Walking Horse Safe Trail Mare
Name
GoGo Yubari
Breed
Tennessee Walking
Gender
Mare
Color
Black
Temperament
1 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
TWHBEA
Reg Number
21402790
Height
15.0 hh
Foal Date
April, 2014
Country
United States
Views/Searches
97/8,895
Ad Status
—
Price
Contact
Tennessee Walking Mare for Sale in Little Rock, AR
OPEN BIDDING ON THEHORSEBAY,COM. SALE ENDS ON 10/09 @ 3PM 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.
GoGo is a nine-year-old Tennessee Walking Horse. She is 15 hands in height. She is a smoky black in the sunshine months of summer and is an even more gorgeous, dark black when the days start getting shorter. She has a striking, full, and unique blaze.
GoGo does it all! She will flex, lower her head, and turn her head for haltering and bridling and their removal; she will back from the ground and from the saddle, move her hips for mounting. She is well-desensitized to whips, plastic bags, umbrellas, raincoats, tarps, etc. GoGo is easy and fun to have both in the pasture and in the barn. She will leave the pasture and go to her designated stall on her own. She loads easily and backs out of the trailer without any hesitation. She stands kindly for the farrier, clipping, bathing, grooming, saddling, fly spray, etc.
GoGo was trained as a show horse early in her training. I have included a video of her gaiting from three years ago. If desired, I believe she could make a successful return to the show ring. I am also including a video of many shots of her on the trail. GoGo is quite the unique unicorn horse with the ability and skill to do it all and with the right attitude and desire to please.
I feel anyone could ride and get along with GoGo: a novice rider, a child, or a husband. Her gait comes naturally and is maintained on a loose rein on the trail, and with light pressure will gait with the best flat-shod show horse out there. Not only does she have a wonderful gait, but she also lopes and stops mannerly with a ‘whoa’ and leaning back in the saddle.
This once-in-a-lifetime mare is one I am truly proud to offer. She deserves the best home.
About Little Rock, AR
Archeological artifacts provide evidence of Native Americans inhabiting Central Arkansas for thousands of years before Europeans arrived. The early inhabitants may have been the Folsom people, Bluff Dwellers, and Mississippian culture peoples who built earthwork mounds recorded in 1541 by Spanish explorer Hernando de Soto. Historical tribes of the area were the Caddo, Quapaw, Osage, Choctaw, and Cherokee. Little Rock was named for a stone outcropping on the bank of the Arkansas River used by early travelers as a landmark. It was named in 1722 by French explorer and trader Jean-Baptiste Bénard de la Harpe, marked the transition from the flat Mississippi Delta region to the Ouachita Mountain foothills.