Magic Show at the Casino

The Great Martini will be performing two magic shows at the Huletts Casino on Friday, July 31st.

Children’s Show at 8 pm

Late Show at Midnight

Come and see what he pulls out of his hat this year!!!

A Day to Remember

Saturday, August 1, 2009

Walk-Run:
9:00 am at Caddy Shack

Golf:
1:00 & 3:00 pm

Community Spaghetti Dinner:
6:30 pm start
8:30 pm Awards
9:00 pm Luminary Ceremony

Tickets
Available from John or Maria Nephew (Blue House Opposite Casino) or mlnephew@aol.com

Donations
Adults (21 +) $35
Seniors $25
Teens $20
Children $10 under 5 free
T-shirts, dinner, beverages included in donation
T-shirts ONLY $10 each

Make Checks Payable to: A Day to Remember
All proceeds go to the American Cancer Society

Waterkeeper Accused of Misusing P.E.

We received this press release from the Lake George Property Owners Group (LGPOG) yesterday which alleges that the Lake George Waterkeeper has been misusing the letters P.E. when signing his letters when in fact he is not registered as a licensed engineer in NY. In papers he filed objecting to the Foster Brook dredging, he signed his name with a P.E. after it.

I contacted the Office of Professions today and his status is “Not Registered“.

The Interviews: Backstage at Today

Here is short video of about 3 minutes of me interviewing Sara Gore and getting a question into Meredith Viera. The interviews were tough because the more established media outlets got first crack but this intrepid reporter would not be out done! Here is my best try at being a celebrity interviewer.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LkzUe4ub4eI

Behind the Scenes of the Today Show

I put this 7 minute video together of what it was like at the taping of the Today Show this morning in Bolton Landing. I got some really nice shots behind the scenes, and I also have an interesting interview segment that I’ll post later.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=veoyKc6UJOE

The Current Reaches the Today Show

I just returned from Bolton Landing where the Today Show was filming today. I will be posting 2 videos later today about what happened behind the scenes and an interview with Meredith Viera. It’ll be worth stopping back for.

Celtic Party a Big Draw


Irene McNelis (John & Pam’s daughter) brought the house down dancing a traditional Irish dance as The Road to Galway band played in the backround.

I’m pleased to announce that the Celtic Music festival sponsored by Friends of Historic Huletts Landing (FHHL) in the Casino was a big success on Saturday night. Both Elizabeth Stanton and The Road to Galway band performed.

The band was playing, people were laughing and even the kids joined in the fun. Bravos to 8 year old Irene McNelis who showed nerves of steel dancing an Irish jig in front of the whole house!

Many thanks to all who worked to make this event such a big success!

Children’s Program a Success


17 children, aged 4-12, attended the first children’s program at the new Huletts’ “Gallery”.

Pam Judge Wilson and Lucinda Heidsiek Bhavsar organized a children’s program last Friday at the new Huletts’ “Gallery”, where an engaging docent from Fort Ticonderoga spoke to the children. The kids learned what it was like to be a soldier in the revolutionary war. They made tri-fold hats, examined the contents of a habersack, practiced marching commands, and dressed up in 18th century clothing. The children even asked the docent to come back next year! What a great event for the local youth (and Mom & Dad on a rainy day). Thank you Pam and Lucinda for adding something great to the community.

There will be another children’s program this summer which we’ll tell you about as we get closer.

Foster Brook Delta Permit Issued

I just got a phone call from the Lake George Association and the DEC has issued the final permit to remove the delta from the mouth of Foster Brook. Congratulations to all involved!!

Additionally, the LGA has also gotten a large donation to put them almost over the top in their fundraising campaign for this project. They are now only $10,000 short of meeting their goal. However, they are sending the project out to bid and are hoping to get contractors for less than they had budgeted.

Please remember that the Lake George Association is the premier lake saving organization. There are other environmental groups out there who may have “catchy” names but who work for either an extreme anti-people agenda or who simply object to every project proposed. I have personally spent almost 2 years working with the LGA on this project and I can tell you this is the organization that is actually doing something.

Thank you Lake George Association for making the Foster Brook dredging happen!

Bits of Everything

Star Trek Episode Shot at Fort Ticonderoga

The Times of Ti reports that the Klingons have invaded Fort Ticonderoga.

NBC’s Today Show coming to the Sagamore

The Times of Ti reports that on Monday the Today Show will be live from the Sagamore.

Washington County Fair to Host Rodeo

The Post Star reports that the Washington County Fair will host a rodeo this year.

NFL Giants Release Training Camp Schedule

The Giants released their training camp schedule in Albany. Read about autograph day also.

Military Road Marker

The next time you’re heading to Whitehall, on the top of the mountain before you start down the other side, you can see this marker through the woods on the right hand side.

What is this? Well next time don’t drive by so fast. It marks a very historic spot.

It is actually a monument that the Town of Dresden erected in 1976 to desiginate the historic march through the woods that happened there in 1776. Here is a close up shot of the monument itself. It looks as new today as the day it was first put there.

This is the story behind it. (Condensed from online sources.)

In 1776-77 General John Burgoyne was given command of the British forces charged with gaining control of Lake Champlain and the Hudson River valley. The plan, largely of his own creation, was for Burgoyne and his force to cross Lake Champlain from Quebec and capture Ticonderoga before advancing on Albany, New York, where they would rendezvous with another British army under General Howe coming north from New York City, and a smaller force that would come down the Mohawk River valley under Barry St. Leger. This would divide New England from the southern colonies, and, it was believed, make it easier to end the colonies rebellion.

From the beginning Burgoyne was vastly overconfident. Leading what he believed was an overwhelming force, he saw the campaign largely as a stroll that would make him a national hero who had saved the rebel colonies for the crown. Before leaving London he had wagered a friend ten pounds that he would return victorious within a year. He refused to heed more cautious voices, both British and American, that suggested a successful campaign using the route he proposed was impossible.

Underlining the plan was the belief that Burgoyne’s aggressive thrust from Quebec would be aided by the movements of two other large British forces under General Howe and Sir Henry Clinton who would support the advance. However, Lord Germain’s orders dispatched from London were not clear on this point, with the effect that Howe took no action to support Burgoyne, and Clinton moved from New York too late and in too little strength to be any great help to Burgoyne.

As a result of this miscommunication, Burgoyne ended up conducting the campaign largely single-handedly. Even though he was not aware of this yet, he was still reasonably confident of success. Having amassed an army of over 7,000 troops in Quebec, Burgoyne was also led to believe by reports that he could rely on the support of large numbers of Native Americans and American Loyalists who would rally to the flag once the British came south. Even if the countryside was not as pro-British as expected, much of the area between Lake Champlain and Albany was underpopulated anyway, and Burgoyne was skeptical any major enemy force could gather there.

The campaign was initially successful. Burgoyne gained possession of the vital outposts of Fort Ticonderoga (for which he was made a lieutenant-general) and Fort Edward, but, pushing on, was detached from his communications with Quebec, and eventually hemmed in by a superior force, led by Horatio Gates. Several attempts to break through the enemy lines were repulsed at Saratoga in September and October 1777. On 17 October 1777, Burgoyne surrendered his entire army, numbering 5,800. This was the greatest victory the colonists had yet gained, and it proved to be the turning point in the war.

So now you know that Burgoyne passed this very spot on his way to defeat at Saratoga as you pass this spot as you go over the mountain! So stop and take a look at the monument the next time you pass by.

It Screams Like a Woman


A stuffed bobcat on display at the Adirondack Museum in Blue Mountain Lake.

Huletts Current reader, Karen Wagner, submitted the following question:

Hi George,

There is an animal in the mountains that produces a sound like a woman sreaming! We’ve asked around, but no one seems to know what it is. I assumed it was some type of a bird. Any ideas?

I might have laughed at such a question but I was in the woods recently and heard this strange screaming sound myself!

I’ve researched this and here are some possible answers.

One possibility is the bobcat. Several sites indicate that bobcats scream when threatened. I’ve also read that bobcats, when lovesick, emit a high-pitched scream. However, this site has three bobcat sounds, as well as various other animal sounds. I must admit that none of the bobcat sounds resembled a woman’s scream.

Another good possibility is the fox, which I have seen at times near the dam. This site has examples of fox screams. (Foxcry.wav seems to be the nearest match.) Other sites I have found indicate that a fox can produce a vocalization somewhat similar to a woman screaming.

Finally it could also be a raccoon. Here is a site where you can listen to raccoon noises. Although these don’t sound exactly like what I heard.

I hope this helps. But if you hear something like a woman screaming, stay alert!

The Darrin Freshwater Institute


The Wyatt’s cove culvert has shown remarkable improvement in water quality over the last 20 years.

I was sitting on the porch today thinking of things to write about and saw the boat from the Darrin Freshwater Institute pull up and take a water sample from what they call the Wyatt’s cove culvert. So I called the Institute and spoke with Larry Eichler and learned a few things.

1.) The Darrin Freshwater Institute regularly samples locations throughout the lake and monitors conditions. The Wyatt’s cove culvert in the center of the Landing has shown dramatic improvements over the last 20 years. Mr. Eichler attributed this to the town sewer system that was installed in the 1980’s. There is lessened algae growth on the bottom of Wyatt’s cove and fecal coliform levels are in accepted ranges. The Institute checks this site numerous times over the course of the summer but it has reached a point, where Mr. Eichler said; “We don’t really see problems with that site anymore. We monitor but that site has shown remarkable improvement.”

2.) When asked if he could give any conclusions about the Lake George basin as a whole, he responded; “We have seen salt levels rise dramatically over the past few decades”. In 1980 (the first year salt was regularly tested for) salt levels averaged 6 parts per million, by 2008 this level had risen to 16 parts per million, almost tripling. When asked what this could be attributed to, Mr. Eichler explained that while waste water does contain salt which usually goes untreated through the sewage treatment cycle, most salt enters the lake through the application of road salt on surrounding area roads in the winter.

3.) Zebra mussels have not been found to date in the Huletts area. They have been found at 8 locations throughout the lake, 6 in the south and 2 in the north, but the lake’s low levels of calcium make it hard for the mussels to survive. Zebra mussel’s need roughly 20 parts of calcium per million in order for the shells to harden, whereas Lake George averages 12 parts of calcium per million in most locations. Where they have been found, calcium levels have been heightened. In these locations, the problem is being dealt with by hand harvesting by underwater divers which seems to be working. In the areas they have been found, calcium levels have been high. Cement seawall’s have known calcification effects and the Darrin Fresh Water Institute is studying these effects.