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Aunt Esther Restores Her Fabulous Stable

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  • Aunt Esther Restores Her Fabulous Stable

    http://www.mercurynews.com/breaking-...nclick_check=1

    Actually, an interesting article/video on the restoration of the 1905 Folger stable.

    And, they take boarders!
    Last edited by claire; Sep. 12, 2010, 10:20 AM. Reason: bad link

  • #2
    The link doesn't quite work. It goes to the Mercury News home page. Would be interesting to see this historic stable.

    P.
    A Wandering Albertan - NEW Africa travel blog!

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    • #3
      http://www.mercurynews.com/breaking-...nclick_check=1 - googled it, there's a video too! Am watching it now, cool!
      "Choose to chance the rapids, and dare to dance the tides" - Garth Brooks
      "With your permission, dear, I'll take my fences one at a time" - Maggie Smith, Downton Abbey

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      • Original Poster

        #4
        Event4. Thanks! I corrected the link.

        It is cool isn't it? I wonder what the facility is like for boarding?

        Pastures/paddocks, riding rings, any trails for riding on the property?

        Comment


        • #5
          What's Aunt Esther's connection to this?

          I grew up there and saw various restorations of both the Folger Stable (Wunderlich Park) and Leland Stanford's barn at Stanford University. The most recent ones aren't the only ones that happened. In fact, Bill Lane and Sara Saxe formed the first partnership that did the most work to restore the main Stanford barn. Their contribution shouldn't be forgotten.

          Both were beautifully designed and built originally. It tells you that what horses needed in the 19th and early-20th centuries are the same thing they need now. The ventilation in the Stanford barn is fabulous.

          The Wunderlich barns was smaller, tighter and darker in the stall section because it sits at the base of a hill. But it has a roofed over, cobbled court yard of sorts that offered great spaces for tacking up, harnessing horses and bathing.

          What a privilege to have been in these old barns! Those wealthy "Gilded Age" horsemen knew what they were doing and spared no expense.
          The armchair saddler
          Politically Pro-Cat

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          • #6
            My computer security program doesn't like that site.
            It tells me the certificate is ok, but the name doesn't match the site's name on the certificate, so it is suspect.

            Comment


            • #7
              I believe that the reference to Aunt Esther is that the Folger stables are quite similar to her own.
              Dee
              Founder of the I LOFF my worrywart TB clique!
              Official member of the "I Sing Silly Songs to My Animals!" Clique
              http://wilddiamondintherough.blogspot.ca/

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              • #8
                oh I thought it was she spent $3,000,000 on hers

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by clanter View Post
                  oh I thought it was she spent $3,000,000 on hers
                  That was what she spent to bring it up to an appropriate standard. One must consider the need for period fittings, historical accuracy et al.
                  We would never speculate on the cost of the "extras", such as the stained glass windows and cupola, the authentic gilt trim on metal work, or the hand-forged blanket bars either.
                  Founder of the I LOFF my worrywart TB clique!
                  Official member of the "I Sing Silly Songs to My Animals!" Clique
                  http://wilddiamondintherough.blogspot.ca/

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                  • #10
                    I've seen this barn and am sooo glad that they restored it. There are a number of amazing historic barns in the Woodside area. The Los Altos Hounds used to do a self-guided tour of local historic barns --- if they still do, it's a lot of fun.

                    It sounds like the contractor was a good guy who took the money and really tried to make it go far. Thanks for posting this story.

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                    • #11
                      It looks so cool from the video/description! I love old barns, houses...well pretty much old anything . They're currently digging up Old College at my university to renovate it and they've found so many artifacts they've had to turn it into an archaeological dig. Very very cool! Not HR but anyway...
                      "Choose to chance the rapids, and dare to dance the tides" - Garth Brooks
                      "With your permission, dear, I'll take my fences one at a time" - Maggie Smith, Downton Abbey

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        That's gorgeous...

                        My friend manages the carriage house and barn at the Wethersfield Estate downstate... the barns there are from 1937 and gorgeous. There are Hackney horses there now and their stalls are cleaner, larger and prettier than any apartment I lived in during college years. d; The carriage museum is super cool, too... http://www.wethersfieldgarden.org/ww...age_House.html
                        "Remain relentlessly cheerful."

                        Graphite/Pastel Portraits

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Watermark Farm View Post
                          I've seen this barn and am sooo glad that they restored it. There are a number of amazing historic barns in the Woodside area. The Los Altos Hounds used to do a self-guided tour of local historic barns --- if they still do, it's a lot of fun.
                          Yes, the Los Altos Hounds Barn Tour is a good time. There is some barn in Woodside that has an octagonal washrack with a hose that comes out of a pipe that rotates at the center of the ceiling. Victorian catalogues of barn appointments had similar.

                          The PITA of a horse stepping on a hose is a very old problem!
                          The armchair saddler
                          Politically Pro-Cat

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