Endurance Riding Horses for Sale near Grand Saline, TX

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Rusty
Beautiful shinny healthy well bred gaited colt. Very sweet, good temperamen..
Terrell, Texas
Chestnut
Tennessee Walking
Gelding
4
Terrell, TX
TX
$6,000
American Warmblood Mare
Gorzalla is a well built, wide baselined filly who likes to move out and j..
Ben Wheeler, Texas
American Warmblood
Mare
-
Ben Wheeler, TX
TX
$8,000
Arabian Mare
Ceryna (AHA #0510156) (Khadrann (Khadron) X Celesta VF (Gwydion) ) She ha..
Lone Oak, Texas
Bay
Arabian
Mare
-
Lone Oak, TX
TX
$2,000
Arabian Mare
Ceryna is an endurance racer who has raced 18 races, and logged over 430 mi..
Lone Oak, Texas
Bay
Arabian
Mare
-
Lone Oak, TX
TX
$2,000
Arabian Mare
Barricha AHR 0513156. (Valor TF x Concion Amorosa) 1100 lb Bay Sweepstakes..
Terrell, Texas
Bay
Arabian
Mare
-
Terrell, TX
TX
$4,000
Arabian Mare
4 / 08 / 2000 Tx Bluebonnet 1 st out of 51 starters of a 25 mile race 5 / 2..
Lone Oak, Texas
Bay
Arabian
Mare
-
Lone Oak, TX
TX
$3,500
Arabian Stallion
Donsys Mesquite. (Navarr AOF x TF Satin Ribbon) AHR 0561651 , This big pr..
Terrell, Texas
Bay
Arabian
Stallion
-
Terrell, TX
TX
$4,500
Arabian Mare
Arabella PM (Raward V x IV Sashay Bey) AHR 0595923. Breeders Sweepstakes No..
Terrell, Texas
Bay
Arabian
Mare
-
Terrell, TX
TX
$4,000
Half Arabian Mare
WWA Dos Colores Del Cielo IAHA 2A328165 PtHA 88861 NSH 012637-97- NNA (KRA ..
Terrell, Texas
Tobiano
Half Arabian
Mare
-
Terrell, TX
TX
$7,500
Half Arabian Stallion
This big gelding was measured at 15. 3H at only 2 years old and should easi..
Terrell, Texas
Dun
Half Arabian
Stallion
-
Terrell, TX
TX
$3,500
Arabian Stallion
MC Timbuktu 16. 1 hh Buckskin Half Arabian 6 year old Gelding. IAHA# IA331..
Terrell, Texas
Buckskin
Arabian
Stallion
-
Terrell, TX
TX
Contact
1

About Grand Saline, TX

Grand Saline's first settlers were the ancient Caddo Indians and Cherokee Indians tribes who discovered and made use of a large salt prairie south of the town. The Native Americans used evaporated salt from the brine stream that flows over the flats as a commodity they traded for other needed goods. By the mid-nineteenth century, the tribes had been forced out of the area by Mirabeau B. Lamar, second president of the Republic of Texas and by general anti-Indian sentiment and moved southeast. Only a few years after the Indians left the salt prairie behind, a new group of settlers arrived.