Gypsy Vanner Horses for Sale near Brea, CA

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Gypsy Vanner - Horse for Sale in Los Angeles, CA 90025
Lexi
Gray and White Tobiano Gypsy Vanner horse, Contact us on our website; Text/..
Los Angeles, California
Gray
Gypsy Vanner
Mare
6
Los Angeles, CA
CA
$8,000
Gypsy Vanner - Horse for Sale in Los Angeles, CA 90025
Diane
Nice Gypsy Vanner horse,, Contact us on our website; Text/sms; (2O9) 868 - ..
Los Angeles, California
Black
Gypsy Vanner
Mare
8
Los Angeles, CA
CA
$6,500
Gypsy Vanner - Horse for Sale in Los Angeles, CA 90025
Nelly
Gypsy Vanner horse for sale,, Contact us on our website; Text/sms; (2O9) 86..
Los Angeles, California
Black
Gypsy Vanner
Gelding
8
Los Angeles, CA
CA
$7,500
Gypsy Vanner - Horse for Sale in Los Angeles, CA 90025
Rita
Contact us on our website; Text/sms; (2O9) 868 - 6739 for more information...
Los Angeles, California
Palomino
Gypsy Vanner
Mare
7
Los Angeles, CA
CA
$6,450
Gypsy Vanner - Horse for Sale in Winchester, CA 92596
Gypsy Vanner Mare
Stunning yearling filly. Blue painted girl with two blue eyes and Lenny blo..
Winchester, California
Gypsy Vanner
Mare
9
Winchester, CA
CA
$11,000
Gypsy Vanner - Horse for Sale in Ca, CA 90001
Gypsy Vanner Stallion
(Tavish) is a broke to ride Gelding. He can be ridden English or western a..
Ca, California
White
Gypsy Vanner
Stallion
12
Ca, CA
CA
$25,000
Gypsy Vanner Stallion
Toby is one of those rare 'do anything' well trained Gypsy Vanner stallion..
Montly, California
White
Gypsy Vanner
Stallion
23
Montly, CA
CA
$3,600
1

About Brea, CA

The area was visited on July 29, 1769 by the Spanish Portolá expedition – the first Europeans to see inland parts of Alta California. The party camped in Brea Canyon, near a large native village and a small pool of clean water. A historical marker dedicated to his visit stands in Brea Canyon just north of town. The village of Olinda was founded in present-day Carbon Canyon at the beginning of the 19th century and many entrepreneurs came to the area searching for "black gold" (petroleum). In 1894, the owner of the land, Abel Stearns, sold 1,200 acres (4.9 km 2) to the west of Olinda to the newly created Union Oil Company of California, and by 1898 many nearby hills began sporting wooden oil-drilling towers on the newly discovered Brea-Olinda Oil Field.