Rock-Solid, All Around, SSH for Sale
Name
Breed
Spotted Saddle
Gender
Stallion
Color
—
Temperament
3 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
NA
Reg Number
NA
Height
15.0 hh
Foal Date
—
Country
United States
Views/Searches
879/170,562
Ad Status
—
Price
$3,500
Spotted Saddle Stallion for Sale in Sylacauga, AL
Outstanding manners on the ground or in the saddle. Loads, Unloads,
Reloads easily, trailers well, stands tied quietly, crossties, clips,
bathes, stands for farrier. He has no vices and is in excellent
condition. He is consistently the same horse every time out. cars /
trucks or buses speeding by, buggies or carts, noisy barking little dogs,
runners, bikers, deer, turkey, deep running creek water, etc does NOT
bother him! He is happy to ride off by himself or with a large crowd.
front, middle or happily bringing up the rear. We have trail ridden him
everywhere. thru water, in the woods, down the road - side, with dogs,
other livestock, 4- wheelers, motorcycles, tractors, opened gaits and more
and he does everything asked of him, EVERY time without exception! NEVER
had to put heels in him, just click to him and go. Stops and turns on
a dime!
Disciplines
About Sylacauga, AL
The first historical account of the area comes from de Soto's chroniclers as he marched south along the east bank of the Coosa River in 1540, encountering the town of Talisi at the edges of the Mississippian-era chiefdoms of Coosa and Tuskaloosa. The inhabitants of the Coosa River Valley were later united as the Creek Indians, whose encounters with the Spanish and French had a significant influence on the history of Sylacauga. Events that occurred between these three groups were partly responsible for the settlement of the village of Chalakagay in 1748 near modern Sylacauga by refugee Shawnee Indians led by Peter Chartier, and Chalakagay was later listed in the French territorial records in 1759 as being a town inhabited by 50 Shawnee Indian warriors. Late in the summer of 1836 all of the Indians remaining in Alabama were taken west by the United States government. The name Sy-la-cau-ga is derived from the Indian words Chalaka-ge which mean "The Place of the Chalaka Tribe".
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