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Saratoga Spa Day: Pampering Bliss for One

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Ever since the Native Americans who once populated Saratoga’s magical landscape referred to the region’s spiritually filled mineral waters as a gift shaken down from their god, Manitou, the Capital Region’s natural elements have never stopped erupting or healing those in need. But I didn’t have to tell you that, did I?

As a youngster who owned his first jar of Lancôme anti-aging cream at 13 and grew up on the ocean 20 minutes from Napa and St. Helena, CA, I completely identify with all things pro-wellness and anti-aging. Throw in a decade of shiny Beverly Hills spa treatment immersion and travels with royalty, and an armload of garnet-colored passports—Montepulciano, Ischia, Capri, Baden-Baden—and I’m now happy to say that after all those global miles, Saratoga Springs is my latest long-term, dial-my-age-back haunt. And it makes perfect sense.

What I love about our location is the overabundance of energy-filled wellness that surrounds us, as well as the immense power our healing Earth and its potently charged water tables just beneath it possess—to help make us feel buoyant. The fact that Saratogians have both fought to preserve their regional organic cures and allowed the injection of modernity into their spa services is inspiring. Now, even in Saratoga, the term “spa” includes old, new and scientifically proven remedies.

The Roosevelt Baths and Spa checks all the necessary boxes.

Many of us spa aficionados are well aware that The Roosevelt Baths and Spa checks all of these boxes. But when was the last time we really perused their impressive service menu? I love that they haven’t rested on their laurels, while respectfully maintaining harmony and balance with the traditional healing properties of the water cures. Whether your skin is aging faster than you’d prefer or your bones feel achier than they should, each category on the menu has something for you. Perhaps on this visit shuck the traditional massage (I prefer deep tissue) for something different and truly transformational: How about craniosacral therapy, reiki (loved it!) or, if you insist on a massage, the classic shiatsu. Their Ayurvedic wellness regimen and acupuncture are also emphasized here—and can be a longevity game-changer, if you follow through with a series as a long-term course of treatment. And OK, men, no smirking: Try a Bach Flower Essence Consultation. The all-natural Bach flower remedies, developed in the 1930s by a British physician and homeopath, restore emotional health and centeredness and help you chart your own unique path to personal authenticity. This takes real strength, dude! Then, book the Back Facial—if not for yourself, then for whomever it is that has your back.

The Roosevelt Spa’s long list of body treatments and facials are categorized as “clinical,” because they’re results-oriented and range from the gentle, rejuvenating Collagen Facial to the more assertive Wrinkle Eraser or the Renewal Clinical Peel deep exfoliating treatment. I, myself, would splurge on the Roosevelt Signature Body Regeneration, an Ayurvedic-inspired balancing treatment designed to drain lymph nodes, exfoliate and stimulate cell regeneration from head to toe. Wraps, meditation and scent also help the feeling of orchestrated well-being. With a full-blown hair salon and heightened mani/pedi options, you can top off your spa day by making beauty the icing on the cake, or save it for another legendary spa day.

Saratoga Spa Day
Complexions Spa for Beauty and Wellness is a premier Gold LEED Certified Spa.

On Broadway, Complexions Spa for Beauty and Wellness, a premier Gold LEED Certified Spa is a must. According to their site, “mineral water from a natural spring underneath the spa is pumped directly into our hydrotherapy tubs and is used for therapeutic soaks, mineral-rich mud wraps and more.” How Saratoga is that?

It’s impressive to see some 6,500 square feet of state-of-the-art spa nirvana so far north of Manhattan, and I love that Complexions appeals to everyone—no one is an afterthought here: man or woman, teenager or golden girl and gladiator or grandpa. The service menus are in-depth, well appointed and results driven. I mean, how many beauty clinics can offer an extensive array of head-to-toe services under each category of “salon,” “spa” and “med spa,” and do them all really well?

At Complexions, traditional wellness and beauty is an absolute standard too. But so are advanced anti-aging aesthetics, meaning microdermabrasion, peels, I2PL treatments, LED light therapy, custom facial rejuvenation programs, and on and on. Providing more than just a classic haircut and blowout, the salon is a haven for renewal and transformation as well. And the male venue, the Barber Spa, is a separate destination experience, offering advanced barbering skin care, hair coloring and foot skin renewal. I’m obsessed! Complexions’ rare quality of care boldly shows you that they want to keep you a happy camper forever.

Saratoga Spa Day
The biggest name in Saratoga medspa treatment is Dr. Jeffrey Ridha (pictured). He’s credited with taking a great former sanctuary and improving on it with clinical technicians and targeted massage therapy offerings.

Scaled down but equally amazing, Ridha Plastic Surgery & Medspa provides a laser-focused medical approach to boutique-chic beauty. If you want to combine plastic surgery with a noninvasive new you, then your ramped-up cosmetic regimen could be a more heightened, expedited experience here. Dr. Jeffrey Ridha is credited with taking a great former sanctuary and improving on it with clinical technicians and super targeted massage therapy offerings. Whether it’s waxing, facials, med spa treatments, chemical peels or a separate day of awesome massage and injectables or fillers, this re-imagined sanctuary of Dr. Ridha’s delivers.

I’m so happy to be a part of Saratoga’s newfound confidence in its beautification and wellness journey. Let’s get our spa days in now so we’ll see each other looking rested and rejuvenated—and fabulous!—this summer at the races.

Oleg Cassini: The Man Who Dressed Jackie Kennedy and Grace Kelly

I go crazy for pillbox hats. Peggy Olson’s creamy white one on Mad Men gave me goose bumps. That scene in Catch Me If You Can, when those Pan Am flight attendants paraded through the Miami airport in their jaunty blue ones made me light-headed. But i really overdosed on 1960s hats with Jackie, the terrific 2016 biopic starring Natalie Portman. in one heart-stopping scene, hours after JFK was gunned down, Jackie Kennedy, crushed by shock and grief, refuses to remove her blood-spattered pink suit and matching pink pillbox.

Legendary fashion designer Oleg Cassini created hats and more than 300 outfits for America’s soft-spoken queen, and his “Jackie Look” clothing, with clean lines, timeless style and luxurious fabrics, swept the nation.

Before Jackie, there was Grace Kelly. When the actress was in her early twenties, she was engaged to Cassini. But her parents disapproved of the fashion designer, who was divorced and had a reputation as a Casanova, and they talked their daughter out of marrying him.

In 2002, a few years before he died, Cassini authored The Wedding Dress, an eye-popping pictorial of bridal gowns. This month, a revised and updated collector’s edition will be released, with dresses by Cassini, Chanel, Dior, Armani, McQueen and other top designers in its 300-plus pages.

The Wedding Dress (Rizzoli) is a reminder of how chic Camelot really was.

‘Purple’ Rains Down on Saratoga Springs

Last month, organizers bathed the National Museum of Dance in lavender-hued light for the fifth annual Purple Tie Affair to benefit the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society and Nick’s Fight to be Healed Foundation for pediatric cancer. Some 300 guests clad in purple took to the dance floor for this year’s mid-winter “Celebration of Life.”

This year’s special honorees were six-year-old Isabella Caruso and seven-year-old Evan Fronk, who both recently finished treatment for Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia.

Glen Sanders Mansion Hosts 18th Annual Tuscan Dinner

Without all of its dedicated volunteers, the Double H Ranch wouldn’t be what it is today. So last month all the individuals and businesses that made the ranch’s Adaptive Winter Sports Program possible got their big “thank you” at the 18th annual Tuscan Dinner at the Glen Sanders Mansion in Scotia.

The evening featured wine tastings by Adirondack Wine Merchants, delicious Italian food prepared by the Mansion staff and desserts by Bella Napoli and the Mansion’s talented bakers.

The Way I Was: Cornelia Guest, America’s Original ‘It’ Girl on Her Summers in Saratoga

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Saratoga Springs holds a very special place in my heart; it always has.

Growing up, August meant Saratoga. My parents—Winston and C. Z.—and I, and a few dogs and horses, would make the trip from our home on Long Island to a house we rented for the month of August in Saratoga. I don’t think the drive was ever complete without a speeding ticket! We generally rented a house, but when I was older, I would sometimes stay at The Holiday Inn, which was where—if you can believe it—“all the cool people were”!

My parents had racehorses up there with our wonderful trainer, D. M. “Mikey” Smithwick. Mikey was a lovely man, full of life and fun, and an incredible horseman. Our racehorses were at the Saratoga track. My mother would bring up some horses and ponies for us to ride on. They were stabled at Mikey’s house on the backside of the track. Mornings always started with a trip to Dunkin’ Donuts, and then we went straight to the barn. My dad got me my first Jack Russell terrier in Saratoga. He was a longhaired, scruffy little man, and I named him Jack. Jack never left my side. I also had a white pony called Ivanhoe, or Ivy.

Cornelia Guest
Guest at her foundation, Artemis Farm Rescue.

My favorite thing to do on those long, hot August days, was to follow Mikey everywhere. We’d go watch the horses work, and I’d ride around everywhere, visit all my pals at different barns and ride all over the place. One year, I got in big trouble jumping people’s hedges. I thought hedges in stately homes made wonderful jumps. The Saratoga police were called, and I, of course, was in big trouble. I felt terrible and I walked Ivy to every house to apologize in person. To this day, I remember it all so clearly. My parents, bless them, were ready to kill me. I simply loved to jump my pony, so anything I saw that I could jump, I would!

Those days also meant having lunch with my father, either at home or at the track, but my favorite place to go with him was, hands-down, Hattie’s Chicken Shack. So many people from the track were there, and to hear the stories of the track and horses was always so much fun and a great part of my day.

Cornelia Guest
Guest loved going to Hattie’s Chicken Shack with her father.

Most afternoons we’d make our way to the Hand Melon Farm outside of town. Hand melons were my father’s absolute favorite. He loved to pick them out and he’d savor every bite. I’ll always remember the uncomplicated delight on his face when he ate one of those melons.

My parents, as so many others also did, loved to go to Siro’s for dinner. I remember it always being so festive, and everyone was all dressed up and looking very glamorous. It felt very Saratoga. And I loved it.

I hadn’t been back to Saratoga Springs for a number of years until this past August, when I was thrilled to be honored by Equine Advocates for my work via my foundation, Artemis Farm Rescue, where we rehabilitate and provide a sanctuary for rescued miniature horses and donkeys. It was an incredible honor, and the party was nothing short of magnificent. It was a joy to reconnect with so many old friends.

But even writing this now makes me more determined than ever to say, “Saratoga, I’ll be back.” How I’ve missed thee. And since I now live nearby—where I’ve based the Artemis Farm Rescue—I’m excited to make Saratoga a part of my summers once again.

Doesn’t everyone always come back to Saratoga?

‘Saratoga Living’ Editor In Chief, Richard Pérez-Feria, on Saratoga Springs’ Past and Present

Not long after graduating from Tulane University in New Orleans, I found myself in Saratoga Springs for the first time. I must say, it made quite an impression.

I was part of a small group of friends celebrating our newfound academic freedom before each of us headed off to different cities and different futures. The six of us knew we had to make the most of our weekend. And so we did. Back before Google or iPhone or Snapchat, Saratoga Springs seemed like a magical place, full of mystery, mischief and mirth. At a bar on Caroline Street, the locals were amazingly welcoming to us, while other Saratoga neophytes treaded a bit more carefully around us Manhattan boys making all that noise. We were hard to miss.

On that first night in Saratoga so many years ago, I remember standing alone on Broadway as I waited for my buddy to pull the car around, and thinking to my 21-year-old self, “I’m going to live here one day.” And here we are. Over the past quarter century, I’ve made dozens of trips to Saratoga and have seen the dramatic changes this special spot has experienced firsthand. But, truth be told, Saratoga Springs is still the same inviting, beautiful, social town it’s always been. Now, in 2018, it feels right, it is right, that in this, the 20th anniversary year of saratoga living, I, too, have made Saratoga my home.

I’ve been thinking a lot about that first weekend with my oh-so-young crew at the time, and where our lives have taken all of us—professional athlete; tech executive; politician; stay-at-home dad—me, as the newly minted Editor in Chief of a storied media brand responsible for reimagining what’s possible, what’s necessary, what’s next. Those are exciting questions my team and I will be answering with every subsequent (and gorgeous) new issue of saratoga living.

We strive to be your window onto the world we inhabit: the intoxicating beauty of our surroundings, the energy of our residents, the excitement that defines this city—saratoga living is the key to unlocking your all-access pass to this place we all call home.

I knew I’d be back. To stay.

Richard Pérez-Feria
Editor In Chief
@RPerezFeria

Running Toilets: Inside Frozen Lake Desolation’s Winter Outhouse Races

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Nothing breathes life into a frigid winter day like sailing across a frozen lake on an old toilet bowl. Just ask the 500 attendees of this year’s Outhouse Races, held at Lake Desolation on January 28. Since 1986, Tinney’s Tavern and the Mulleyville Snowmobile Club have joined forces to put on the whacky event, a crowd-pleaser with a loyal following—that also happens to be one of the most reliable of the winter season: At an elevation of 1,600 feet, Lake Desolation is always frozen solid, making for the perfect outhouse racing conditions. “It’s an excuse to get out of the house in the middle of the winter for a fun, comical time with the community,” says Kevin Joyce, Tinney’s owner.

For those unfamiliar with the ins and outs of outhouse racing, the official rules state that all competing lavatories have three walls and a toilet seat, leaving room for a wide range of design strategies to slip and flip across the ice. Participants build their own racing loos, homemade structures built atop skis, so their port-o-potties level up from portable to race-able. Some sport flames on the sides or look like something out of the old Speed Racer cartoon; others look kind of like skiing doghouses. One even has the traditional moon-sliver insignia cut into both sides.

Outhouse racers line up at Lake Desolation. (Kevin Clark)

Within each unique exterior sits a courageous “driver,” operating the latrine with nerves of steel. Not that he or she has any control. In fact, many of the outhouses are occupied by young children. The true feats of athleticism and balance are performed by the racing teams, three- to five-member crews that push and pull their contraptions 30 yards across Lake Desolation to cross the finish line. “It’s a riot,” says Joyce. “Teams get dressed up in comical outfits, outhouses flip, team members slip, fall…” This winter, Team POT ROD earned the coveted title of 2018 Outhouse Race Champs, channeling the discipline and endurance of a pack of sled dogs as they trounced ten other teams in double elimination.

It’s no small feat racing an outhouse—or watching someone else do it from the sidelines, for that matter. So Tinney’s Tavern provides the fuel all day long, serving burgers, hot dogs and wood-fired pizza at a stand on the frozen lake itself. And for those looking for a little more, the Tavern offers their full menu indoors and on their deck, as well as a number of drink specials provided by co-sponsor Artisanal Brew Works.

If you’re jonesing for a good outhouse race, we have some good news for you: Lake Desolation’s isn’t the only one in town. Lake George also has its own (check the Winter Carnival schedule for more information).

 

Ride Out The Winter At The Top Snow Tubing Spots Near Saratoga

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Another day, another snowstorm. This winter has been one of the coldest and snowiest in recent history, but that shouldn’t keep you and the kids feeling cooped up or snowed in. There are a countless winter-weather activities for the whole family to take part in in the Capital Region, and one of the most enjoyable is snow tubing (for the uninitiated, it’s sledding, but on a giant, inflatable tube). Here are six nearby snow tubing spots where you and yours can blow off some much-needed steam—all in the name of winter fun.

West Mountain (25 Minutes Away)

If you have teenagers and younger children, West Mountain will be your best bet for a wide range of ages and athletic abilities. The popular ski slope also offers six enormous tubing lanes; two 1,000-foot-long tracks that drop 100 feet vertically; and four, 700-foot-long tracks that drop 65 feet. And don’t worry about that long trek back; the West Mountain staff will tow you up the mountain again, assuming you’re willing to wait in line for the service. An added bonus: Because West Mountain makes its own snow, those tubing lanes are open whether Saratoga’s streets are covered in fresh powder or a layer of thick, icy grime. For those tubers who catch some air and then a chill, West Mountain’s cozy lodge offers hot beverages, food and serene views of the foothills of the Adirondacks.

The line up the snow tubing hill at West Mountain is always long. (West Mountain)
Tubby Tubes in nearby Lake Luzerne takes snow tubing to the next level. Weather permitting, the company operates seven different tubing courses that vary in slope and number of turns, so whether your kids are ramblers or straight-shooters, they can all find their favorite lane. (If you have a young rambler in your brood, he or she will be over the moon about this seasons featured course, the “Whoopsie Woo.”) In addition to their septet of tracks, Tubby Tubes has two, 1,000-foot “Snow Coasters”; bunny slopes for your youngest or most skittish; and the Bigfoot Cafe, where the whole family can warm up by the fireplace with a cup of hot cocoa.

Did Edgar Allan Poe Really Write ‘The Raven’ In Saratoga Springs?

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If you’re a native Saratogian, you’ve heard this tasty historical morsel: famed poet of the macabre, Edgar Allan Poe, wrote “The Raven” in Saratoga Springs. But how much truth is there to the tale? According to a handful of Poe historians, the real story is a little more complicated; technically, Poe worked on “The Raven” for about a decade before he finally published what would become arguably his most famous poem.

Susan Archer Talley Weiss, an associate of Edgar Allan Poe, recalled that the manuscript for the poem “had lain for more than ten years in his desk unfinished, while he would at long intervals work on it, adding a few words or lines, altering, omitting or even changing the plan or idea of the poem in the endeavor to make something which would satisfy himself,” records Thomas Ollive Mabbott, editor of the Complete Poems by Edgar Allan Poe. “He is said to have discussed the poem with Ann Van Riper Gillespie Barhyte, wife of [tavern] owner John Barhyte, and herself a poet,” says Mabbott. The Barhytes’ tavern? An early fixture in Saratoga Springs. (The land where the inn stood would later be purchased by Spencer Trask, and is now where Yaddo is located.) “Their children, James and Mary, remembered Poe, and the former claimed to have heard Poe reciting parts of the poem aloud in the open air. Poe did sometimes compose aloud, and the story is well-witnessed. Since Mrs. Barhyte died in April 1844, the date is fixed as prior to the time Poe composed a version of his poem he finally published.” Still with us?

According to George E. Woodberry, author of  The Life of Edgar Allan Poe: Personal and Literary, the draft that Poe wrote at Barhyte’s tavern in Saratoga would ultimately be rejected by George Rex Graham, editor of Graham’s Magazine. Graham and his colleagues “condemned the poem,” but sent Poe $15 out of charity, as the poet had mentioned that he and his wife were starving. “He had this poem, which may be correctly described as a draft, at least, when, in 1844, he went to New York and boarded at Mrs. Brennan’s,” writes Woodberry. “It is clear whatever revision he gave, it was done there.”

Whatever revisions he made in Mrs. Brennan’s farmhouse, located on what is now 84th street in the Upper West Side of Manhattan, were certainly effective. The successful draft of “The Raven” would be published in The Evening Mirror in January 1845, originally written under the pseudonym “Quarles.”  It was re-published in The New-York Daily TribuneBroadway Journal and American Review. It was even re-published by The Evening Mirror, this time under Poe’s real name and with a preface written by the editor, who celebrated Poe’s writing as “unsurpassed in English poetry for subtle conception, masterly ingenuity of versification, and consistent, sustaining of imaginative lift and pokerishness.”

So when Edgar Allan Poe wrote the creepy poem we all know and love, he was actually down in New York City. But, for what it’s worth, Poe did fail at writing “The Raven” right here in Saratoga Springs.

Saratoga Race Course 2018: The Travers, Whitney And Key Stakes Race Dates

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For Saratogians suffering through this unseasonably cold winter, there are brighter (and altogether warmer) days on the horizon. The 2018 Saratoga Race Course has released its schedule with all the dates of the top races, which means you can now start planning your summer stay-cation schedule around when Travers weekend is.

This summer’s 40-day meet officially kicks off on Friday, July 20 and will feature 69 stakes races worth nearly $18.8 million. As always, the meet will be highlighted by the Grade I, $1.2 million Whitney on Saturday, August 4; and the fabled “Mid-Summer Derby,” the Grade I, $1.25 million Travers Stakes, on Saturday, August 25.

Opening weekend action includes a pair of Grade I stakes races, with the $500,000 Diana for turf fillies and mares on Saturday, July 21; and $300,000 Coaching Club American Oaks for three-year-old fillies on Sunday, July 22. Also included in the weekend’s fare: the Grade III, $150,000 Schuylerville and the Grade III, $150,000 Lake George on opening day.

The stakes are high on July 28, with the Grade II, $600,000 Jim Dandy revving up local Travers prep; along with the Grade I, $350,000 Alfred G. Vanderbilt Handicap for sprinters at the end of their career; the Grade II, $250,000 Bowling Green; and Grade III, $200,000 Amsterdam for three-year-olds.

Co-starring with the Whitney on August 4 will be the Grade I, $500,000 Longines Test for three-year-old fillies and a trio of turf stakes: the Grade III, $200,000 Waya for fillies and mares; the $100,000 Lure; and the $100,000 De La Rose for fillies and mares. The Grade I,  $500,000 Fourstardave Handicap will be held the following weekend (August 11); and the Grade I, $600,000 Alabama on the following Saturday (August 18).

Travers Stakes
The canoe in the lake, painted with the Travers Stakes’ winner’s colors from 2017. (Mike Kane)

Of course, Travers Weekend promises to be jam-packed with incredible racing—and might even feature a Triple Crown-leg winner or two. Besides the $1.25 million gem, five other Grade I stakes races are on tap for August 25: the $1 million Sword Dancer Invitational; the $700,000 Personal Ensign; the $500,000 Ballerina; the $600,000 Forego; and the $500,000 H Allen Jerkens Memorial (formerly known as the King’s Bishop). That day will also see the running of the Grade II, $400,000 Woodford Reserve Ballston Spa.

All good things must come to an end, though. Closing weekend begins on Saturday, September 1, with a group of graded stakes races: the Grade I, $750,000 Woodward and Grade I, $350,000 Spinaway; followed by the Grade III, $300,000 Saranac and Grade II, $250,000 Glens Falls. The meet ends with three featured races: the Grade II, $250,000 Prioress for three-year-old fillies on Sunday, Sept. 2; and the Grade I, $350,000 Hopeful and Grade II, $250,000 Bernard Baruch Handicap on Monday, Sept. 3.

Below, find a full list of all the featured/stakes races and their respective dates:

Friday, July 20:
Grade III, $150,000 Schuylerville
Grade III, $150,000 Lake George

Saturday, July 21:
Grade I, $500,000 Diana
Grade III, $150,000 Sanford

Sunday, July 22:
Grade I, $300,000 Coaching Club American Oaks

Monday, July 23:
Caress (ungraded), $200,000

Wednesday, July 25:
Grade II, $200,000 Honorable Miss Handicap

Thursday, July 26:
Grade I, $150,000 A.P. Smithwick Memorial (steeplechase)
John Morrissey (ungraded), $100,000

Friday, July 27:
Curlin (ungraded), $100,000

Saturday, July 28:
Grade II, $600,000 Jim Dandy
Grade I, $350,000 Alfred G. Vanderbilt Handicap
Grade II, $250,000 Bowling Green
Grade III, $200,000 Amsterdam

Sunday, July 29:
Grade III, $200,000 Shuvee Handicap

Monday, July 30:
Coronation Cup (ungraded), $100,000

Wednesday, August 1:
Shine Again (ungraded), $100,000

Thursday, August 2:
Birdstone (ungraded), $100,000

Friday, August 3:
Grade II, $200,000 National Museum of Racing Hall of Fame

Saturday, August 4 (The Whitney):
Grade I, $1.2 million Whitney
Grade I, $500,000 Longines Test
Grade III, $200,000 Waya
Lure (ungraded), $100,000
De La Rose (ungraded), $100,000

Sunday, August 5:
Grade III, $200,000 Troy
Alydar (ungraded), $100,000

Monday, August 6:
NYSS Cab Calloway (ungraded), $100,000

Wednesday, August 8:
Quick Call (ungraded), $100,000

Thursday, August 9:
NYSS Statue of Liberty (ungraded), $100,000

Friday, August 10:
Tale of the Cat (ungraded), $100,000

Saturday, August 11:
Grade I, $500,000 Fourstardave
Grade II, $200,000 Adirondack

Sunday, August 12:
Grade II, $200,000 Saratoga Special

Monday, August 13:
Saratoga Dew (ungraded), $100,000

Wednesday, August 15:
Bolton Landing (ungraded), $100,000

Thursday, August 16:
Union Avenue (ungraded), $100,000

Friday, August 17:
Skidmore (ungraded), $100,000

Saturday, August 18:
Grade I, $600,000 Alabama
Grade II, $300,000 Lake Placid

Sunday, August 19:
Summer Colony (ungraded), $100,000

Monday, August 20:
Evan Shipman (ungraded), $100,000 (NYB)

Wednesday, August 22:
John’s Call (ungraded), $100,000

Thursday, August 23:
Riskaverse (ungraded), $100,000
Grade I, $150,000 New York Turf Writers Cup (steeplechase)

Friday, August 24:
Albany (ungraded), $250,000 (NYB)
Fleet Indian (ungraded), $200,000 (NYB)
Funny Cide (ungraded), $200,000 (NYB)
Seeking the Ante (ungraded), $200,000 (NYB)
West Point (ungraded), $150,000 (NYB)
Yaddo (ungraded), $150,000 (NYB)

Saturday, August 25 (Travers Day):
Grade I, $1.25 million Travers
Grade I, $1 million Sword Dancer
Grade I, $700,000 Personal Ensign
Grade I, $600,000 Forego
Grade I, $500,000 Ballerina
Grade I, $500,000 H. Allen Jerkens Memorial
Grade II, $400,000 Woodford Reserve Ballston Spa

Sunday, August 26:
Smart N Fancy (ungraded), $100,000

Monday, August 27:
Better Talk Now (ungraded), $100,000

Wednesday, August 29:
Grade III, $150,000 With Anticipation

Thursday, August 30:
P.G. Johnson (ungraded), $100,000

Friday, August 31:
Lucky Coin (ungraded), $100,000

Saturday, September 1:
Grade I, $750,000 The Woodward
Grade I, $350,000 Spinaway
Grade III, $300,000 Saranac
Grade II, $250,000 Glens Falls

Sunday, September 2:
Grade II, $250,000 Prioress

Monday, September 3 (Closing Day):
Grade I, $350,000 Hopeful
Grade II, $250,000 Bernard Baruch Handicap