Even the State is Sick of Paying High Property Taxes.

North Country Public Radio has a short radio spot which came out about 10 days ago which highlights that:

“For the first time since the 1800s, the state of New York wants to cap property tax payments on forest preserve land in the Adirondack Park.”

This would be absolutely devastating to property owners in the Adirondacks. Right now the state pays property taxes to local towns and school districts based on the land they own in that town. This would effectively reduce their share, shifting the burden to private landowners.

Listen to it here. It’s only about 3.5 minutes.

Cruella DeVille Would Be Happy

Remember the cries of Cruella DeVille to “kill the puppies, kill ALL the puppies” in 101 Dalmatians? Well Governor Paterson is killing all the pheasants and closing the Reynold’s Game farm by the end of the year.

The Reynolds Game Farm, is the last-of-its-kind New York game preserve where pheasants have been bred and released into the wild since the 1920’s. You won’t hear much about this in the mainstream press but this is the type of thing that makes upstate sportsmen really mad. The reason is that this preserve is funded by excise taxes collected on all firearm and ammunition purchases. Instead of releasing the birds into the wild in the Spring, they will be slaughtered and given away in the city and the Governor will claim credit for a free holiday bird. Sad but true.

Read about it here.

A Great Gift Idea

Here is a book which would make a great Christmas gift. While I was researching my book, I was fortunate enough to meet one of the co-writers of this book doing research at the same time. In Stoddard’s Footstep: The Adirondacks Then and Now, photographer, Mark Bowie, faithfully returned to many of the exact locations where Seneca Ray Stoddard shot his historic Adirondack photographs in the 1880’s and took pictures of how the locations look today. It is an interesting photographic time capsule and album, looking at the same exact spots then and now.

Learn More Here

Update: December 16, 2008

We got our first look at this book and in addition to a large section on Lake George, it has two great historical photographs of Huletts.

What the heck is a Stromatolite?

Do you know what a Stromatolite is? I didn’t until I read chapter 19 in Bill Bryson’s book “A Short History of Nearly Everything” – which I found highly interesting.

Well a Stromatolite is one of the first complex living organisms that arrived on the scene about 3.5 billion years ago; which is quite a long time ago considering the earth is only 4.5 billion years old.

The interesting thing is that I found a press release from the NY State Museum which tells us that the Adirondacks a few billion years ago were teaming with them. Some of the more complex ones have been found in present day Washington County.

“New York has the oldest animal fossils in the eastern United States – dating to a time that takes eight zeros to express. The (museum had an) exhibition … of these, a star-like trail discovered in Washington County. (NY has) fossils that are even older, stromatolites made by blue-green bacteria living more than a billion years ago in the seas of what are now the Adirondacks.”

Next time you’re out for a walk, you’ll know what to look for.

Logging in the Adirondacks

This is a real good piece (about 7 minutes) about the history of logging in the Adirondacks. Logging and tourism are two industries that the Adirondack Park Agency is supposed to specifically encourage. It’s also presents the history of the formation of the Adirondack Park in the late 1800’s. It points out correctly, that private land has always been a big part of the Adirondack Park.

Did the Lost Dauphin of France Really Stay in Huletts?

This is a great piece from Adirondack Magazine about rural legends of the Adirondacks. Was there really a Lake George Monster? What was the biggest buck ever shot here? Did Napoleon Bonaparte’s brother live in the Adirondacks? Does Presidential brother, Jeb Bush really own land in the Champlain Valley?

From Gerald Ford’s son to the Lost Dauphin of France, the legends are all spelled out here. It a great read. Perhaps you’ll learn of a legend you never knew existed.