The Most Popular Horse Breeds Of 2019
Equestrian Advice & Guides General Equestrian
Build your business profile for FREE and expose your services to thousands of potential clients!
Create my profile now!We no longer have Bella's pasture-mates. So, we have cut our asking price, hoping to get her to a new home more quickly. She has produced healthy foals for us every time she was bred. She is a very good broodmare. She delivered on her own, in the pasture each time, without complications. Bella produced plenty of milk for her foals and took good care of them through to their weaning. She is a bit elusive, but she halters and leads well once you have something on her neck. She was purchased from a neighbor, who raced her in gaited/pacing races. She has a bit of a distrustful attitude. Once you put your lead rope on her neck, she remembers her training. I have tied her in the barn and groomed and saddled her, just to see how she acted. She didn't display any negative habits the whole time after I haltered her. I have never ridden her (I am in my sixties and my mother has forbidden me to ride anymore - lol). And I had already stopped my horse training activities before we got Bella. So, while we have had her, she has been strictly a broodmare. Our program has ended and all of Bella's companions are gone. That's why I've lowered her price.
Sire Tennessee Walker | Dam Tennessee Walker |