Azteca Horses for Sale near Redondo Beach, CA

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Azteca - Horse for Sale in Los Angeles, CA 91352
Lucero
LUCERO, 06/05/2015, Azteca, Gelding, Bay, 15 hh, well broke under saddle, a..
Los Angeles, California
Bay
Azteca
Gelding
9
Los Angeles, CA
CA
$9,000
Azteca - Horse for Sale in Los Angeles, CA 91352
Mariposa
MARIPOSA, 3/27/2014, Azteca, Mare, Chestnut, 15.3 hh, well broke under sadd..
Los Angeles, California
Chestnut
Azteca
Mare
10
Los Angeles, CA
CA
$10,000
Bonita
BONITA, 07/03/2020, Azteca, Mare, Grey, 15.2 hh, well broke under saddle, w..
Los Angeles, California
Gray
Azteca
Mare
4
Los Angeles, CA
CA
$8,000
Azteca Mare
Beautiful Azteca Female Black Mare. Also has other horses for sale. For m..
Norco, California
Black
Azteca
Mare
-
Norco, CA
CA
$3,500
Azteca Mare
You get it all with these two. 1 Bombproof Buckskin pony mare that is calm..
Acton, California
Buckskin
Azteca
Mare
-
Acton, CA
CA
$4,250
Azteca Mare
beautiful buskin mare. great mind, trails, 3 months reining & roping traing..
Sunland, California
Buckskin
Azteca
Mare
-
Sunland, CA
CA
$5,000
Azteca Mare
Horse for teenager that rides western. Loves horses and will give great an..
Orange, California
Bay
Azteca
Mare
-
Orange, CA
CA
Contact
1

About Redondo Beach, CA

The Chowigna Indians used the site of today's Hopkins Wilderness Park, formerly Nike missile site LA-57 from 1956 to 1963, in Redondo Beach, California, as a lookout place. The wetlands located at the site of today's AES power plant in Redondo Beach were a source of foods including halibut, lobster, and sea bass, and also of salt. In the 1700s, the Chowigna bartered salt from the old Redondo Salt Lake, "a spring-fed salt lake about 200 yards wide and 600 yards long situated about 200 yards from the ocean", with other tribes. Their village by the lake was called "Onoova-nga", or "Place of Salt." The Chowigna were relocated to missions in 1854, when Manuel Dominguez sold 215 acres of Rancho San Pedro, including the lake, to Henry Allanson and William Johnson for the Pacific Salt Works. Moonstone Beach was a tourist attraction from the late 1880s to the early 1920s.