CHINCOTEAGUE
No matter how you pronounce
it, CHINk-oh-teeg or SHINK-oh-teeg, it is a little spit of
the Eastern Shore of
Virginia stretching from the Maryland line to Cape Charles,
downstate,
below the canal, oysters
and crabs.
Mothers all have stories
of the wonders of the wild Chincoteague pony's, how to open
Chicoteague oysters, all
that Eastern Shore stuff you need to know. Just remember that
Chincoteague is synonymous
with “good” .
Every July, there is the
Chincoteague Firemans Carnival , a three day affair,, the main
feature
is the pony swim and
auction at the town fairgrounds off Main street. The Fireman’s
pony swim, July
1993, at the 68th annual fair, there were 50,000
people in the audience to
watch 140 and some pony's
being herded , at low tide , in to the Assateague channel , which
they swam for 300 yards to
the Chincoteague shore, penned up for a vet's inspection and a
rest. After this rest,
the pony's are paraded through the village streets to again another
pen
to be admired and
photographed .
One foal to make the shore
first during the swim, is given the name “King Neotune”. This
years King Neptune was a wide eyed tan colt of tender months which
took six cowboy firemen
more that 20 minutes to
catch and brought under control and auctioned off. The next
morning another 74 foals
will be sold , an average price, $250. Buyers from as far away as
Wisconsin come with
trailers to carry their purchases home.
Day four has the return
swim. The mares, stallions and those foals not purchased , are
returned
to Assateague for another
year of freedom.
This year the temperature
was in the high 90's , there are both mosquitoes and horseflies.
This is SHINK-oh-teeg.
Abstract: Harrison H.
2018, Pittsburg Post Gazette, Saturday 31 July 1993, by John G.
Craig, Jr., Post
Gazette editor.
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