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Sadly, pastoral places like
Road's End Farm have been succumbing to development at a disconcerting
pace in recent years due to a number of factors, none of which give much
credence to their worth to young people. With their passing have
gone still more of the vestiges of a way of life rooted deeply in the
rhythms of nature and the harmony of living beings.
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Thankfully, serendipity has played a major role in saving
the end of Jackson Hill Road as an open air classroom for girls and horses
to teach one another about the give and take involved in life.
Of course, the people who have personified this good fortune, and without
whose fine efforts, knowledge, and wherewithal the Farm would be but a
memory, deserve special recognition for their mostly unsung contributions.
Only by honoring these generous individuals can one fully appreciate
the unique collaboration of kindred spirits that results in something
so fleeting yet so formative as a young girl's summer camp experience
on a working horse farm.
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The Families
Coaxed into
existence long ago by parents who valued the thought of Bob Woodman teaching
their children more than just horsemanship, the camp has drawn upon the
insight and wisdom of parents ever since. While the Farm is deeded
to the Woodman family, the camp in essence belongs to the families who
have supported and helped define the camp program down through the years
with their camp fees, constructive advice, and encouraging words.
Beginning with the wonderful daughters they have sent to Road's End Farm
and continuing on with their apt referrals of praiseworthy young women
to be on the staff and their candid recommendations to the families of
prospective campers years later, parents have been instrumental in perpetuating
the camp and preserving the Farm.
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People with a soft spot in their hearts for the camp
and for what it has meant to the horse-loving girls who have been a part
of it owe a debt of gratitude to the many parents, grandparents, aunts,
and uncles who have believed in and sustained the Farm since those early
camp days. This brief acknowledgment here along the way is but
a small token of the Woodmans' appreciation for all the families over
all the years who have made Road's End Farm viable for so many girls to
experience and to enjoy.
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The Full-Timers
Differing
from camps that open up each summer after Memorial Day and close up before
Labor Day, Road's End Farm is a year-round endeavor involving continual
maintenance and husbandry tasks. For the most part this work has
fallen squarely on the shoulders of three dedicated people who have been
assisted on a regular or emergency basis by the veterinarian, the farrier,
and the hay man. Whatever success the Farm has enjoyed over the
years must be attributed in large measure to these six forehanded individuals,
whose combined sixteen decades of unstinting service to two generations
of Woodmans could never be adequately compensated.
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Much less prominent but none the less crucial to the
smooth operation of the camp are the countless people employed by the
Farm's many vendors and service providers, who take pride in their workaday
lives and consistently go the extra distance to make certain that Road's
End Farm offers girls and horses the best environment possible.
Since the camp's staff is front and center to receive accolades for its
fine efforts each summer, 'tis only fitting that you should pass by this
heartfelt tribute to all the folks who labor diligently in the background
to keep the Farm ready for each camp season and each camper.
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