3 Female, Baby, Percheron Horses for Sale

showing results 1 - 3 of 3

?1578390142

price: $1,000

Dory is a Percheron X paint filly coming two

Dory is a big girl and very pretty! Her mom is a Percheron X tb and her dad is a registered APHA black and white. Dory has a big ankle do to an old injury, but she does nice running. It does not bo... SEE MORE DETAILS found on Horseclicks

Corinth, KY, United States


?1577964259

price: $2,000

Flashy Warmblood Filly

2018 warmblood filly dam is a huge bodied 16.1 hand tall percheron sire is a 15.1 hand tall very athletic registered quarter horse. Filly has a good medium build and is getting big. She was 14.2 ha... SEE MORE DETAILS found on Equine Now

Cottage Grove, OR, United States


?1577869067

price: $2,500

Percheron paint possibly in foal

Tricolored Percheron Paint cross with the size and presence of her Percheron side. Exquisite mare and my largest 1 out there at about 17. She has been trained to ride but she hasnt been ridden in s... SEE MORE DETAILS found on Equine Now

Athens, AL, United States



More information on Percheron

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The Percheron is a breed of draft horses that originated in the Perche valley in northern France. Percherons are usually gray or black in color. They are well-muscled, and known for their intelligence and willingness to work. Although their exact origins are unknown, the ancestors of the breed were present in the valley by the 17th century. They were originally bred for use as a war horse. Over time, they began to be used for pulling stage coaches, and later for agriculture and hauling heavy goods. In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, Arabian blood was added to the breed. In the late 19th century, exports of Percherons from France to the United States and other countries rose exponentially, and in 1893 the first purely Percheron stud book was created in France.

After going through various incarnations and stud books, the current US Percheron registry was created in 1934. In , the breed was used extensively by the British. In the 1930s, Percherons accounted for 70% of the draft horse population in the United States, but their numbers declined substantially after . However, the population began to recover, and as of 2009, around 2,500 horses are registered annually in the United States alone. Today, the breed is still used extensively for draft work, and in France they are used for food. They have been crossed with several light horse breeds, such as the Criollo, to produce horses for range work and competition. Purebred Percherons are used for forestry work and pulling carriages, as well as under saddle work, including competition in English riding disciplines such as show jumping.

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