Trail Horses for Sale near Blacksburg, VA

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Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Buchanan, VA 24066
MacMack
Good cool tempered horse just don’t have time to ride him anymore always wa..
Buchanan, Virginia
Palomino
Quarter Horse
Gelding
18
Buchanan, VA
VA
$4,000
Mule - Horse for Sale in Boones Mill, VA 24065-18
Griff
Great Trail Mule..Solid on trails, easy to catch in feild,stand for Vet and..
Boones Mill, Virginia
Red Dun
Mule
Gelding
17
Boones Mill, VA
VA
$5,000
Tennessee Walking - Horse for Sale in Roanoke, VA 24013
Apache
This horse is a paint - black on white. Web site does not allow "paint..
Roanoke, Virginia
White
Tennessee Walking
Gelding
11
Roanoke, VA
VA
Sold
Paso Fino - Horse for Sale in Buchanan, VA 24066
Lily
14hh dappled grey Paso Fino mare. Experienced in trail and overnight campin..
Buchanan, Virginia
Gray
Paso Fino
Mare
23
Buchanan, VA
VA
Sold
Any
I am looking for a new addition to our family a friesian mare or gelding mu..
Meadows Of Dan, Virginia
Black
Friesian
Mare
25
Meadows Of Dan, VA
VA
Contact
Kentucky Mountain Mare
Woodwind Hermione is a nicely dappled palomino. She is a perfect size with ..
Wytheville, Virginia
Palomino
Kentucky Mountain
Mare
-
Wytheville, VA
VA
$4,000
Kentucky Mountain Mare
Flashy mover, this big 4 year old mare is pretty enough for a show prospec..
Wytheville, Virginia
Buckskin
Kentucky Mountain
Mare
-
Wytheville, VA
VA
$4,500

About Blacksburg, VA

In the mid-1600s, English colonists were still uncertain of what lay beyond the Allegheny Mountains, whose topography and possession by native inhabitants, Tutelo-speaking tribes, were a barrier to expanded settlement by the Colony of Virginia. Abraham Wood, who commanded Fort Henry on the frontier (now the site of Petersburg, Virginia), and operated an Indian trading post nearby, organized several expeditions to explore farther west. A passage over the ridge was finally found in 1671 when explorers Batts and Fallam, sent by Wood, reached the present-day location of Blacksburg, Virginia. Their expedition followed Stroubles Creek, through the current locations of the town and campus of Virginia Tech, to what they named Wood's River. They reported the area as inhabited by the Monacan and Moneton, Siouan-speaking groups, but the Virginia colonial legislature had authorized Wood to claim it.