Author: Tim Farley

A Horse of a Different Color!

This is a horse after my own heart. A racer and and an artist!
We have a lot of summer camps coming up so maybe you can grab a brush and be part of the fun with HorseTales.org!
It’s graduation time so be sure to give the gift of imagination – a Bucephalus to call your own!

Read and Ride On!!



 

Metro Meteor, once considered one of the fastest Turf Sprinters at Belmont and Saratoga, knee injuries ended his racing career.
Adopted off the track by Ron & Wendy Krajewski, Metro now spends his days painting abstract art. Holding the paintbrush in his teeth and stroking the canvas, Metro’s paintings are sold, with 50% of the proceeds going to help other retired racehorses find homes.

 

Walter Farley Newspaper Article

Here’s a nice article that is in the Herald Tribune newspaper today about Dad and his literary landmark at the Venice Public Library.
Hope you get to visit sometime!

NEW: Walter Farley’s legacy lives on at Venice library

Published: Wednesday, May 22, 2013 at 10:52 a.m.

Dale White
The Walter Farley Literary Landmark in the children’s wing of the Venice Area Public Library is a showcase of memorabilia about the famous author of “The Black Stallion.”

 

The popularity of most children’s book authors may come and go with each generation.

Just a few years ago, though, when Random House released a hardback reproduction of the original 1941 edition of “The Black Stallion” by the late Walter Farley, it found no shortage of eager fans.

That hardcover edition continues to sell, with new and returning readers posting enthusiastic reviews on bookselling websites such as Amazon.com.

Today an exhibit about Farley, who lived in Venice for decades, continues to be a drawing card at the Venice Public Library — which he and his wife Rosemary helped get built more than 47 years ago.

County library system director Sarabeth Kalajian worked at the Venice library and remembers Farley well.

“He was a frequent visitor to the library and would come and hang out with the kids,” Kalajian said. “He was definitely fun-loving, always inquisitive, always doing research… Young readers today still really love his stories. They are adventures that take you to far-off places. Some have an element of mystery. The relationship of a youngster and a horse is an appealing theme.”

“The books are wonderful,” Nancy Pike, a former head of the Venice library who helped create the Farley exhibit there. “The message they give of ‘follow your dream’ is a universal message that never grows old.”

Who was Walter Farley?

Growing up in Syracuse, N.Y., and New York City, Farley — the son of an assistant hotel manager — never owned a horse but had opportunities to visit the stables of his uncle, a professional horse trainer.

While still attending high school in Brooklyn, he started work on what would become his first and most popular novel. Millions became enchanted by “The Black Stallion,” the story of a boy and a horse that survive a shipwreck.

In 1941, Random House published the book while Farley was still an undergraduate at Columbia University.

After service in World War II, Farley pursued a successful career as a children’s book author — writing sequels to “The Black Stallion” and many other books.

Shortly after the war, he and his wife started splitting time between their beach home in Venice and their farm in Pennsylvania.

He died at Sarasota Memorial Hospital in October 1989 after suffering a heart attack, just a few months after the Venice Public Library unveiled an exhibit about him and shortly before the publication of his final book, “The Young Black Stallion.”

Rosemary Farley, 94, died March 6 at her Venice home.

The Hollywood versions

Farley rejected offers from Disney and others to make a movie of “The Black Stallion” because the producers wanted to alter the story.

He eventually agreed to let Francis Ford Coppola produce the popular 1979 film of the same title, which critic Pauline Kael wrote “may be the greatest children’s movie ever made.”

The TV show inspired by the book and movie, “The Adventures of the Black Stallion,” lasted 78 episodes and still sells on DVD.

In his own words

Farley, in a 1980 interview with the Herald-Tribune: “When I look back on it, writing has been the perfect career for me. As I’ve said before, I’m a professional observer and I like to put my observations on paper. I suppose if I hadn’t become a writer I would have found a career related to my interest in horses.”

A ‘Literary Landmark’

When the Venice Public Library unveiled an exhibit about Farley in its children’s wing in 1989, it called the glass-enclosed showcase the “Walter Farley Literary Landmark.”

Today, the exhibit still contains Farley’s typewriter, saddle and many personal letters and photos.

His son, Tim Farley, maintains an active website about his father’s legacy, TheBlackStallion.com, and, in his memory, oversees the Horse Tales Literacy Project, which encourages children to read.

Thanks Dale! – Enjoy the Ride!

TF

Preakness @ 6:20 ET

139th Kentucky Derby

Don’t forget about the Preakness this evening – Will Orb repeat??

PP Silk Horse Owner Trainer Jockey Breeder Morning Line
1
Orb S. Janney/Phipps “Shug” McGaughey Joel Rosario S. Janney/Phipps Even
2
Goldencents W.C./Kenney/RAP Doug O’Neill Kevin Krigger Rosecrest/Pirrello 8-1
3
Titletown Five Hornug/Martin et al D. Wayne Lukas Julien Leparoux Stonestreet T.H.,LLC 30-1
4
Departing Claiborne/Dilschneider Albert M. Stall, Jr. Brian Hernandez, Jr. Claiborne/Dilschneider 6-1
5
Mylute GoldMark/Whisper Hill Tom Amoss Rosie Napravnik Mike G. Rutherford 5-1
6
Oxbow Calumet Farm D. Wayne Lukas Gary Stevens Colts Neck Stable 15-1
7
Will Take Charge Willis D. Horton D. Wayne Lukas Mike Smith Eaton 12-1
8
Govenor Charlie Michael E. Pegram Bob Baffert Martin Garcia Michael E. Pegram 12-1
9
Itsmyluckyday Trilogy/Plesa Eddie Plesa Jr. John Velazquez Liberation/Brandywine 10-1

Ride on!

TF

Yunnan Baiyao, ever try it?

Yunnan Baiyao boxYunnan Baiyao
Yunnan Baiyao

I’ve read about this Chinese medicine for people but never thought how good it might be for use with horses. I had a letter this week that one owner had really excellent results on cuts, as a general antibiotic mixed with water and used in ears, etc. and even taken internally. Unlike regular antibiotics it doesn’t seem to build up resistance. And it’s VERY affordable since they use it all the time in China. It is available as a powder, ointment, spray or packaged bandages.  Vietnam veterans might remember seeing the vials during the war.
Has anyone used this herbal remedy before? Like to hear your comments & if it worked for you or not.
Thanks!

Think Orb will do it again in the Preakness?
Enjoy the Ride!
TF

From Wikipedia;
Yunnan Baiyao (or Yunnan Paiyao) (simplified Chinese: 云南白药; traditional Chinese: 雲南白藥) is a hemostatic powdered medicine famous for being carried by the Vietcong to stop bleeding during the Vietnam War. [1] The medicine, developed by Qu Huangzhang in 1902, is designated as one of two Class-1 protected traditional medicines, which gives it 20 years protection. In China, its reputation is equal to that of penicillin in the U.S. It is founded and manufactured by a state-owned enterprise, Yunnan Baiyao Group in Yunnan, China. The formula is secret.