4H Youth Or Quite Weekend Trail Rides
Name
                        
                    Breed
                        Paint
                    Gender
                        Mare
                    Color
                        Black Overo
                    Temperament
                        3 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
                    Registry
                        NA
                    Reg Number
                        NA
                    Height
                        14.0 hh
                    Foal Date
                        —
                    Country
                        United States
                    Views/Searches
                        1,372/164,974
                    Ad Status
                        —
                    Price
                        $3,200
                    Paint Mare for Sale in Punxsutawney, PA
                                Great! 4H youth show mare. She does Western Pleasure, Trail Class, and
 Showmanship. She has also had lots of time out on the trail. Would be
 great for youth or adult who likes quite weekend trail rides. Anyone
 can ride.  She is being used as a lesson horse until sold. She hauls ,
 stands for ferrier, & clips. She has had lots of Natural Horsemanship
 Training. She walks, jogs, lopes, backs, sidepasses, halfpasses, turns
 on haunches & forhand. She has full body control form the ground &
 undersaddle. She walks over teeter totter bridges, tarps, thru gauntlets,
 you can open go thru, & close gates with her. You can handle a rope
 off her & drag things. You can't go wrong with this mare. Call Pam 814-
 939-9***8 or e - mail williamew***@wildblue. net                            
                        About Punxsutawney, PA
                                 Shawnee wigwam villages once occupied this site on the Mahoning Creek. The first settlement that included non-indigenous people was in 1772, when Reverend John Ettwein, a Moravian Church missionary, arrived with a band of 241 Christianized Delaware Indians. Swarms of gnats plagued early settlers and their livestock for years, and are blamed for Ettwein's failure to establish a permanent settlement there. The clouds of biting gnats eventually drove the Indians away. The Indians called the insects ponkies (living dust and ashes), and called their village Ponkis Utenink (land of the ponkies), from which the present name Punxsutawney evolved.