. When the entire mane is shaved off, the mane is "roached."
So when you shave the horse's mane right behind the ears, it's called "cutting a bridle path." And when you shave the entire mane off, it's called "roaching the mane."
It's called the bridle path, as it is where the bridle sits. It stops the hair becoming caught under the bridle, and the bridle sitting unevenly on the head causing, preventing pressure points.
If you're talking about the shaved part on a mane, it's called a bridle patch.
The bridlepath
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Its called the bridle path.
Bridlepath
Bridlepath
bridle path
It's called a Bridle Path :)
It is called a bridleway
A Bridle pathType your answer here...
Bridlepath.
It's called the bridle path.
It is called a bridle path.
It is called a bridle path.
Bridle Path
a bridlepath :)