Paso Fino Horses for Sale near Miami Gardens, FL

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Paso Fino - Horse for Sale in Homestead, FL 33033
Paso Fino Mare
Very Friendly paso fino quater horse. We have two the mother and the daught..
Homestead, Florida
Brown
Paso Fino
Mare
10
Homestead, FL
FL
$1,000
Paso Fino - Horse for Sale in Fort Lauderdale, FL 33310
Paso Fino
Make an Offer Today*** Paso Fino *Castrated ( Gelding ) for Sale on Davie, ..
Fort Lauderdale, Florida
Chestnut
Paso Fino
15
Fort Lauderdale, FL
FL
$3,000
Paso Fino Stallion
Pro is a beautiful, 10 year old, bay Paso Fino gelding which ive owned sin..
Homestead, Florida
Bay
Paso Fino
Stallion
-
Homestead, FL
FL
$3,500
Paso Fino Stallion
cameo is a red line back dun with socks i don't have papers on him but was..
Davie, Florida
Red Dun
Paso Fino
Stallion
-
Davie, FL
FL
$1,500
Paso Fino Stallion
Eclipse del Classico (El Classico son) 6 years old, 2 years with prof. trai..
Miami, Florida
Paso Fino
Stallion
-
Miami, FL
FL
$6,500
Paso Fino Mare
black filly with white off side blaze and 3 white socks. long mane and tail..
Miami, Florida
Black
Paso Fino
Mare
-
Miami, FL
FL
$3,500
Paso Fino Stallion
Absolute beauty, wonderfully well behaved, loves camping, trailrides, learn..
Miami, Florida
Paso Fino
Stallion
-
Miami, FL
FL
$1,000
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About Miami Gardens, FL

In the wake of the construction of I-95 in the late 1960s, many middle- and upper-income African American and West Indian American families migrated from Miami neighborhoods like Liberty City to what became Miami Gardens (also called Carol City , Norland or Norwood) as race-based covenants were outlawed with the Fair Housing Act, and mostly lower income blacks moved into the Liberty City and Little Haiti neighborhoods surrounding Liberty Square and Edison Courts. Miami Gardens was incorporated on May 13, 2003. The city's neighborhoods of Andover, Bunche Park, Carol City, Lake Lucerne, Norland, Opa-locka North, and Scott Lake were previously unincorporated areas within Miami-Dade County. In 2007, Mayor Shirley Gibson said that the city would no longer allow any low-income housing developments; many residents blamed the developments for spreading crime and recreational drugs throughout the city. Around that time, the city's tax revenues dropped to the third-lowest in Miami-Dade County.