AQHA REG BAY Gelding
Name
Breed
Quarter Horse
Gender
Gelding
Color
—
Temperament
3 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
NA
Reg Number
NA
Height
16.0 hh
Foal Date
January, 1998
Country
United States
Views/Searches
386/6,628
Ad Status
Available
Price
$2,500
Quarter Horse Gelding for Sale in Camas, WA
Rocket is 16.1 hands 15 year old Register Quarter horse Gelding, Rocket is a great horse But he is just sitting around doing nothing and he has great potential to a lots. Just needs to find the right person to take him down the road. He's got a big Heart and loves to please. Rocket has been Team Roped off of As a Heading' Horse. He's too big and too fast for the Heeling side. But He will get you to your steers every time. He's Knows the Barrel Pattern. But Needs to be Tuned on it. He can be very fast. He Just hasn't been Clocked on Barrels. He has a very soft mouth works off legs And has a beautiful sliding stop.. He could go any direction. Rocket is in your pocket kind of horse. Will follow you anywhere. He is not for a beginner Rider. but loves little kids on the ground. He easy to bath, loads, ties, hobble,Ground Ties... Is Updated on his worming and shots, He is a Parrot mouth (He has a overbite ) Does doesn't seem to have a problem with bits. Please come and take a look at Rocket. And check out his blood lines : allbreedpedigree Pritte+rocket+man
He goes back to Go Man Go...
ASKING $2500.00 OBO CASH ONLY
MIGHT TRADE FOR SOMETHING THE WHOLE FAMILY CAN RIDE
Thanks for Looking
NO SCAMMERS,
Disciplines
About Camas, WA
Officially incorporated on June 18, 1906, the city is named after the camas lily, a plant with an onion-like bulb prized by Native Americans. At the west end of downtown Camas is a large Georgia-Pacific paper mill from which the high school teams get their name, "the Papermakers". A paper mill was first established in the city in 1883 with the support of Henry Pittock, a wealthy entrepreneur from England who had settled in Portland, Oregon, where he published The Oregonian . Pittock's LaCamas Colony bought 2,600 acres in 1883, forming the Columbia River Paper Company the following year to begin production in 1885, before merging with Oregon City's Crown Paper Company to form Crown Columbia Paper in 1905. Converting from steam to electricity in 1913, it then merged with Willamette Paper in 1914 and then again in 1928 with Zellerbach Paper to become the largest paper company on the west coast, Crown Zellerbach.