Old stable now just a memory
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Many years ago, we lived on Little Balboa Island facing what is now
Irvine Terrace. In those days, instead of houses lining the bluff,
horses were silhouetted there, residents of a stable that was run by
an Englishman by the name of Lionel Harris.
Not being in the least interested in horses, I managed to live
without noticing them for several years. Not so my daughter.
One morning, my wife looked out in the enclosed sand pit we called
a yard, only to find 2-year-old Nancy was gone. Katie ran out and
found Nancy in the bay, doing her best to reach the horses, not very
successfully since she couldn’t yet swim. A few more years, and the
stable on the bluff would be my daughter’s home away from home.
If you had asked Central Casting to send you an Englishman, you
couldn’t do any better than Mr. Harris, who had the silver-haired,
hawk-nosed look of the English peerage, although he may have come out
of Limehouse for all I know.
He had quite an establishment there in Corona del Mar -- a number
of barns, a large riding ring and I don’t know how many horses, and
he ran the operation almost single-handed. My daughter was a typical
child who couldn’t pick up as much as a sock at home, but she would
come home chattering excitedly about mucking out stalls or moving hay
bales. Mr. Harris didn’t need to hire stable hands when he had dozens
of horse-crazy girls fighting for the opportunity to move manure
around.
He did have an assistant named Katrina. She was idolized almost as
much as Mr. Harris around our house, an enthusiasm I could more
easily share since she was a very attractive and buxom young woman.
These qualities were lost on my daughter. Katrina had a bullwhip that
she could crack. That was what impressed a little girl.
Every Saturday morning, I drove off the island and to the stables,
dropping my daughter off for her lesson. Riding around and around in
a circle seemed like a stultifying occupation to me, but she was in
heaven, and her excitement was even greater when she graduated to the
Sunday rides.
Every Sunday, Mr. Harris would lead a group of riders on some
cross-country adventure. It’s difficult to picture now in our
built-up community, but at that time, all of what is now Irvine
Terrace was either barns or horse pasture, and on the other side of
Coast Highway, there was nothing but open space -- no Fashion Island,
no Newport Center, no Eastbluff. Nothing but miles of open space.
Alternatively, he could head in the other direction, leading the
riders along the bluff and then down to a flat spit of land called
Shark Island where the horses could go swimming. Some years later,
this spot of sand was dredged and reconfigured into Linda Isle. I
always thought the Irvine Co. made a big mistake when they changed
the name.
Our daughter learned a lot more than riding at the stables. I can
still remember my wife’s horrified expression when Nancy regaled us
one night at the dinner table about watching the vet stick his arm
into a horse’s rectum for some health reason. And then there was the
time she gave a detailed account of a horse being gelded. She also
learned about death, arriving home practically hysterical when her
favorite horse had to be put down for colic.
Eventually, the land that Mr. Harris leased became too valuable
for horses. The bulldozers came in and created Irvine Terrace, which
was the first development around here to really shift the natural
land shape to create more lots with views. Mr. Harris moved his
operation to Fountain Valley where land was cheaper, and I have no
idea where little girls go today to learn to ride -- certainly not in
Newport Beach.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge.
His column runs Tuesdays.
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