American Azteca Horse Intl. Assoc An organization providing registration, promotion, education and advertising of American Azteca horses
Azteca horse - Wikipedia The Azteca is a horse breed from Mexico, with a subtype, called the "American Azteca", found in the United States They are well-muscled horses that may be of any solid color, and the American Azteca may also have Pinto coloration
Azteca Horse Information, Origin, History, Pictures The Azteca Horse is a breed of Mexican horses that were developed by the cowboys from Mexico These horses are muscular, well-built, elegant, and are known for their inborn athleticism
Breed Profile: Azteca Horse - fei. org Azteca horses are friendly and extremely smart, but they can be quite spirited, especially in the early stages of training So, this breed is not recommended for novice riders
Azteca Horse Breed Info Facts Horses with American Paint Horse (APHA) breeding are allowed only in the American Azteca registry However, horses that have had more than 25% Thoroughbred blood in their pedigrees within the past four generations (which is common in many Paints and Quarter Horses) are not allowed to be registered
Breed Profile: Meet the Mexican American Azteca Horse The Azteca is the first breed developed in Mexico and also holds distinguished title of the National Horse of Mexico The traditional Azteca is created by breeding an Andalusian to a Quarter Horse, but the American Azteca variation allows Andalusian Paint crosses
American Azteca Breed Information The Azteca combines both the New and Old World, resulting in a noble, docile, agile proud spectacular horse The breed is very easy to train, and once taught it never forgets
Azteca Horse – International Equine Information The Azteca is a horse breed from Mexico, with a subtype, called the “American Azteca”, found in the United States They are well-muscled horses that may be of any solid color, and the American Azteca may also have Paint coloration
American Azteca - The Official Horse Breeds Standards Guide: The . . . Although its bloodlines continued to be based on the original Azteca of Mexico—a combination of Quarter Horse and Andalusian—the American Azteca breeders also allowed “Quarter Horses with color”—Paint Horses—in their breeding program