Roping Horses for Sale near Anza, CA

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Riverside, CA 92509
Flo Jo
6 year old Mare Grade Dark Bay (Almost Black) Rides good. Been sitting up...
Riverside, California
Bay
Quarter Horse
Mare
9
Riverside, CA
CA
$7,500
Paint - Horse for Sale in Menifee, CA
Paint Mare
Shanna is a looker! A flashy beautiful big - boned mare usable for almost ..
Menifee, California
Paint
Mare
-
Menifee, CA
CA
$500
Paint Stallion
12 year old 15. 1 hands, well trained buckskin gelding, been hazed off of ..
Romoland, California
Buckskin
Paint
Stallion
-
Romoland, CA
CA
$3,500
Quarter Horse Stallion
This horse is awesome! He is big beatiful and really broke and only 7! He ..
Murrieta, California
Buckskin
Quarter Horse
Stallion
-
Murrieta, CA
CA
$6,800
Quarter Horse Mare
Beautiful Exceptionally Race bred QH Palomino mare w / Palomino Paint colt ..
San Jacinto, California
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
San Jacinto, CA
CA
$5,000
Paint Stallion
Super sweet and athletic. Could do anything. Bred to run or work cows! Cute..
Riverside, California
Bay
Paint
Stallion
-
Riverside, CA
CA
$3,500
Paint Mare
Flashy 2 year old black bay and white overo Paint filly with stunning blue ..
Homeland, California
Bay
Paint
Mare
-
Homeland, CA
CA
$3,000
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About Anza, CA

It is estimated that the Cahuilla aboriginal tribes inhabited an area including what is today the Anza Valley more than two thousand years ago and encountered Europeans only as late as 1774, when a Spanish expedition in search of an overland route from Sonora to Alta California made its way from Tubac, Sonora through the valley to Monterey, Alta California. Explorer Juan Bautista de Anza first passed through the valley on March 16, 1774, and again on December 27, 1775. De Anza originally named the valley "San Carlos"; it was renamed in his honor from Cahuilla Valley to Anza Valley on September 16, 1926. Up until about 1580 the area was in the proximity of a larger body of inland water known as Lake Cahuilla, but that inland lake larger than the current Salton Sea, which occupies a portion of its former location, evaporated, thus increasing the desert character of the Anza Valley. These climatic and cultural factors can be seen as having exercised a unique influence on the early European settlers of the Anza Valley.