Learn about sustainable farming on organic farm in East King County.
Pony Paradise Rides offers our 2012 day camp: Horse and Pony Summer Day Camp for 6 - 12 year olds 10am - 4pm, Mon - Fri from July 30 through August 31. Horseback Riding Lessons are only part of the fun! Schedule changes every day, with indoor and outdoor activities, keeping your child engaged and active. Outdoor activities include: Horseback Riding, Bouncy House, Petting Zoo, Wagon Rides, Campfires. Indoor activities include: Riding Etiquette, Arts & Crafts, Fun and Games, Stories, Songs, Costumed Play-acting, and more. Just $425.00 per child per week. Multi-week and multi-child discounts available. With over six years in operation, our summer camp is well-organized and well-supervised. Located just off the Paradise Lake exit of highway 522, our location is convenient from any direction.
Prior to Anglo-American settlement, the Woodinville area was inhabited by the native Sammamish people. In 1871, Ira Woodin and his wife Susan moved from Seattle and up the Sammamish River to build a cabin, log timber and farm cattle. A town gradually built up around the cabin, which served as its first school and Post Office, with Susan Woodin as Postmaster. Woodin and his son-in-law Thomas Sanders set up the first general store. Like other nearby towns, Woodinville began as a logging community, became a farming center in the early decades of the 20th century, and developed into a suburb of Seattle after World War II. In 1969, rock bands including Led Zeppelin and The Guess Who performed at the Seattle Pop Festival at Woodinville's Gold Creek County Park. The growth of Bothell in the early 1990s led to plans for it to annex Woodinville; the residents of Woodinville responded by voting for incorporation in 1992. Woodinville was officially incorporated on March 31, 1993.