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Trail horse that needs a job! Only selling because he is his best when he has 2-3 days of consistent work a week and I don\'t have the time with 2 coming 3 year olds to break and a standard 50 hour work week. With all the ambition and the stocky build/booty for days I have had several people comment he would make a good rope/barrel horse, but that\'s not my gig so that\'s for you to decide if it\'s yours.rnBasics- currently shod on an 8 week schedule, UTD on vaccines, wormed regularly, currently stands in a mixed herd somewhere in the middle of the pecking order that is pasture kept. AQHA papers will transfer to buyer.rnArena/basic training summary: He has all 3 gaits, backs up well, and is working on a side pass (I\'d grade it a B: you can get it, but it\'s not fancy) His neck rein is about the same: he definitely has it, but for a sharp duck around a tree you may need to throw in some direct rein. Moves off your leg nicely. Stops well. Most of our limited round pen time this summer was spent balancing circles and collecting the trot. Again, he does a good job for the limited time I spend in a pen, but it isn\'t push button collection. He will lunge on a line or free in a round pen. Flexes to both sides. Rides in a snaffle.rnAs for trail he has done just about everything: creeks, bridges, logs, dogs, atvs, traffic, mud don\'t phase him. Goes up and down steep hills and deer paths fine. I have also taken him on some obstacle course objects such as the tractor tire tower and various step ups and he did fine with that. We just came back from a week at the Wild Dog fall ride in KY, which if you are familiar are some pretty rough trails with some nasty steep mountain paths (find them on facebook for sample videos). The more technical the trail the better I think he performs. Picked a duster up off the fence and rode around in it before we left and never batted an eye. Has carried saddle bags front and back. He will stand tied to the trailer for hours, and when we haul overnight we use the Portable Corral PVC panels, which he does fine with. I don\'t trail ride alone so I have no clue how he would do solo. Groups 2-15 he does all the time, groups 20+ we have done but not as much. Has the power to go ALL Day Long.rnBehavior: good for farrier (shod all 4) and vet. loads on a trailer fine (we have only ever owned step-up trailers, so I don\'t know how he\'d feel about a ramp). Fly spray and bathes fine. I would class him as an intermediate and up ride, mainly because of the need for the schedule mentioned in the beginning. He is calmer and just more fun if he works consistently. Let him sit for 3 weeks and drop him in a herd of 25 other horses for a group ride and he will be snorty and prancy the first hour and a beginner isn\'t going to have fun. That said he\'s never bucked with me or refused to go somewhere.
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