
Assateague Island © Susanne Bledsoe/U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
Virginia's only resort island, Chincoteague captures the essence
of the Chesapeake Bay, the waterman culture and the nostalgic
summertime rituals reminisced over by so many families in the
region. Its small town is a quaint collection of charming
boutiques, divine seafood restaurants and museums chronicling life
on the sea. On this small barrier island, life revolves around the
water, the source for both residents' livelihood and visitors'
revered pastimes. Waders in the shallow water rake for clams, while
others crab with nets and baited lines. The rewards are the
time-honoured traditions of the clambake and crab feast. Brown
paper is unrolled across tabletops and guests take up their mallets
to crack open freshly steamed crabs smothered in the region's
ubiquitous red seasoning, Old Bay.
Chincoteague is connected by a bridge to the large barrier
island of Assateague, empty but for pristine stretches of beach, a
historic lighthouse and herds of wild ponies. Here along the
Assateague National Seashore, in the absence of vendors, amusement
park rides and noise, beachgoers bask in the sunshine, read books
under umbrellas and enjoy the peaceful beauty. At the height of
summer, the event for which Chincoteague is best known takes place:
the annual pony swim, poignantly captured in Marguerite Henry's
children's classic,
Misty of Chincoteague. Each
year, to manage the wild population, ponies are rounded up by local
firemen. These 'saltwater cowboys' then swim the ponies across the
Assateague channel to Chincoteague, where they are auctioned off to
buyers eager to own one of the unique breed.
Events

Chincoteague Pony Swim
Chincoteague Pony Swim, Auction and Carnival
Assateague Island, which spans the Maryland-Virginia border, is
famous for its small, sturdy breed of wild ponies. Their true
origin is unknown, but romantic legend claims they are descendents
of a cargo of wild mustangs carried by a Spanish galleon that sunk
off the...
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