Paint Horses for Sale in Live Oak CA, Sacramento CA

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Paint Stallion
Stormy has a wonderful disposition and loves people. He would make a great..
Live Oak, California
Sorrel
Paint
Stallion
-
Live Oak, CA
CA
$4,000
Paint Mare
SERIOUS INQUIRIES ONLY PLEASE - BUCKSKIN TOBIANO Want to show? Get her in ..
Sacramento, California
Buckskin
Paint
Mare
-
Sacramento, CA
CA
$3,000
Paint Mare
Missi is a beautiful 8 year old mare. She is a high energy horse, and is ..
Yuba City, California
Black Overo
Paint
Mare
-
Yuba City, CA
CA
$1,800
Paint Mare
I just bought this filly in aug but my divorce is going to force me to sel..
Auburn, California
Tobiano
Paint
Mare
-
Auburn, CA
CA
$2,700
Paint Mare
SIRE HAS ROM's IN REINING AND BARREL RACING, POINTS IN HALTER, POLE PENDIN..
Palermo, California
Black
Paint
Mare
-
Palermo, CA
CA
$3,800
Paint Stallion
This colt is a real looker. Has a great temperment and is willing to learn..
Auburn, California
Bay
Paint
Stallion
-
Auburn, CA
CA
$4,500
Paint Mare
Kahlua is a 4- year - old Buckskin overo mare. She was imprinted at birth ..
Loma Rica, California
Buckskin
Paint
Mare
-
Loma Rica, CA
CA
$1,500

About Yuba City, CA

The Maidu people were settled in the region when they were first encountered by Spanish and Mexican scouting expeditions in the early 18th century. One version of the origin of the name "Yuba" is that during one of these expeditions, wild grapes were seen growing by a river, and so it was named "Uba", a variant spelling of the Spanish word uva (grape). The Mexican government granted a large expanse of land which included the area in which Yuba City is situated to John Sutter, the same John Sutter upon whose land gold was subsequently discovered in 1848. He sold part of this tract to some enterprising men who wished to establish a town near the confluence of the Yuba River and the Feather River, tributaries of the Sacramento River, with an eye to developing a commercial center catering to the thousands of gold miners headed upstream to the gold fields. At the same time, another town was developing on the eastern bank of the Feather River, the beginnings of what later would become Marysville.