Arabian Horses for Sale near Burnsville, MN

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Arabian - Horse for Sale in Baldwin, WI 54002
Tulsa
Tulsa is a 2009 gelding with a big personality! I am selling (open to trade..
Baldwin, Wisconsin
Chestnut
Arabian
Gelding
16
Baldwin, WI
WI
$2,000
Arabian Mare
Black mare with a star and a white sock. Very well mannered. Niga / Ferzo..
Welch, Minnesota
Black
Arabian
Mare
-
Welch, MN
MN
$1,500
Arabian Stallion
Black is a stunning black eqyptian arabian. He has a beautiful face with a..
Prior Lake, Minnesota
Black
Arabian
Stallion
-
Prior Lake, MN
MN
$500
Arabian Stallion
we call him czar. he is a beautiful registered purebred egyptian arabian. ..
Inver Grove Heights, Minnesota
Bay
Arabian
Stallion
-
Inver Grove Heights, MN
MN
$200
Arabian Mare
Lady is a 19 year old mare. She knows all WSCA games. is an awesome trail ..
Woodbury, Minnesota
White
Arabian
Mare
-
Woodbury, MN
MN
$3,500
Arabian Mare
Milly Two Thousand is a pretty bay Arabian Mare. She has a very smooth gat..
Rosemount, Minnesota
Bay
Arabian
Mare
-
Rosemount, MN
MN
$2,000
Arabian Mare
This mare has a lot of potential to do well at regional and national levels..
Buffalo, Minnesota
Chestnut
Arabian
Mare
-
Buffalo, MN
MN
$10,000
1

About Burnsville, MN

The Mdewakanton Dakota were the earliest inhabitants who came through the Minnesota River, following water fowl and game animals. As part of the greater migration of the Mdewakanton from their ancestral area around Mille Lacs Lake to the river confluence of the Minnesota and Mississippi Rivers, Chief Black Dog, around 1750, established his band at a permanent village at the isthmus between Black Dog Lake (from which is named after him) and the Minnesota River, near the present site of the Black Dog Power Plant. The permanent camp was reported by early settlers as being inhabited by over 250 Dakota. At the south end of Burnsville, Crystal Lake, recorded as "Minne Elk" was utilized for abundant fish, leisure and burial. It was also a gathering spot where Dakota watched deer or bucks drink at the lake from the top of Buck Hill, in which was named by early settlers who witnessed this activity.