Talented English Mare!
Name
                        
                    Breed
                        Arabian
                    Gender
                        Mare
                    Color
                        Bay
                    Temperament
                        3 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
                    Registry
                        NA
                    Reg Number
                        NA
                    Height
                        14.0 hh
                    Foal Date
                        —
                    Country
                        United States
                    Views/Searches
                        545/79,484
                    Ad Status
                        —
                    Price
                        $20,000
                    Arabian Mare for Sale in Kirkland, WA
                                Bassanova is an extremely athletic well balanced black bay mare. This
 sweet mare is 14. 3 hh,  and has blues in Country Pleasure. She
 is fine featured, has a beautifully fine well shaped neck, straight
 feminine legs, fabulous loin, croup and length of hip. She is a plucky
 and sensitive girl who loves to work for a rider who treats her with
 gentleness and kindness. This amazing performance horse would make a
 great Youth Nationals mount for the serious competitor. Her sire DWD
 Tabasco, son of the great Traditio a US TT Park horse, is a producer of
 international champions. Her dam, Joie De Vie WC, is a multiple halter
 champion who has produced halter champions. Broodmare or performance
 horse, Bassanova will be a great prize to the lucky person who owns
 her. Sweepstakes nominated. No vices, clips, bathes, hauls.                            
                        About Kirkland, WA
                                 The land around Lake Washington to the east of Seattle was first settled by Native Americans. English settlers arrived in the late 1860s, when the McGregor and Popham families built homesteads in what is now the Houghton neighborhood. Four miles (6 km) to the north people also settled near what is now called Juanita Bay, a favored campsite of the Natives because a wild potato, " wapatos", thrived there. The Curtis family arrived in the area in the 1870s, followed by the French family in 1872. The Forbes family homesteaded what is now Juanita Beach Park in 1876, and settled on Rose Hill in 1877.