Breathtaking and Promising

Name
Gabriel
Breed
Arabian
Gender
Gelding
Color
Bay
Temperament
7 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
AHA
Reg Number
NA
Height
15.1 hh
Foal Date
January, 2018
Country
United States
Views/Searches
953/35,127
Ad Status
Available
Price
$2,500

Arabian Gelding for Sale in Sierra Vista, AZ

After a lot of thought, Im going to offer this guy... at a lot lower than before. Ive been working with him and hes fantastic but I am not the person he needs for a lot of reasons. He could make someone a heck of a dressage or HJ horse, but I have neither the knowledge to teach him that, nor the time to train him consistently. I really want him to go somewhere that he will be loved and not flipped. He deserves it. He is incredibly sweet and kind and silly. He has been trail ridden WTC at Arivaca Rehab Ranch and was with a trainer for 6 months following that. He will load in a 2 horse easily, stands perfectly for the farrier, leads very nicely. Hes been to a couple of shows and ponied all over. I dont have the confidence as a rider to do more than walk/trot but he does those well. He gets lunged with side reins and is learning collection. Completely sound. He will need regular dental care. He has an underbite. Current dental/farriery. He is registered & SW nominated. South of Tucson AZ. I will need to measure but he is over 15hh. 4yrs old He is still green so experienced rider recommended

About Sierra Vista, AZ

As evidenced by several neolithic sites and known archeological sites, Paleo-Indians have been in southern Arizona from at least 12,000 years ago. It was the home to a large Sobaipuri, Pueblo near Fairbank which had several smaller pueblos and settlements throughout the valley, a Spanish Fort, Presidio Santa Cruz de Terrenate between modern Huachuca City , Whetstone and Tombstone, on the Western bank of the San Pedro River. along with sparse Spanish settlers supporting the route to Tucson's Mission San Xavier del Bac and Presidio San Agustín del Tucsón . Like most of Cochise County it was part of the Gadsden Purchase. At the end of the Apache Wars, with the protection of Fort Huachuca and the completion of the Southern Pacific and El Paso & Southwestern railroads, the San Pedro Valley began to be populated by American Settlers.

Contact about Gabriel

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