![]() ![]() The next-best piece was from the Vac-N-Blo, which sucked so deeply it nearly lifted the skin up (we tried it on our own arm, and it’s not uncomfortable). The serrated metal one from Rapid Groom lifted dirt in one stroke. With these attachments, we were able to remove the most amount of dirt from deep-down in the horse. Until then, we found the best tool for simply sucking dirt out of the coat was the approximately four-inch wide small attachment that more closely resembled a house vacuum piece than a grooming brush. We’d like someone to come up with a vacuum attachment that’s closer to a real, flexible rubber curry with hand strap. While the vacuum attachments worked adequately, we simply couldn’t get comfortable enough using them, and they were definitely a bit large for our female tester’s hand. These devices allow you to do a brush-vacuum-type job or a circular-motion currying-vacuum, but it’s just not the same feel as with brushes and curries. We studied the attachments and the way they’re made to try to understand why most of the ones that look like horse-grooming tools were large, bulky, hard-plastic imitations. ![]()
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