WRITTEN ON September 22nd, 2008 BY admin AND STORED IN Other - Pets

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arabian horses
baddrose268 asked:


I wanna buy an arabian horse for my older brother.

9 Responses to “Aside from Egypt where else can I buy an arabian horse and how do I go about sending it to Nevada?”

 
Jeep Driver wrote on September 24th, 2008 12:27 pm :

I am positive you will be able to buy one in Nevada. They are all over the USA

dph wrote on September 24th, 2008 8:47 pm :

shows the breeders in the United States.

??hapichik192?? wrote on September 25th, 2008 7:13 am :

Arabian horses are EVERYWHERE. In every state you can find them, there are tons of farms devoted to just raising them. Look around on the internet or a tack shop, they are super popular. For good reason, they are great horses.

wileewill wrote on September 27th, 2008 4:17 am :

not as rare as you think look around!!

nique_que wrote on September 29th, 2008 6:27 pm :

arabians are all over, if you are looking for a specific bloodline you can search through the arabian registries. if not you could check out or . they are both good horse searches.

FancyCowgirl17 wrote on September 30th, 2008 7:30 am :

You can buy an arabian horse mostly anywhere and you can probally even find some in nevada

Sassy B wrote on October 1st, 2008 1:30 am :

you could either buy a horse from your state or if you find a horse that you really like in another state you can search online for horse transporters. There are a lot of them out there.

nokhada5 wrote on October 2nd, 2008 11:12 pm :

They do breed them in the US.

link is to a arabian breeder in Nevada. Shipping would be cheaper if you bought the horse in the US.

DancesWithHorses wrote on October 5th, 2008 3:37 pm :

Everyone here is right. Arabians are in every state in the country (presumably even Alaska and Hawai’i).

However, I do have one cautionary note: don’t buy a horse for someone else. A horse is not a car. What if their personalities clash? What if an Arabian is too much for him? What if turns out he didn’t want a horse after all? What if he wanted specific bloodlines (which the horse you bought didn’t have)? Or a horse with specific training? Or one that wasn’t trained at all? Or one that had specific prospects — does he want to do dressage? Or trail riding? Or something else? A horse that you select for dressage would be very different from one you would select for western pleasure. A horse can live for more than 30 years. This is not a decision to make lightly.

And it is entirely unfair to the horse, a living being, to just say, “well, we’ll just sell it if it isn’t what my brother wants.” Plus, it often isn’t that easy.

Please, don’t do this. Give him the money. Go horse shopping with him (that can be a lot of fun!). Buy him horse books. Whatever. But do NOT make this huge decision FOR him.