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Well I barely ever wear gloves and the head isn't on the engine so some blood wont hurt much.When I did that task, I used a pry bar to depress the valve spring, and WEARING GLOVES, would then twist the follower out of place. I don't know of an easy way to do it. The gloves are handy to prevent the sharp edges of all the internal parts, especially cam bearing stands, from scraping the skin from your hands. The edges of the followers are not rounded either. Installation is the reverse.
You can increase the available clearance by pressing firmly on the lifter support end of the follower, collapsing the lifter, and getting about .050"(ballpark) more clearance. I didn't bother as it takes time to get the oil to leak out if you have good lifters.
It was a while ago, and I sort of remember using a valve spring compressor designed for a Chevy small block that had a dual-ended hook on the end, and an opening closer to the handle that fit over the valve spring, allowing access to the retainers. I think hooking to openings on the cylinder head, prying downward, and then removing the follower, wiggling and rotating as needed was the procedure. I repeat, wear gloves. Unless you don't mind blood in your oil.
tom