Needs a Good Loving Home
Name
Breed
Trakehner
Gender
Stallion
Color
—
Temperament
3 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
NA
Reg Number
NA
Height
16.0 hh
Foal Date
—
Country
United States
Views/Searches
451/26,740
Ad Status
—
Price
Contact
Trakehner Stallion for Sale in Clarksville, TN
I rescued this horse from starvation and treated him for EPM. He now is healthy and needing a good home. He CAN NOT be cantered under saddle. Has placed 1 sts 2 nds and 3 rds in intro dressage (after treatment) would make great pasture pal. He is a beautiful horse, he once was at gram prix level but sadly now can only be ridden at the walk and trot. Can do leg yeilds, haunches in etc. still. Asking eight hundred OBO I am only looking to get what I have spent on vet bills for him. Please help me find him a good home!
Disciplines
About Clarksville, TN
The area now known as Tennessee was first settled by Paleo-Indians nearly 11,000 years ago. The names of the cultural groups that inhabited the area between first settlement and the time of European contact are unknown, but several distinct cultural phases have been named by archaeologists, including Archaic, Woodland, and Mississippian, whose chiefdoms were the cultural predecessors of the Muscogee people who inhabited the Tennessee River Valley prior to Cherokee migration into the river's headwaters. When Spanish explorers first visited Tennessee, led by Hernando de Soto in 1539−43, it was inhabited by tribes of Muscogee and Yuchi people. Possibly because of European diseases devastating the native tribes, which would have left a population vacuum, and also from expanding European settlement in the north, the Cherokee moved south from the area now called Virginia. As European colonists spread into the area, the native populations were forcibly displaced to the south and west, including all Muscogee and Yuchi peoples, the Chickasaw, and Choctaw.