Sorrel Blonde Haflinger
Name
Deputy
Breed
Haflinger
Gender
Gelding
Color
Sorrel
Temperament
1 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
NA
Reg Number
NA
Height
14.0 hh
Foal Date
February, 2016
Country
United States
Views/Searches
5/362
Ad Status
Available
Price
Contact
Haflinger Gelding for Sale in Kentwood, LA
AT AUCTION ON THEHORSEBAY.COM
Deputy Dog is a 10 year old full blooded Haflinger gelding. He stands 14 hands tall.
Deputy Dog is a superior wagon horse. He has been working as a team on both sides. He has been on lots of trail rides, pulling a single cart or carriage.
He has an easy one-hand, neck, and rein. He will walk, trot, and lope both ways, catching his leads easily with an awesome stop. Deputy dog will pull from the saddle horn with no problem, whether you’re dragging logs, bricks, feed, troughs, etc. He carries his head very collected at all times. He is a super fun horse to ride.
He crosses water logs and bridges with ease. He is not scared of wildlife or Livestock. He is very safe on highways and in traffic. He also rode in the national forest and in the fields checking cattle/Fence.
Deputy Dog has been shot at for a long time with shotguns, rifles, and pistols. He is easy to shoot off of and will stay true on the rundown of a mounted shooting course. He will not duck or veer. He is honest.
He is trained to come pick you up off of a step, a fence, the side of a trailer, etc. If you can climb up on it, he will come to you, or if you want to get on him regularly, he will stand and wait for you to get on him and ask him to go. He is very patient with mounting and dismounting.
He is very easy to saddle, bridle, wash, load into a trailer, and catch. You can pick up all 4 feet with no problem.
If you’re looking for that all-around type, using a horse for the whole family/farm that is suitable for anybody to ride or drive, check out Deputy Dog!
Disciplines
About Kentwood, LA
This rural town was founded by Amos Kent in 1893. On August 30, 2012, pressure on a dam on the Tangipahoa River to the north of the town as a result of Hurricane Isaac led to Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal calling for a mandatory evacuation of the town due to fears of large-scale flooding from Lake Tangipahoa. The evacuation order was later rescinded and the dam held.




