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Not slowing down Retirement for this Caroline couple is hard work
Broadview Farm owners work around the clock, even though they're past retirement age.
Date published: 3/23/2006
LLEN AND BARB Ellis are responsible for two dogs, six cats, nine horses and 50 acres.
The couple owns Broadview Farm off U.S. 1 in Woodford, and, at ages 70 and 68, they manage everything themselves.
Barb Ellis handles the horses--two of their own and seven boarders. Allen Ellis does everything else.
"He does the heavy labor work and I do the horse work," Barb Ellis said.
But caring for horses is by no means an easy task.
"That's 1,200 pounds of energy you have to deal with," Allen Ellis said. "Babs has broken ribs, back problems and everything else from being thrown."
"That doesn't say much for my riding," Barb Ellis joked in response.
Allen Ellis never rides, but still manages to get some toes stomped on every now and again.
"You get jerked around, that's all," Allen Ellis said. "After you get to be 70 years old, everything's sore."
Barb Ellis feeds the horses every morning around 6:30.
In the winter she lets them out into the paddocks during the day, and takes them back to their stalls in the barn at night.
During the summer the horses keep the opposite schedule: barn by day, when it's hottest, and paddocks during the cooler nights.
She periodically checks on water and throws hay for the horses to eat throughout the day.
She makes one last trip to the barn around midnight, and is back for the same routine some six hours later.
Oh, and she tries to clean the paddocks three days a week.
"It's a lifestyle. I sometimes wish I could slow down a little bit, but I don't want to be a couch potato," she said. "I stay challenged with all the work here."
She also is involved with the Virginia Dressage Association's Fredericksburg chapter and does administrative work at Fredericksburg Animal Hospital every Friday.
Allen Ellis has his hands full as well.
He retired from electrical contracting almost one year ago, but manages to keep busy with a new full-time job: maintaining the farm.
"There's always fences to paint and gates to fix," Barb Ellis said of her husband's work.
Until recently, Allen Ellis got up at 3:15 a.m. to check hay and water and start working on odds and ends around the barn. One of the couple's horses, Zak, had eye surgery last fall and required extra attention.
Date published: 3/23/2006
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