Tennessee Walking Horse Mare
Name
Mercedes
Breed
Tennessee Walking
Gender
Mare
Color
Gray
Temperament
1 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
TWHBEA
Reg Number
21610010
Height
15.2 hh
Foal Date
October, 2016
Country
United States
Views/Searches
209/20,366
Ad Status
—
Price
Contact
Tennessee Walking Mare for Sale in Alexandria, LA
OPEN BIDDING ON THEHORSEBAY,COM. SALE ENDS ON 09/05 @ 3:40PM CT. More information is available on the website, including an UTD vet inspection, Coggins, video, images, and the owner's contact information to ask questions, request information, or make arrangements to come to visit.
Shadow’s Pack’n Blue Heat, a.k.a ” Mercedes,” is dwelling on a 20-acre farm together with other Mares, Geldings, and a couple of yearlings She has been on the lookout for. Commonly, when she recognizes you, she will meet you at the gate or come when called. Out of range, a grain bucket Sound will get her attention to show up on her own.
Vices such as cribbage, weaving, kicking, biting, or rearing up have not yet been confronted with. Mercedes adjusted well to previous stable stalls at a boarding facility under the loafing shed/turnout. She is no stranger to general farm equipment like Tractors, ATVs, and Chainsaw sounds.
Daily interactions with Cats and dogs, desensitized to plastic bags, cracking whip all around her, ball over or underneath her, accustomed to surcingle, crop, saddlebag. No showing of distress, layering her body completely with Tarp, neither walking on nor dragging it. Collected at bathing, fly spray, or winter blanketing.
Willingly, without a ramp, steps- right up into the Trailer and, in the same fashion, back out. On trails, she will take the lead position; however, is yet satisfied in the middle or end of a group ride. (Compliant to your decision). Steps over obstacles, up and down elevated slopes, crosses through the waters. Mercedes moves on your bending cues, with small circles or around trees, barrels, through tight gates. She has a fabulous back-up, great Stop.
A disposition of heeding attentiveness equally relaxed, she does take naps during brushing or tacking up. Remains comfortable during the Farrier visits. She has great feet and is barefoot on a regular professional Hoof Trim schedule; likewise, arranged a deworming rotation routine as per recommendation.
Riding her bareback is a pleasure, with rather different speed options, versatile to both English and Western riding styles, utilizing alternate variations of a regular bit headstall, bosal, or Hackamore. When using Hackamore, she will help you to slip her head into it. You could mount her from the Picknick table/ bench, Tractor tire, patio deck, and mounting block; she will stand quietly—applied training fundamentals as in Join-Up Free-lunging in Round Pen.
About Alexandria, LA
Located along the Red River, the city of Alexandria was originally home to a community which supported activities of the adjacent French trader outpost of Post du Rapides. The area developed as an assemblage of traders, Caddo people, and merchants in the agricultural lands bordering the mostly unsettled areas to the north and providing a link from the south to the El Camino Real and then larger settlement of Natchitoches, the oldest permanent settlement in the Louisiana Purchase. Alexander Fulton, a businessman from Washington County, near Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, received a land grant from Spain in 1785, and the first organized settlement was made at some point in the 1790s. In 1805, Fulton and business partner Thomas Harris Maddox laid out the town plan and named the town in Fulton's honor. The earliest deed that survives for an Alexandria resident is from June 24, 1805, when a William Cochren, who identifies himself as "of the Town of Alexandria", sold a tract of land across the Red River to a William Murrey.