Monday, May 30, 2016

Got my fix for another year


Canada Geese on the pond at Trappe Farm ...

Horse show at Fox Chase Farm...
 The weather was perfect, if a little on the warm side. The horses were beautiful. The farms were green and welcoming. The people were friendly. The food was out of this world. What else could you ask for from a weekend in Virginia's Hunt Country?

Middleburg's annual Stable Tour never disappoints, and this year was no exception. It's hard to leave the shaded hospitality of the old plantation, with its charming array of guests and delightful hosts, to trek out into a steamy Virginia day, but we three did it: We left after breakfast, tired ourselves out following the tour trail, ate more often than we needed to, and ended up back at Welbourne in time to join the other guests on the front porch for the cocktail hour -- which began at 6:30 and ended somewhere around midnight. 

Two perfect days. It was worth the drive through a nasty rainstorm coming home. 

dinner at Girasole in The Plains...

Welbourne



capturing history at Welbourne ...
The Piedmont Hounds come to visit ...

Monday, May 23, 2016

Virginia calls, and I must go


WELBOURNE, LOUDOUN COUNTY, VA.jpg

It has been 20 years, exactly, since I last saw Welbourne. (I almost wrote: "Last night, I dreamt I went to Welbourne again ...") This weekend, I will be there again.

With two friends, I will drive the Sycamore-shaded sunken road, pull into that graveled drive, alight from the car to the sound of horses nickering softly on the other side of the fence, and walk the worn steps across the old porch, likely stepping over a couple of black-and-tan coon dogs as I do so.

I'm looking forward to seeing Nat and Sherry Morison again, the latest generation of family who own and are tasked with the care of  this 250-year old plantation; for several decades, they've opened it as a bed and breakfast for guests who eschew the chintz-and-comfort type of inn in favor of the real thing.

There's plenty of chintz and comfort around Middleburg, Virginia, but since I discovered Welbourne, about 25 years ago, I've not wanted to be anywhere else.  It was built around 1770 by Peyton Dulany, who founded the first foxhunting club and the oldest horse show in America, the Upperville Colt and Horse Show,  in 1853.

The place was a recurring refuge for Confederate warriors Jeb Stuart and John Mosby as they strove to evade the Union Army during the War Between the States; the battle of Goose Creek took place on its back acreage even as a later Dulany served as colonel of a southern regiment.  Later, notables such as F. Scott Fitzgerald, Thomas Wolfe, and John Foster Dulles were guests. Succeeding generations of the family have stepped into the role of caretaker/owner of the property, taking on willingly or unwillingly the accompanying financial responsibility. Besides the B and B, income is derived from the retired horses -- sometimes as many as 50 -- who are sent to graze their final years in Welbourne's pastures. 

So this week, Welbourne will be the base from which our sightseeing will be launched. We're headed for the Hunt Country Stable Tour.   It's a weekend guided tour of the finest that Middleburg's Horse Country has to offer: farms that feature hunters, jumpers, carriage horses, race horses -- horses of nearly every breed, used in every discipline.  We'll take breaks long enough to eat in the village restaurants and at the Red Fox Tavern, Virginia's oldest "publick house." We'll drive a few back roads and soak in history, history, history all around us. 

By Sunday, we'll be happily heading home, but ever so glad we went!











Monday, May 16, 2016

Who has time to sit and blog?

Wait! I'm here, I'm here.

I know it seems as though I've dropped off the edge of the earth, or lost interest in blogging. The evidence is all there to support that theory.

Truth is, I just forget.

Riding the mower to keep the grass in some kind of check, I take a good look at the house and decide it needs paint/stain. Now. So, no time to sit and blog.

Coming out of the barn, I glance at the roofline of the house and realize I need new shingles. On the garage, too, and the cottage and barn. Now. So, no time to sit and blog.

Ego and the refusal to stop being important to someone keep me going to work a couple of days a week as a wordsmith of sorts. So, no time to sit and blog.

 Everyday life on the farm is taxing on people much younger; while I don't plant or harvest crops, there's a lot of yard to mow, and a nearly-200-year-old house to try to maintain, and a handful of horses to tend to. So, no time to sit and blog.

Especially now that the horse tending has intensified by one.  My little herd of four mares has just been gifted with a young stallion in the adjacent pasture. For sure, no time to blog!

This is True Sensation.  Aptly named, no?  He bears an achingly striking resemblance to my first stallion, Ibn Marengo, except that he's bigger and bolder and, unlike wise 'Rengo, he loves to play. Give him a Ginger Snap and he'll hold onto your coat until you give him another. Open his stall door to let him into his paddock and he leaps out and then spins around, waiting for you to come play.

Play? At my age? But I do. Who can say no to him? Already, I adore him.

I said, a few years ago, that I would no longer plan to keep horses -- that through attrition, my herd would be reduced to nothing in a few years. I was too old for this, I said.

Man makes plans and God laughs.

"Tru" found himself in a position, a few weeks ago, where he needed a home. Now.  Apparently, I needed another stallion.

It's going to work out.  But probably for sure now, no time to sit and blog.