Read the latest Ranch newsletter
Transcription
Read the latest Ranch newsletter
THE VI EW F ROM CATALOOCHEE Volume 16, Number 2 CATALOOCHEE RANCH CELEBRATES 76 YEARS Summer 2010 A Change in the Dance Step by Mary Coker ~ President and General Manager ast spring, as the new president and general manager of Cataloochee Ranch, I dove into the intricacies that make this place tick and discovered the myriad of tasks that needed to be completed to ensure we deliver our anticipated exceptional hospitality throughout the season. As the staff returned from their long winter vacation I looked to them at every step to ensure an excellent guest experience. Mary’s daughter Alexia Our knowledgeable and dedicated staff consists of Trull gets an early brief- Liz in the front office, who keeps reservations straight, ing on ranch duties. answers a million questions a day and does things that I don’t even know about. Patsy, head cook and kitchen manager, creates the menus and cooks the dinners we all enjoy. She knows how to pick the finest meats and where to find the best local fresh fruits, vegetables and fish and always has plenty on hand should a dozen people call at the last minute to make a reservation. Jasper, head housekeeper, makes sure we maintain an inspection record of 100%. Red, head of maintenance, knows the complicated water system like the back of his hand, keeps the ranch looking beautiful and makes sure guests’ accommodations function as they should. Iris, wait staff supervisor, knows how to train a green recruit to fit into the warm, family atmosphere we are noted for. Judy B. maintains a top-notch string of wellbehaved trail horses and oversees an equally strong barn crew ready to guide guests through the mountains. I couldn’t do my job without all of these people and their staffs. Now in our 76th year we continue our strong ranch traditions of comfortable lodging, great food and opportunities to bond anew with family and friends. We are introducing more daytime and nighttime activities this season as well as reviving some forgotten traditions and hope you’ll experience the new joy and excitement in the air. You’ll still experience that same old Cataloochee magic that comes from the ranch’s long history, integrity to the core, its vast expanses and extraordinary vistas. Best of all is the serenity and leisure that allows you to enjoy the exceptional natural beauty that is the heart and soul of Cataloochee Ranch. Come enjoy the vacation of a lifetime. L © Jane Alexander The Chestnut cabin is a cozy place to stay. Big trout hide deep in the ranch pond. © Jane Alexander www.cataloocheeranch.com Be sure to visit our new website designed by Penny Redfern with help from the Alexander family. Take a tour of the ranch and book your next stay. 1 Chestnut Saturday by Richard A. Coker ome join us at Cataloochee Ranch as we celebrate the restoration of the great American chestnut tree. On September 11, a day of new beginnings, the Garden Clubs of Waynesville, The American Chestnut Foundation and the Cataloochee Ranch will hold the first Chestnut Saturday. For centuries past the American chestnut (Castanea dentata) was the dominant tree of the Appalachian Mountains from Maine to Mississippi. It was a fast-growing deciduous hardwood tree that reached 150 feet in height and 10 feet in diameter. But in 1904 a deadly airborne fungus was introduced into the United States and within 45 years nearly four billion trees had been lost. Not only were the trees gone but the shade they supply, the housing they provide for birds and small mammals and the abundant mast which fed wildlife and the pioneers’ livestock. Also gone were the valuable nuts the pioneers gathered for sale in the big cities, a major source of income. But the chestnut’s most valuable asset was the lumber that literally carried you from the cradle to the grave. Its wood is straight-grained, strong and easy to saw and split and being rich in tannins was highly resistant to decay. Its bark was used for house siding, its logs for houses, barns, fences, framing, furniture and paneling. We at Cataloochee are helping The American Chestnut Foundation return this tree to its rightful place in the woods. By using the backcross method, researchers are working to breed a new tree that is blight resistant but has the dominant characteristics of the original American chestnut. Cataloochee’s orchard, now in its fourth growing season, will be tested in a couple of years for resistance to the blight and the survivors will be back-crossed again. On Chestnut Saturday there will be crafts and vendors, live bluegrass, dancing, tours of the chestnut orchard, hiking, horseback riding, fishing, horse shoes, kids’ games, and Rob Gudger and his wolves. Tickets cost $10 with children 12 and under free. In the evening there will be a gala steak cookout with all the trimmings (fresh garden salad, baked potatoes, baked sweet potatoes, corn on the cob, fresh green beans, hot dinner rolls and a landslide of desserts). Evening entertainment includes a live auction with the premier item being a large (7 feet by 44 inches) dining table made of pure American chestnut. Price is $100 per person or $160 for two, which © The American Chestnut Foundation © Jane Alexander C Several years ago I found some chestnuts that had come from a tree in the wild that had survived the blight long enough to produce nuts. I planted three of them and the tree above is the one that survived to adulthood. This year it bloomed profusely, probably because it too will die soon as a result of the deadly chestnut blight. Notice the beautiful long fingers of the catkins, which are the male parts. Nestled in the middle is the little green bur, the female part, which becomes the womb that will nurture the little nuts in velvet. When they are ready to be born the bur will open to let them out. Although a chestnut tree has both male and female parts, it does not self-pollinate. It needs a mate and since there is one close by, we should actually have chestnuts for the Chestnut Saturday festivities. — Judy Alexander Coker includes a one year membership to The American Chestnut Foundation. Dinner for Cataloochee Ranch guests is included in the room rate. To make reservations for dinner or to spend the weekend, please call 828.926.1401. Consider joining The American Chestnut Foundation, www.tacf.org. Your donation will help the great tree resume its key role in the Appalachian hardwood ecosystem, perhaps within our children’s lifetimes. “Part of what makes Cataloochee such an ideal place for families is its all-in-the-family style of management.” — Travel + Leisure 2 Hiking the Walhalla Trail by Judy Alexander Coker The road back to the ranch is slightly uphill. There is another nice view of Maggie and the mountains at the switchback and, as you continue on, if you know them, there are several chestnut trees bravely trying to survive the deadly fungus, but they won’t. You re-enter the ranch complex above the pond. The Southern Appalachian Highlands Conservancy, the organization that holds the conservation easement on over 300 acres of Cataloochee Ranch property conducts organized hikes many times a year and the Walhalla Trail is one of their favorite winter hikes. Juju enjoys the icy water at Sliding Rock while Tommy thinks about it. © Jane Alexander As you rise from The Bowl, you see Water Rock Knob ahead. Cataloochee Ranch Collection he Walhalla Trail is a delightful hike, one with a great deal of variety in views, vegetation and terrain. You start behind the Ranch House at the first orange arrow on a post going up the hill towards the Chestnut Orchard. Stop and enjoy our part of helping to restore the mighty chestnut to its rightful place in the forests of eastern America. The trail continues through the gate and around the side of The Bowl. As you proceed you can see why it is named The Bowl and why we never get tired of the awesome view. You are looking over Maggie Valley toward the Balsam Range and the Campbell Creek Basin. At the other side of The Bowl follow the arrow down a little and into one of our favorite spots, a rhododendron tunnel. You will go through a field and into another rhododendron tunnel before you follow the signs to The Big Oak Tree, truly a specimen to be admired. Now return to the road. Soon there will be a sign on the left designating a “Hiker only Trail.” This trail is a little slick in wet weather so be careful. The hill flattens out and you are in the Walhalla Flat. According to Jim Campbell, the previous owner, this is called Walhalla because it was the land nearest the railroad in Walhalla, SC where he shipped his cattle and other stock before the railroad reached Haywood County. Walk on down to the dirt road and bear left. There will be a rail fence and an arrow pointing to the right on the old logging road. This is a lovely trek through cove hardwood forests; you cross a stream and finally come to the Sliding Rock. As children we carried old sacks down here and spent most of the day climbing up and sliding down the rock, ignoring the cold water and the rough rock. T “I just want to come here every day.” — S.M., age 9, June 2010 3 CATALOOCHEE VALLEY by Phyllis Artabasy still savor the tales my great aunt Irn used to tell about a summer’s day in the 1930s when she and her parents made their way over the arduous road at Cove Creek Gap and fell under the spell of Miss Judy and Mr. Tom Alexander. Aunt Irn’s stories about the first Cataloochee Ranch sowed the seeds for my own serious case of mountain fever. My little cabin looks down on a small section of the Cove Creek Gap road that began as a bison and elk trail. I imagine the heavy thump of bison and the slow regal movement of elk, the measured tread of Cherokee hunters, and the creak of wagons and clop of hooves as newly-settled farmers headed for market, a day’s journey away in Waynesville. But after the valley became part of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park, the prosperous farmers were forced to leave and the once thriving homesteads disappeared. Many animals once common disappeared as well, hunted out before the valley was settled, but now some like the elk are coming back again. Beginning in 2001, 52 elk from Alberta in Canada and the Land between the Lakes in Kentucky were transported to Cataloochee Valley; today the elk grazing the lush meadows there are 100 strong and have gained almost rock-star status for visitors. Shelly Coker and I are members of the Elk Bugle Corps, a cadre of mountain-loving volunteers who are trained to educate visitors about elk (and elk about the public) while maintaining a respectful distance top: Phyllis Artabasy, between the two. When a 600 or 700-pound bull elk with a full rack of antlers moves through the tall grass he shows the grace and beauty of a tall-mast ship at sea. During the fall rut, the I valley reverberates with their bugling as they attract and lay claim to their harem of elk cows. The sound is hard to describe but it’s unmistakable and once you’ve heard it you won’t forget it. On my first trip to the valley as a volunteer, a huge bull suddenly appeared from the woods and ran alongside my car. I slowed to give him plenty of room and he continued his graceful canter. Just then he let out a mighty bugle and disappeared into the woods, leaving me feeling like a peasant who has just met her king. The best times to see elk in the meadows are early morning or late afternoon since they disappear into the cool woods during the day. In March elk shed their antlers but begin to grow them back in the fall, at the rate of about half an inch a day, in preparation for rutting season. Young elk are born June through August. Elk appear placid but can become aggressive and dangerous if they feel threatened. Tony, a fellow volunteer, was carrying a set of sheds (antlers used © Phyllis Artabasy for demonstration purposes) to our truck when he heard something and turned just in time to see a bull getting up speed to attack what he thought was competition for his harem. Tony was close to our vehicle and lost no time in dropping the antlers and vaulting to safe harbor. Pacified, the bull ambled happily back to his harem. In Cataloochee Valley I feel a small part of the on-going story of a © John Havens special place. I enjoy the spark in a youngster’s eye when I tell stories above: Shelly Coker about the old people and how they lived. For these young’uns will be the guardians of our planet’s special places some day and we hope they too catch mountain fever. “The 1,000-acre Cataloochee Ranch is so close to paradise, you half expect to enter it through pearly gates.” – Atlanta Journal Constitution 4 © Jane Alexander Just Makes You Go WOW! by Mary Coker, Large Animal Veterinarian friend of mine just told me a story showing that horses do amazing things. It just makes you go … wow. A man is barrel racing. He approaches the first barrel in a forward position trying to get one more stride in. The horse shortens his stride to make the turn and the man hits the front of the saddle, feels incredible pain and falls unconscious. Despite this he stays astride the horse which continues the barrel pattern. From up in the stands it looks as if the rider is drunk. Each time he starts to slip to the side the horse shifts underneath him to correct his position. The horse finishes the pattern and exits the ring going straight through the busy gate area with people and horses warming up for their run. He A WINTER AT THE continues until he gets into a stall that has been set up near the ring and then he comes to a standstill. The man tries to dismount but cannot stand. His wife, who has watched from the stands, gets to his side as he is hanging on the saddle horn. He is rushed to the hospital where he learns he has a badly broken pelvis. The doctor tells him that if he had fallen off the horse, his broken pelvis could have punctured his bladder, liver or some other vital organ, which could have killed him. That horse saved that man’s life by keeping him positioned on top of his back. RANCH ome celebrate Thanksgiving with us and while you’re at it, why not book a few days to enjoy a beautiful November at the ranch. We’ll be open Wednesday to Sunday Thanksgiving week. We’ll also be open for weekends all through the winter. Book early this year for your Christmas parties. We’re happy to welcome you middays or evenings, your choice. And best of all, call us to discover our winter plans. C © Jane Alexander © Jane Alexander Cataloochee is beautiful in winter too. Cataloochee Ranch 119 Ranch Drive ~ Maggie Valley, North Carolina 28751 ~ email: [email protected] ~ 1.800.868.1401 or 828.926.1401 Founder and Senior Writer: Judy Alexander Coker ~ Editor: Jane Alexander ~ Graphic Designer: Susan Rhew Visit the ranch’s new website at www.cataloocheeranch.com 5