Summer Times 2022

Page 99

Blowing Rock Charity Horse Show BY DAVID ROGERS

F

ew, if any, special events have as significant of an economic impact in the High Country as the Blowing Rock Charity Horse Show has on Blowing Rock. Estimated at approximately $8 million every year during those special three weeks in June, July and early August, according to an Appalachian State University impact study more than 10 years ago, the Charity Horse Show means business to the region, especially when it comes to lodging, dining, and shopping. That’s because the historic show attracts some of top riders not just from North Carolina and the South, but from many other parts of the U.S. Participants regularly come from North Carolina, Tennessee, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida, Virginia, New York, California, Texas, and other states. And it has been doing it for more than a century, ultimately descending from a gymkhana in the late 19th century, at a space behind what is now the Green Park Inn. In 1897, one newspaper described the event as “... largely consisting of games on horseback and more of an equine fashion show for the amusement of hotel guests.” In 1923, L.M. Tate held his first Blowing Rock Horse Show, still at a venue near the Green Park Hotel. It grew as an official sporting event, but retained its reputation as a “fun show.” By the mid-1920s, Thomas Broyhill had purchased about 1,000 acres of land in the Mayview section of Blowing Rock and the horse show moved to a small, little-used golf course there. Broyhill’s objective was to make the horse show an attraction for guests of the famous Mayview Manor Hotel. The Blowing Rock Charity Horse Show Association was formed in the early 1930s, and in 1934, Broyhill sold what was known as the “horse show grounds” to the association for $1. During the years since, the Blowing Rock Charity Horse Show grew and expanded, even while keeping its nonprofit organizational model. As the longest, continuous SUMMER TIMES 2022

PHOTO COURTESY OF BLOWING ROCK EQUESTRIAN PRESERVE Liza Boyd of Camden, S.C. rides Carento to the 2021 Blowing Rock Charity Horse Show’s Hunter Derby championship at the Blowing Rock Equestrian Preserve.

running equestrian event in the U.S., it survived not only the Great Depression, but subsequent recessions, too, as well as two world wars and other regional, national, and even international crises. Today, the Blowing Rock Charity Horse Show features a Saddlebred competition in June and then two consecutive weeks of Hunter/Jumper events, at times drawing more than 500 horses to compete and thousands of owners, riders, trainers, support staff, and their families. The first show features Saddlebreds, with roadster, hackney harness, pleasure, equitation, academy and miscellaneous classes. It will be June 9-12, 2022. Altogether, there are 158 competitive classes planned for these four days, with thousands of dollars in prize money on the line. With increased prize money, the Hunter/ Jumper Division will be two full weeks of excitement and spectacle. It seems to break

BLOWING ROCK CHARITY HORSESHOW Saddlebred Division

June 9-11 at L.M. Tate Showgrounds on the Blowing Rock Equestrian Preserve, 1500 Laurel Lane, Blowing Rock, N.C.

Hunter-Jumper I Division

July 26-July 31 at L.M. Tate Showgrounds on the Blowing Rock Equestrian Preserve, 1500 Laurel Lane, Blowing Rock, N.C. For times, pricing and other details, visit www.brchs.org. records for the number of entries, participants and spectators every year. Previous shows have seen upwards of 500 horses competing for thousands of dollars, as well as bragging rights for a year. Week No. 1 of the Hunter Jumpers in 2022 is July 25-31, then they do it all over again in Week No. 2, Aug. 3-7. For more information, visit www.brchs.org.

FILE PHOTO A hunter-class horse jumps over an obstacle during the Blowing Rock Charity Horse Show. 99


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Farmers Market

6min
pages 148-160

Blowing Rock Art and History Museum

3min
pages 146-147

Ashe County Arts Council

2min
pages 142-143

Appalachian Theatre

1min
pages 144-145

Lees-McRae Summer Theatre

2min
page 141

Ensemble Stage

2min
page 140

Arts in the High Country

3min
pages 138-139

A place for artists to explore

13min
pages 130-137

General Stores

9min
pages 126-129

Watauga Lake

9min
pages 104-109

Fishing

5min
pages 100-103

Equine Experiences

2min
pages 96-98

Blowing Rock Horse Show

3min
page 99

Motorcycling

2min
pages 92-95

Hang Gliding

5min
pages 60-61

Mountain Biking

3min
pages 90-91

Cycling

3min
pages 88-89

Hiking

13min
pages 84-87

Rock Climbing

5min
pages 58-59

Zip lines

4min
pages 54-57

Christmas in July

0
pages 52-53

Summer festivals

14min
pages 46-51

Grandfather Mountain

4min
pages 32-35

Things to do in the High Country

6min
pages 40-43

High Country attractions

7min
pages 36-39

Keeping the culture in Boone

3min
pages 44-45

Blue Ridge Parkway

7min
pages 26-29

High Country Host

3min
pages 12-15

Mystery Hill

2min
pages 30-31

Chambers of Commerce

2min
pages 8-11
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