Bits of Everything

Think Tank: NY Pension Costs Could Explode

The NY Post presents an analysis of where pension costs are going.

Top Aide to Gov: Saratoga closure ‘definite possibility’

The Capitol Confidential Blog speaks about Saratoga’s possible demise.

NJ Gov Talks Tough to Paterson

“I have a bridge to sell you”, takes on a new meaning for NJ gov, Chris Christie. So says NJ.com.

Republicans Take NY Senate, Claim Cuomo is One of Them.

Dean Skelos shares some thoughts about being the new Majority Leader in the next NY state legislative session. Read the NY Post.

When the Gold Cup Came to Lake George

The Adirondack Almanack presents a great piece on the Gold Cup on Lake George.

Have Some Turtles? Here’s a Great Practical Joke

The Encyclopedia of Science recounts a practical joke played with some turtles.

Flying for the Holidays?

Then Cargo Collective wear has some gift ideas for you. (Warning: contains graphic images.)

Frank Lasch Joins LGA Board


Frank Lasch of Kattskill Bay, NY has joined the board of the Lake George Association.

Frank Lasch of Kattskill Bay and Loudonville, NY has been appointed to the board of directors of the Lake George Association. He has traveled extensively and has yet to find a more beautiful lake, or one so worthy of protection, he said.

After discharge from the US Navy in 1960, Frank joined the Albany law firm of DeGraff, Foy, where he served as a partner until his retirement in April of 2010. While in the navy, Frank served aboard two destroyer ships: the USS Robert Wilson and the USS Parsons. As past president of the USS Slater Museum in Albany, Frank helped restore the ship to her former glory. The USS Slater, a WWII destroyer and convoy ship, and the only one of her kind remaining, was loaned to the Greek Navy for forty years before returning to Albany.

Frank has also served as president of the Lake George Club and the Fort Orange Club in Albany. He received his law degree from Cornell University Law School.

LGA Receives $25,000 to Protect English Brook


The English Brook delta in Lake George has grown significantly during the past decade. Seen here is an aerial picture of the delta taken by the LGA in November 2010. (Click the picture to see in full-scale.)

The Lake George Association has been awarded a $25,000 grant from the Lake Champlain Basin Program to help protect the English Brook Watershed on Lake George.

The grant will partially fund the installation of a $48,400 Aqua-Swirl hydrodynamic separator on the east side of Rt. 9N at the Lochlea Estate in the town of Lake George. The system will collect previously untreated stormwater runoff from both the east and west sides of Rt. 9N, as well as the bridge between the two exits at Exit 22 on Interstate 87. The majority of the runoff in the 48-acre watershed will be captured and treated.

Other stormwater solutions requiring a larger footprint were explored but were not possible due to the shallow soil depth and high bedrock found throughout the site. The Aqua-Swirl unit has a small footprint and a suitable location was found near existing stormwater infrastructure. The project is also taking the opportunity to capture untreated stormwater runoff from the west side of the road. By installing some additional infrastructure, stormwater from both sides of the road will be directed to the new unit. The cost of the entire project is estimated at $117,000. In addition to the Lake Champlain Basin Program grant, funding for this project has been secured from the Lake George Watershed Coalition and the Helen V. Froehlich Foundation. The village of Lake George will maintain the structure and clean out the system using the LGA’s Catch Vac.

One of the eight major streams entering Lake George, English Brook has been of high concern to the Association for over a decade. The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) lists the brook as sediment impaired, and its delta is one of the largest on the Lake. According to National Urban Runoff Program reports conducted during the 1980s, English Brook has high levels of total phosphorus, chlorides, total suspended sediments, lead and nitrate-nitrogen.

How does an Aqua-Swirl Hydrodynamic Separator work?

Stormwater enters an Aqua-Swirl unit through an inlet pipe, producing a circular flow that makes contaminates settle. A swirl concentrator removes the gross pollutants; a filtration chamber then removes fine sediment and waterborne pollutants. A combination of gravity and hydrodynamic forces encourages solids to drop out of the flow and migrate to the center of the chamber, where velocities will be lower. The Aqua-Swirl also retains water between storms, allowing for settling of inorganic solids when the water is not flowing.

Additional work protecting the English Brook Watershed

Significant work in the English Brook watershed has already been completed by the LGA in conjunction with Warren County Soil and Water Conservation District (WCSWCD). In 2009, design work for a 150-foot-long sediment basin at the mouth of the brook was completed. Permits for this project have been submitted to the appropriate agencies. The basin will be about 6 feet deep with a capacity to trap over 700 cubic yards of material. Further upstream, at the Hubble Reservoir, the LGA hired Galusha Construction to remove a non-functioning sluice gate and valve that were making it difficult to maintain the site. The site was dewatered and almost 600 cubic yards of sediment were removed. The LGA acquired funding for both projects through grants from the Helen V. Froehlich Foundation and the New York State Department of State and the Environmental Protection Fund.

Once this important upland work is completed, the culminating step is to remove the sediment that has built up in the delta over the course of generations. The nutrient-rich sediment in deltas supports invasive plant growth, hampers fish spawning, and harbors nuisance waterfowl. By removing the delta, safe navigation is restored, the health of the Lake’s fisheries improves, the Lake returns to its original bottom, and property values are retained.

New Book Release

Kateri, Native American Saint is a new book release from Clear Light Publishing that takes the reader into the world of 17th Century Native Americans and Catholic missionaries. Kateri Tekakwitha (1656-1680), “The Lily of the Mohawks”, was a Native American woman born near the Canadian border in present-day Auriesville, New York.

Authored by Taos, NM artist Giovanna Paponetti, the book is beautifully illustrated with twenty-one full-color images from an altar screen that Giovanna was commissioned to paint for the Church of St. John the Baptist at Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo in New Mexico, the oldest Parish in the United States. These extraordinary paintings feature significant chapters from Kateri’s early years, her life as a Christian, and miracles following her death at age twenty-four, and make this book a must-have collector’s item.

Giovanna Paponetti is an adjunct professor in the art department at the University of New Mexico-Taos since 2001. In 1998, she was commissioned by the Town of Taos to paint four large historic murals of the town’s history, beginning with Taos Pueblo in the year 1300. Giovanna’s historical paintings have been published in history textbooks and shown in PBS documentaries. Her art can be seen online at: www.giovannapaponetti.com

You can order a book from Clear Light Publishing Corp. at 505-989-9590 or www.clearlightbooks.com/kateri.

Blanche Meehan: 1924-2010

I am sad to report that long-time Huletts resident, Blanche Meehan, passed away on Saturday, November 27th.

Blanche Meehan was a wonderful person who will be missed by all who knew her.

This is her obituary with funeral service details.

“May God support us all the day long, till the shades lengthen and the evening comes, and the busy world is hushed, and the fever of life is over, and our work is done. Then in His mercy may He give us a safe lodging, and a holy rest and peace at the last.”

Bits of Everything

Washington County Deals with Budget

The Post Star reports on Washington County’s budget (with a small tax increase) for next year. The Wash Blog breaks down how the supervisors voted.

NY State Does NOT Deal with Budget

The Press Republican reports that the Legislature decided not to address a $315 million budget deficit in its special session Monday.

France Grants Asylum for Iraqi Christians

Aljazerra reports on the fate of some Iraqi Christians. According to the Guardian, this is what Pakistan does to Christians.

Thank You & Happy Thanksgiving

Thank you for reading The Huletts Current, and for supporting this site over the last two years.

I’m thankful for the opportunity to blog about my experiences daily (or almost daily) here. I’ve gained many new friends and learned so much about Huletts Landing doing this “day in” and “day out”, for now over two years.

Thank you again, and a very happy Thanksgiving to everyone!

“Embarkation of the Pilgrims,” by Robert Walter Weir

The pilgrims are shown on the deck of the ship Speedwell before their departure for the New World from Delft Haven, Holland, on July 22, 1620. William Brewster, holding the Bible, and pastor John Robinson lead Governor Carver, William Bradford, Miles Standish, and their families in prayer. The prominence of women and children suggests the importance of the family in the community. At the left side of the painting is a rainbow, which symbolizes hope and divine protection.

Robert Walter Weir (1803–1890) had studied art in Italy and taught art at the military academy at West Point.

The dimensions of this oil painting on canvas are 548 cm x 365 cm (216 inches x 144 inches; 18 feet x 12 feet)

To see the painting in full screen, click on the image.

Bits of Everything

10 Adirondack Weather Disasters

Adirondack Life has an interesting article on the Adirondack’s worst storms.

Beets No Salt

WNBZ reports that the NY State Thruway is going to experiment this winter with a de-icing material made out of sugar beets and brine.

Grant Money for Lake George Delta

Warren County heard that they are the recipient of a state grant to clear a delta in Lake George. Read the Post Star.