Driving Horses for Sale near San Juan Bautista, CA

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Andalusian - Horse for Sale in Santa Cruz, CA 95003
Gazelle
Gazelle 2015 PRE mare with passport Registered IALHA and ANCCE Dam: Arista ..
Santa Cruz, California
Buckskin
Andalusian
Mare
9
Santa Cruz, CA
CA
$20,000
Shetland Pony Mare
Nice palomino filly. She is by Step - n - Stones Fancy Russett Roulette HO..
Moss Landing, California
Palomino
Shetland Pony
Mare
-
Moss Landing, CA
CA
Contact
Shetland Pony Stallion
Nice foundation stallion. Shown in halter and has blues and one Res. Grand..
Moss Landing, California
Pinto
Shetland Pony
Stallion
-
Moss Landing, CA
CA
Contact
Shetland Pony Mare
Beautiful Shetland filly. Black and white pinto. By HOF Brush Creek's Nigh..
Moss Landing, California
Pinto
Shetland Pony
Mare
-
Moss Landing, CA
CA
Contact
Morgan Mare
This gentle Morgan has a lovely temperment, is willing and loves to work. ..
Cupertino, California
Black
Morgan
Mare
-
Cupertino, CA
CA
$5,000
Miniature Stallion
CL Magic Mark or "Magic" is an absolute sweetheart & very willing! he has b..
Hollister, California
Black
Miniature
Stallion
-
Hollister, CA
CA
$1,200
Morgan Stallion
Favorite is one of the west coasts most versatile stallions, having compete..
Gilroy, California
Black
Morgan
Stallion
-
Gilroy, CA
CA
$750
Miniature Stallion
Markie is a 7 year old black and white pinto stallion. He is 34" and is dou..
Monterey, California
Miniature
Stallion
-
Monterey, CA
CA
$1,200
1

About San Juan Bautista, CA

Prior to the arrival of Europeans, the area around San Juan Bautista was populated by the Mutsunes, a branch of the Ohlone Indians. The Mutsunes lived in villages composed of thatched huts made of willow and grass, and as they lived the simple hunter-gatherer lifestyle common to California Indians, left little mark on the land. Today, the Mutsunes are extinct, with the last full-blooded native, Ascención Solórzano, dying in 1930. In 1797, the Spanish Franciscan priest fray Fermín de Lasuén founded Mission San Juan Bautista to facilitate the conversion of the native people to Catholicism; in the process, he claimed the land for the Spanish Empire. Lasuén chose the site because of the area's fertile cropland, steady water supply, and sizable Indian population.