Kentucky Mountain Gelding
Name
Gus
Breed
Kentucky Mountain
Gender
Gelding
Color
Red Roan
Temperament
2 (1 - calm; 10 - spirited)
Registry
NA
Reg Number
NA
Height
15.1 hh
Foal Date
May, 2018
Country
United States
Views/Searches
12/435
Ad Status
Available
Price
Contact
Kentucky Mountain Gelding for Sale in Park City, KY
Gus is a 6-year-old Ky mountain saddle horse. I have all the paperwork to register him as a Kentucky mountain saddle horse; he is 15.1, red roan, a great trail horse. He has a great personality and loves to be brushed and loved on. He will love you back. His is so many things. Most notably, he is loving, affectionate, kind, dependable, respectful, and safe. Gus has a good gait and will go anywhere you ask him to Gus is a good hunting horse, I have been using him this winter for squirrel hunting. He does well with the dogs is great with crossing
Ditches, Creeks, steep hills up and down, mud, crosses water and bridges, steps easily over down trees, is also traffic safe. You can shoot a shotgun while on his back when hunting, and he doesn’t get excited. You can drag things with him. He has ridden hundreds of miles on trails and hunting. Loads and unloads with ease stands good for the Ferrier, and side passes over to pick you up from anything. Lays down on command, Gus will ride with a saddle and bridle, bridleless, bareback with a halter. Fill free to call to ride Gus for yourself.
We require payment in full the next business day after sale.
OPEN BIDDING ON THEHORSEBAY.COM ENDS ON 3/26 @ 3:15 PM CT. More information is available on the website, including an UTD vet inspection, Coggins, video, images, and the owner's contact information to ask questions, request information, or make arrangements to come to visit.
About Park City, KY
In the early 19th century, the site of the present city was the junction of the Louisville and Nashville Pike with spur roads to Glasgow and Bardstown. By 1827, a stagecoach relay station had developed into a settlement with a post office named Three Forks. The postmaster William Bell owned a 1,500-acre (610 ha) plantation nearby, with a prominent tavern, which led to the community also being known as Bell's Station. In 1859, the mainline of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad reached the plantation, and in 1863 the Glasgow spur was completed. The community was then known as Glasgow Junction after the L&N Depot, which also served as the junction between the mainline and the Mammoth Cave Railroad.