Trail Ranch Sorting Gelding
Name
Remedy For Chex
Breed
Quarter Horse
Gender
Gelding
Color
Buckskin
Temperament
1 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
AQHA
Reg Number
5517765
Height
15.1 hh
Foal Date
May, 2013
Country
United States
Views/Searches
102/6,873
Ad Status
—
Price
Contact
Quarter Horse Gelding for Sale in Jamestown, KY
OPEN BIDDING ON THEHORSEBAY,COM. SALE ENDS ON 09/20 @ 4:20PM 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.
If you are looking for pretty, broke, good pedigree and experience??? Well, folks, he just checked every box… that’s why we call him Chex! Chex is a 15.1h, stout built, 2013 Model Reg AQHA Golden Buckskin Gelding. Chex goes back to Von Remnic and Remnic on the top side. Chex has started roping out of the box on the head side. He has been a working ranch horse and spent time in South Dakota, Missouri, and Texas working ranches. We have had Chex since last winter, and we have pasture roped and doctored sick ones off of him, and he will hold one while you take care of business. We have taken him on some camping trips, including 1 in Tennessee for three days and 1 in Oklahoma for a week. He is a quiet, gentle horse to handle and also rides well on the trails. He will go anywhere you point him while crossing deadfall through deep water, boggy mud, and scale slick rocky terrain! Chex rides out alone with no issues. He is safe around traffic, ATVs, Skid steers, and farm machinery. He does not crib/weave and is not cinchy. Chex is a great horse with much experience on ranches and trails. He can do any job and look good doing it! Honestly, he comes by his name and checks all the boxes!
Disciplines
About Jamestown, KY
The community was established in 1826 to be the seat of the newly formed Russell County. It was briefly known as Jacksonville in honor of General Andrew Jackson, who had just won a plurality of the popular vote during the 1824 presidential election but lost the runoff in the House of Representatives, largely because of the " corrupt bargain" struck by Henry Clay and John Quincy Adams. However, an anti-Jacksonian party loyal to Clay came into power the same year and the post office was established in November as Jamestown after local landowner James Wooldridge, who (together with his brother John) had donated 110 acres of land for the town. The act of the state legislature incorporating the city in December continued this name, which the city has used since. As of the census of 2000, there were 1,624 people, 662 households, and 421 families residing in the city.