Country Zest & Style Winter 2022 Edition

Page 25

Carry Me BACK

Hold Your Horses, It’s All Mush for the Dogs By Jimmy Hatcher

Your Life is Now

I

think we were talking about the early 1970s.

Chip and Cary Embury were in the horse business at Kentfield Farm, then owned by Glenn and Dixie Nofsinger and later by Caro and Jordan Bentley when I used to board my horses there. Embury decided he wanted to try the sport of sled dog racing, but found the roads around Kentfield far too busy to train his Alaskan Huskies on them. Instead, he proceeded to take them to Crenshaw Road, also known as The Polo Field Road. It runs from Route 50 to Chip Embury running his team at the Ely, Rectortown. His training sled Minnesota “Race of Champions” in January had wheels, since snow was 1981, where they set the course record in the mostly scarce in Virginia. But 7dog Class. In 1981, Embury won the “ISDRA” the brakes only stopped the [International Sled Dog Racing Association] Gold Medal for the 7-dog Class. sled’s wheels, and not the dogs. Embury chose Sunday afternoons on Crenshaw for his training program. One day, his dogs were all hooked up and ready to roll by 2 p.m. Unfortunately, that very same Sunday, Paul Mellon, ex-MFHA of Piedmont Hunt, had invited Billy Wilbur, past master of the Warrenton Hunt and now acting field master of the Piedmont Hunt, and Charles Whitehouse, Master of the Orange County Hunt, to come over for lunch. That would be followed by a pleasure ride, also set to start at 2 p.m., but because the surrounding fields were wet, they set off down Crenshaw Road.

"The ghostly winter silence had given way to the great spring murmur of awakening life.“ — Jack London, book Call of the Wild, 1903 At that time, Mellon owned farms on both sides of Crenshaw. On this particular day, he and his riding pals would go south down Crenshaw. At the same hour, right after lunch, Embury and his sled dogs took off from the opposite direction and headed north. Wilber once said their outing became a small disaster when they trotted around one corner, only to see sled dogs coming toward them at full run. There were no collisions, and no one on horseback was unseated, but the frightened horses reversed themselves and were suddenly off to the races in full panic mode, and also at full gallop. Years later, Wilber recalled that he was thinking at the time that Mellon was going to inflict pure holy hell on Embury. But Wilber, who had almost pulled his horse up, said Mellon galloped by with a smile on his face and shouted, “Faster Billy, they’re catching us.” As for Chip Embury, that Crenshaw Road training surely paid off. The wheels eventually came off his sled, replaced by blade runners, and he and his dogs found their way to Alaska in 1984 and also competed in many major races there and around the country. No horses ever got in their way.

The rolling hills of Virginia’s horse and wine country offer the ideal backdrop to revel in romance. Awaken your culinary senses, indulge in transformative spa treatments and take in the mountain air on a morning horseback ride as you connect with nature, and the one you love.

888.598.6340 SalamanderResort.com

Country ZEST & Style | Winter 2022

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Articles inside

A Letter From Paris: The Wedding Rehearsal From Hell

5min
page 66

PROPERTY Writes - Willwyn Farm: History and Horse Heaven

3min
pages 64-65

At Wakefield, a Scholarship Made All the Difference

3min
page 63

Middleburg Mayor Off to a Great Start

3min
page 62

TIRTHAS-The Thin Places Where Earthly and Divine Meet

2min
pages 60-61

Two Brave Men Honored as Civil Rights Stalwarts

4min
pages 58-59

Tremelo: A New Bar With a Musical Touch

3min
page 56

Hardly the Retiring Type Advocating for Children

4min
page 54

PATH Foundation Paves the Way

3min
page 53

At Cupcakes and Lace, It’s Sew Perfect

3min
page 52

The Potter’s House Making a Comeback

3min
page 51

A FIELD TRIP FOR THE BIRDS

3min
page 50

Profiles in1962 Courage: Integrating Loudoun’s Public Schools

7min
pages 48-49

Vineyard VIEW: Tasting the Wide World of Wine in Leesburg

3min
page 47

Foxcroft Student Just Keeps Zooming Along

3min
page 46

It’s Home Sweet Home for Miss “Issy”

3min
page 44

Country Zest & Style Winter 2022 Edition

3min
page 43

A Field of Dreams for Bernadette Boland

3min
page 42

Montana and Middleburg: A Perfect Fit

4min
page 41

At Home in the Countryside

3min
page 39

It’s Sophie’s Choice toHelp Save the Land

3min
page 38

It’s Family, It’s Horses, It’s Home

3min
page 37

NOBODY HERE BUT US CHICKENS

2min
pages 34-35

New Technology: BRINGS BLACK HISTORY TO LIFE

5min
page 32

Keeping Traditions Alive to a Tea

3min
page 31

A Music Man with the Touch of an Artist

3min
page 30

STUDIO LUXE: A Welcoming Boutique for One and All

4min
page 29

At Hill, It’s The Path

4min
page 28

MODERN FINANCE - Electric Vehicles: Driving Toward the Future

2min
page 27

Leesburg’s Glenfiddich House Has Some History

3min
page 26

CARRY ME BACK: Hold Your Horses, It’s All Mush for the Dogs

3min
page 25

Land Trust of Virginia Had a Very Good Year

3min
page 24

Moonstruck Geologist Played a Vital Role at NASA

3min
page 23

Physical Therapist Mary Wilson Making a Wheel Difference

3min
page 22

CELEBRATIONS

1min
page 20

For the Bowersock Family, A Final Chapter

6min
page 18

A Vintage Shop Blends Wine, Art and Antiques

3min
page 17

Bluewater Market Has Survived and Thrived

3min
page 16

Cup of COFFEE: A New Year, a New Approach

5min
page 14

The Ice Was Nice and Thick in the Mid-1800s

3min
page 12

Crafted With Old World Care

3min
pages 8-9

Young Musicians Will Take Center Stage

3min
page 6

of NOTE - IT’S FABULOUS FEBRUARY

3min
page 4

For Chef Pete, Cruising to a Delicious Destination

3min
page 3

Straight Shooter Teresa Condon Right on Target

4min
pages 10-11
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Country Zest & Style Winter 2022 Edition by Country Zest & Style - Issuu