Hunter Under Saddle Horses for Sale near Tampa, FL

Post Free Ad
Advanced Search
Arabian - Horse for Sale in Lakeland, FL 33801-95
Mai Tai
Talented Arabian 14.2h DOB: 2012 Ty is a wonderfully talented gelding with ..
Lakeland, Florida
Chestnut
Arabian
Gelding
12
Lakeland, FL
FL
$10,000
Fjord - Horse for Sale in Plant City, FL 33565
Rio
Absolutely beautiful fjord/Mongolian cross (unregistered) available for con..
Plant City, Florida
Buckskin
Fjord
Gelding
10
Plant City, FL
FL
$25,000
Quarter Horse - Horse for Sale in Bradenton, FL 34251
AL Be Your Detail
Beautifully bred for performance and mind which she exemplifies. Stunning v..
Bradenton, Florida
Bay
Quarter Horse
Mare
10
Bradenton, FL
FL
Contact
Paint Mare
Abby is her name. Apha Reg. Rides beginners and quietly as well as hack, h..
Floral City, Florida
Red Roan
Paint
Mare
-
Floral City, FL
FL
$2,500
Quarter Horse Mare
15. 2 mare, wonderful natural headset. flowing trot. will be wonderfull e..
Pinellas Park, Florida
Black
Quarter Horse
Mare
-
Pinellas Park, FL
FL
$4,000
Paint Stallion
This gelding has a long sweepy trot, soft slow lope and natural head set t..
Lutz, Florida
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Lutz, FL
FL
$6,500
Welsh Pony Mare
Bayli is a great family pony! She is very sweet and willing, UTD with no v..
Odessa, Florida
Bay
Welsh Pony
Mare
-
Odessa, FL
FL
$10,000
1

About Tampa, FL

When the pioneer community living near the US Army outpost of Fort Brooke was incorporated in 1849, it was called "Tampa Town", and the name was shortened to simply "Tampa" in 1855. The earliest instance of the name "Tampa", in the form "Tanpa", appears in the memoirs of Hernando de Escalante Fontaneda, who spent 17 years as a captive of the Calusa and traveled through much of peninsular Florida. He described Tanpa as an important Calusa town to the north of the Calusa domain, possibly under another chief. Archaeologist Jerald Milanich places the town of Tanpa at the mouth of Charlotte Harbor. The entrances to Tampa Bay and Charlotte Harbor are obscured by barrier islands, and their locations, and the names applied to them, were a source of confusion to explorers, surveyors and map-makers from the 16th century though the 18th century.