Eeek..
If any of you who disagree or think sweating is cheating please try something. Bend over and tie your shoes and hold your breath. If you are in top physical shape and all your abs are tight and you are on the thinner side, it's no problem. Add a couple rolls extra and it's tough to do. Period.
That said, I sweat necks regularily in the show season. Why?? Because I drive my horses (and show in halter). If the performance horses are a little "flabby" at the throat latch they get worked in a full sweat and then bathed after. In their stalls I use cotton wraps (from my Saddlebred days). Why? As mentioned it removes excess water and helps the horse keep a finer thoatlatch to bend it's neck without compromising breathing.
I have had Saddlebreds and Hackneys for a zillion years. Fortunately the breed has a fine throat latch. I find mini's to have not been so lucky. I help them. Just like putting miles on in a jogger to build leg, wind and muscle. Or using sidelines to build a topline so the horse can elevate and carry itself in harness. No horse is perfect in conformation, but you can, without cruel or hurtful techniques, bring out the best and enhance a horse.
Slaney and others, I don't think anyone is flaming you. I think they are in all honesty trying to help you understand the difference between cheating and beautification (clipping, hoof black, sweating, clean sheets over freshly bathed horse). Cheating is surgery (liposuction, cutting ham strings), permanent dyes, fake hair appliances etc.
If you mare has a fallen crest, it is not from previous sweating. If you don't like the idea of sweating your horse, you don't have to do it to be competetive. Especially if your horse is gifted with a fine throatlatch. A studdy or thick neck will not become thinner just from sweating. You need to literally starve the fat off and geld the stallion and hope for the best, not something I advocate.
It is all in the bottom line of what you want to do (or not do) with your horses IMHO. I want a driving horse that can lift, elevate, drive off the backend AND wear his head. The horse I chose does have a fine throatlatch, I sweat it to make sure he doesn't get "rolls" in this area. As a halter horse, I didn't sweat his neck at all prior to the Nationals..honest. Here he is :
Below is an example of a horse without a fine throatlatch, and it will NEVER be fine, but with a cotton sweat and a full work sweat he will be able to bend more at the poll (I hope). And I used him to demonstrate it is not just mini related. This is a big hairy Gypsy Cob
As in he is bending in the middle of his neck, not at the "hinge" in the poll. I use this analagy from the perspective not related to a halter horse. I think there is a lot in this thread that can be used to understand, as in pro's and con's, but IMHO, as having 30+ years under my belt in various breeds, I have seen sweats on dressage horses, standardbreds, show draft horses besides the minis. hackneys and saddlbreds. Each one had a specific reason and it seemed to accomplish that.
Kim