16hh 2008 Andalusian PRE Mare
Name
Breed
Andalusian
Gender
Mare
Color
Gray
Temperament
3 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
NA
Reg Number
NA
Height
16.0 hh
Foal Date
January, 2008
Country
United States
Views/Searches
2,227/147,480
Ad Status
—
Price
$12,000
Andalusian Mare for Sale in Las Vegas, NV
Introducing Devota LAR. 16hh 2008 Mare.
She was started in jumping, got up to 3'6". She hasn't been worked a lot recently, but that's where I come in. she’s going to work with being more fluid, and respectful under saddle. She’s become spoiled with not working, and she needs a job, and possibly after some additional manners under saddle, we'll correctly get her back into jumping.
Sire: Bolero CLII
Dam: TB Wichita
DOB: May 2008
Gender: Mare
Color: Grey
Height: 16hh
Devota is a solid built mare with a strong, uphill, forward movement. She is quiet on the ground, has excellent manners while lunging, and loves to be turned out with other horses.
Shes registered with Carta de Mundial, and has been shown a few times in jumping. Devota is started under saddle, loves to jump, though she is athletic enough to make nice jumper, dressage, or Doma Vaquero horse. Devota also carries the black gene from her sire and can produce color; she is a heterozygous grey.
Her sire is competing in Pre St. George level Dressage.
Both Parents Imports. Sire from Spain, Dam from Costa Rica.
Attractive mare. Loves to go! preferred advanced rider.
Her current Asking Price: $12,000 obo (listed on ranch website for $15,500) Located in Las Vegas
About Las Vegas, NV
Perhaps the earliest visitors to the Las Vegas area were nomadic Paleo-Indians, who traveled there 10,000 years ago, leaving behind petroglyphs. Anasazi and Paiute tribes followed at least 2,000 years ago. A young Mexican scout named Rafael Rivera is credited as the first non- Native American to encounter the valley, in 1829. Trader Antonio Armijo led a 60-man party along the Spanish Trail to Los Angeles, California in 1829. The area was named Las Vegas, which is Spanish for "the meadows," as it featured abundant wild grasses, as well as the desert spring waters needed by westward travelers.