English Pleasure Horses for Sale near Red Feather Lakes, CO

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Appaloosa - Horse for Sale in Fort Collins, CO 80534
Beatrice
OPEN BIDDING ON THEHORSEBAY,COM. SALE ENDS ON 05/01 @ 3PM CT. More informat..
Fort Collins, Colorado
Gray
Appaloosa
Mare
10
Fort Collins, CO
CO
Contact
Gypsy Vanner - Horse for Sale in Berthoud, CO 80513
Merrylegs
Merrylegs is for sale. 11 year old Gypsy Cob, likes to work, been in a para..
Berthoud, Colorado
White
Gypsy Vanner
Mare
15
Berthoud, CO
CO
$15,000
Paint Stallion
Wego is for sale. He is very athletic, 11 years & needs a focused rider t..
Windsor, Colorado
Brown
Paint
Stallion
-
Windsor, CO
CO
$5,400
Morgan Mare
Bit - O - Wy Lark is a spicey little palomino filly. She is fancy and stou..
Cheyenne, Wyoming
Palomino
Morgan
Mare
-
Cheyenne, WY
WY
$2,500
Morgan Stallion
Tern has proven to be a stout hearted youngster with ample couriosity. The ..
Cheyenne, Wyoming
Chestnut
Morgan
Stallion
-
Cheyenne, WY
WY
$1,800
Paint Mare
Need to sell ASAP. . moving and have too many horses. Started under saddle..
Fort Collins, Colorado
Paint
Mare
-
Fort Collins, CO
CO
$2,500
Morgan Stallion
Beautiful, kind, willing, and sensitive young prospect. Dam was from the W..
Fort Collins, Colorado
Bay
Morgan
Stallion
-
Fort Collins, CO
CO
$1,000
Quarter Horse Stallion
Honor Mark aka Solomon is a very nice gelding. He is a proven beginner~s ho..
Fort Collins, Colorado
Chestnut
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Fort Collins, CO
CO
$4,000
1

About Red Feather Lakes, CO

Other than Native Americans, only occasional hunters and trappers passed through the Red Feather Lakes area until the middle of the 19th century. The first known settler was John Hardin, who built a cabin about 2 miles (3 km) from the current Red Feather Lakes village in 1871. Other settlers, many of them families of Hardin's eleven surviving children, homesteaded and built nearby. In these early years, the settlers were primarily ranchers, but another important activity was lumbering. The trails in the area, some of which eventually became roads, were built by tie hacks, who hauled their ties [ clarification needed ] lumber down to what is now Tie Siding, Wyoming, where they were used in building the transcontinental railroad.