Quarter Horse Ranch Gelding
Name
Rosso
Breed
Quarter Horse
Gender
Gelding
Color
Sorrel
Temperament
1 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
NA
Reg Number
NA
Height
14.3 hh
Foal Date
May, 2016
Country
United States
Views/Searches
68/5,350
Ad Status
—
Price
Contact
Quarter Horse Gelding for Sale in Fort Collins, CO
OPEN BIDDING ON THEHORSEBAY,COM. SALE ENDS ON 09/27 @ 4PM 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.
Rosso is the perfect trail horse anywhere you take him. He is also willing to learn and pretty decent in the bridle. He has a true neck rein and a nice stop. He will ride off of your seat and leg. He is very sweet and easy to catch and always interested. He is not a spooky horse. He does great with traffic, bicycles, joggers, and wildlife and goes where you point him. Crosses logs, mud, rivers, and bridges; nothing phases him. He does like to gather cattle, and we will try to get some video of that. He loads and unloads very well like one should. He is at the right age and really settled in nicely. He won’t disappoint. If you’re looking for a safe, gentle young gelding with a head full of sense, check him out. He is the same safe and sane ride every time, no matter how long he has been off. Hard to pass up the chrome sorrels and conformationally correct them.
Disciplines
About Fort Collins, CO
Fort Collins was founded as a military outpost of the United States Army in 1864. It succeeded a previous encampment, known as Camp Collins, on the Cache La Poudre River, near what is known today as Laporte. Camp Collins was erected during the Indian wars of the mid-1860s to protect the Overland mail route that had been recently relocated through the region. Travelers crossing the county on the Overland Trail would camp there, but a flood destroyed the camp in June 1864. Afterward, the commander of the fort wrote to the commandant of Fort Laramie in southeast Wyoming, Colonel William O.