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Village Squire, 1980-10, Page 21vegetables and the staff often packs picnic lunches for guests. The kitchen has a microwave oven and small appliances and is open to guests for coffee -making and preparing Tight snacks. Hostess Lois Vanstone says guests seem to enjoy going out to dinner at nearby Benmiller Inn and other local restaurants. Arrangements can also be made to allow Cherrydale guests to use facilities at the Inn, such as tennis courts, swimming pool and the sauna. This spring a new dimension was added to Cherrydale's activities when Mrs. Mazzoleni's daughter and son-in-law, Gina and Ero Wyss, opened a riding stable for visitors and local residents. The stable includes ten horses, a pony and one colt. The 200 -acre farm affords numerous one-hour and two-hour trails through woodlands and along riverbanks. Cook -outs are becoming popular among the riders with food provided by the stable. Reservations for horseback riding are taken through Cherrydale Farm. During the winter, the trails are popular for cross-country skiing, and the basement of the house. nicknamed "The Forge," is a Welcome Centre. When the house was built, the kitchen was located in the basement, and cooking was done over a six-foot fireplace. Later the kitchen was moved to an addition on the main floor, and the basement became a blacksmith shop. Longtime residents of 75 per cent of the clientele comes from Michigan Colborne Township recall taking their horses through the wide basement door to the shop. Now "The Forge," with its rustic walls and furniture, is a warm place for skiers in the winter and cool place for summer visitors to spend an evening watching T.V. Although Cherrydale doesn't advertise. news has spread from one satisfied customer to another. Articles on the home have appeared in The Detroit Free Press. Oakland Press and Financial Post. Mrs. Vanstone estimates 75 per cent of the clientele comes from Michigan, the other 25 per cent from Ontario. The farm setting is ideal for small business conferences. Firms report their farm seminars were their first seminars free of distractions. The staff prepared lunches of cold cuts for the conventions -allowing work to continue all day. Mrs. Vanstonc is assisted by Bernice Fisher and Shelley Baer. FAMILY APPEAL Cherrydale is also appealing to families. Children from cities enjoy the space and freedom and are too fascinated with the new environment to become bored. Adults enjoy getting away from a ringing telephone. A mother and two children. from Windsor, spent five days at Cherrydale this summer; a young couple with their son discovered the guest house when they were travelling to the Blyth Summer Festival and made another booking before leaving. Two Toronto ladies staved overnight last October to attend the Christmas Country Fair in Saltford and booked the weekend for 1980 as well. Renting the whole guest house is a pleasant arrangement for families and small groups, but strangers sharing the house are no problem. The atmosphere is informal - at breakfast. toasters are set on the large dining room table and everyone makes their own toast, just like they do at home Friendships develop, and accoraing to Mrs. Vanstonc, by the second day it's just like one big family. ANTI�UE6 WICKED FllQNITURE DESIGNED LAMPS DUGS K\QCK-DOWN FUQNITUQE nI-FI STANDS I11 Il CO:\1PONLNT6 CAQ 6TFtI~:O A I.11 \16 MMIC 40 ONTARIO STQEET STI ATFOQD 271-2960 CLOSED WEDNESDAYS • VILLAGE SQUIRE/OCTOBER 1980 PG. 19