Family Safe Buckskin
Name
Crown
Breed
Quarter Horse
Gender
Gelding
Color
Buckskin
Temperament
1 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
NA
Reg Number
NA
Height
15.1 hh
Foal Date
January, 2012
Country
United States
Views/Searches
777/109,863
Ad Status
—
Price
$3,500
Quarter Horse Gelding for Sale in Congress, AZ
ONLINE AUCTION
Place your bid at PlatinumEquineAuction dot com
Auction ends November 27th
$3500 Starting bid
Gorgeous, sound and gentle buckskin gelding that is 10 years old and stands 15.1 with a beautiful head and a big soft eye. Amazing color, balanced conformation, and great disposition. When slick in the summer Crown’s coat takes on a beautiful, dappled buckskin color. Crown is a very gentle gelding and an excellent trail horse. He will ride out safely alone or travel easily down the trail in a group. He is the perfect size for any rider and will calmly stand at the mounting block or “curbside” to get on. Great feet, bone, and plenty of stamina to carry a larger rider all day long. Crown is very used to covering country and crossing obstacles. He has an easy-going demeanor, and is seasoned with traffic, cow dogs, machinery and blowing tarps. We have ridden him from the Continental Divide mountains in Montana to the Arizona desert. Crown is also an exceptional pack horse with the size and stamina to pack heavy loads all day in rough country. He has been used extensively to pack in the rugged Salmon-Challis National Forest. Crown gets along great when turned out in a corral or pasture with other horses. Easy to catch and excellent ground manners. Handsome, kind and quiet gelding that you will be proud to own. UTD on worming and all vaccinations June 1, 2022, new shoes all around on October 15, 2022 and stood great for the farrier. FMI call 208-880-0325.
ONLINE AUCTION
Place your bid at PlatinumEquineAuction dot com
Auction ends November 27th
$3500 Starting bid
Disciplines
About Congress, AZ
Gold was discovered at the Congress Mine in 1884. By 1893, the Santa Fe, Prescott and Phoenix Railway passed within three miles of the mine, at Congress Junction. Congress boomed, and remained prosperous until the mid-1930s, when the mines closed. Total gold production at the Congress Mine exceeded $8 million, at the then-current price of $20.67 per ounce — or about $400 million, at the 2007 price. The post office moved to Congress Junction in 1938, where it remains.