Tennessee Walking Horse
Name
blondie
Breed
Tennessee Walking
Gender
Mare
Color
Palomino
Temperament
1 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
NA
Reg Number
NA
Height
15.1 hh
Foal Date
August, 2007
Country
United States
Views/Searches
732/59,300
Ad Status
—
Price
$4,000
Tennessee Walking Mare for Sale in Bedford, VA
15yr old 15.1hh TWH mare
Blondie has a super nice running walk
A nice slow gait or will open up wide open if you ask her to
She will go as slow or as fast as you ask of her
She does have your typical TWH motor and loves to stroll down the trails
Lopes out in the open and will catch both leads, even has lead changes!
She has been ridden all over by 3 little girls, has rode double and triple
She has been used for lessons in the arena
Has a nice one hand neck rein and rides in a simple O RING
Rides one handed or direct reined
Stands to mount
First one to meet you in the field
She has been extensively trail ridden
Crosses through steep steep ditches, over logs, bridges, through water/ creeks, you name it
Rides out CONFIDENTLY ALONE or in a group
Gets along great with others!
She is 100% traffic safe
There isn’t a thing in the world this girl worries about, she is super Surefooted, honest and brave
Nothing phases her, she’s your been there done that kind that surely knows her job
If your looking for a SAFE SAFE SAFE trail mount to stroll the trails on or even show in the rail/trail classes absolutely look no further!
This is a true baby sitter who still has the get up and go that you want on the trails & safety to take care of any level rider you put on her back in the arena!
100% SOUND
NO VICES
NO MAINTENANCE
UTD on all shots, coggins, worming, feet etc
I bought blondie 2 months ago from a consignment seller. unfortunately, we have to relocate to NYC due to my husbands job and I can not take her with us. Please contact me if you are interested .Videos are avaliable.
About Bedford, VA
Bedford was originally known as Liberty, "named after the Colonial victory over Cornwallis at Yorktown." Founded as a village in 1782, Liberty became Bedford County's seat of government, replacing New London which had become part of the newly formed Campbell County. Liberty became a town in 1839 and in 1890 changed its name to Bedford City. In 1912 Bedford reverted to town status, it resumed city status in 1968, and once more it reverted to a town in 2013. Bedford is home to the National D-Day Memorial (despite the "National" in its name, the memorial is owned and operated by a non-governmental, non-profit, education foundation). The United States Congress warranted that this memorial would be the nation's D-Day Memorial and President Bill Clinton authorized this effort in September 1996.