Horses for Sale near Red Feather Lakes, CO

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Appaloosa - Horse for Sale in Laporte, CO 80535
Gallinicker
If you are looking for a true, all-around style horse GalliNicker is the gu..
Laporte, Colorado
Gray
Appaloosa
Gelding
13
Laporte, CO
CO
Contact
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Fort Collins, CO 80524
Raja
Raja! Raja is a 6-year-old, black, Quarter pony who stands at 14 hands and ..
Fort Collins, Colorado
Black
Quarter Horse
Mare
6
Fort Collins, CO
CO
Contact
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Fort Collins, CO 80526
Austin
Austin is a beautiful dapple grey and white paint mare. She is a 16hh, Perc..
Fort Collins, Colorado
Gray
Quarter Horse
Mare
6
Fort Collins, CO
CO
Contact
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Cheyenne, WY 82007
Barbie
She was raised for a buck writing can't put a saddle on her but she bucks s..
Cheyenne, Wyoming
Brown
Quarter Horse
Mare
8
Cheyenne, WY
WY
$5,000
Arabian - Horse for Sale in Fort Collins, CO 80526
Ginger
Arabian mare, 3 years old, 14.1 Hands. Ginger is spirited yet composed, ver..
Fort Collins, Colorado
Brown
Arabian
Mare
6
Fort Collins, CO
CO
$6,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Fort Collins, CO 80526
Francesca
7 year old paint / quarter horse. Francesca is a very sweet, yet timid proj..
Fort Collins, Colorado
Black
Quarter Horse
Mare
10
Fort Collins, CO
CO
$3,000
Thoroughbred - Horse for Sale in Loveland, CO 80537
Cyrus
Mr. Earl R AKA Cyrus still looking for a half-lease. Cyrus is a 9 year old..
Loveland, Colorado
Gray
Thoroughbred
Gelding
13
Loveland, CO
CO
Contact

About Red Feather Lakes, CO

Other than Native Americans, only occasional hunters and trappers passed through the Red Feather Lakes area until the middle of the 19th century. The first known settler was John Hardin, who built a cabin about 2 miles (3 km) from the current Red Feather Lakes village in 1871. Other settlers, many of them families of Hardin's eleven surviving children, homesteaded and built nearby. In these early years, the settlers were primarily ranchers, but another important activity was lumbering. The trails in the area, some of which eventually became roads, were built by tie hacks, who hauled their ties [ clarification needed ] lumber down to what is now Tie Siding, Wyoming, where they were used in building the transcontinental railroad.