20? YR OLD Icelandic Gelding
Name
                        TATOR TOT
                    Breed
                        Icelandic
                    Gender
                        Gelding
                    Color
                        White
                    Temperament
                        2 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
                    Registry
                        NA
                    Reg Number
                        NA
                    Height
                        13.2 hh
                    Foal Date
                        January, 2004
                    Country
                        United States
                    Views/Searches
                        1,893/181,911
                    Ad Status
                        —
                    Price
                        $5,000
                    Icelandic Gelding for Sale in Spokane, WA
                                CHARACTER 
SUPER FRIENDLY,
BEEN HIGH-LINED AND CAMPED FOR YEARS.
SELL WITH TREELESS SADDLE,BRIDLE AND BOOTS.
STILL A LITTLE GREEN BUT WILL WALK AND TROT ALL DAY LONG. LOADS, LEADS AND TIES NO PROBLEM. JUST HAD TEETH,FEET, ADJUSTMENT & DEWORMING.
MAY LOVE CHILDREN AND DOGS BUT WILL AVOID OTHER MEAN HORSES.                            
                        Disciplines
                        
                    About Spokane, WA
                                 The first humans to live in the Spokane area were hunter-gatherers that lived off plentiful fish and game; early human remains have been dated to 8,000 to 13,000 years ago. The Spokane tribe, after which the city is named (the name meaning "children of the sun" or "sun people" in Salishan), [a] are believed to be either their direct descendants, or descendants of people from the Great Plains. When asked by early white explorers, the Spokanes said their ancestors came from "up North." Early in the 19th century, the Northwest Fur Company sent two white fur trappers west of the Rocky Mountains to search for fur. These were the first white men met by the Spokanes, who believed they were sacred, and set the trappers up in the Colville River valley for the winter. The explorer-geographer David Thompson, working as head of the North West Company's Columbia Department, became the first European to explore the Inland Empire (now called the Inland Northwest).                            
                        

