Bits of Everything

Support the Huletts Post Office

The Washington Post details a GAO report that endorses postal cuts.

“Lawmakers also should consider establishing a panel similar to the Defense Base Closure and Realignment Commission to independently recommend changes, the report said. Auditors, however, also suggested that more details are needed about potential delivery cuts and post office closures.”

Remember stamp and postal purchases in Huletts Landing, support the operation of the Huletts Post Office.

Leave the Firewood Home

North Country Public Radio details the DEC’s attempts stop wood infested with invasive insects from entering the Adirondacks.

Albany Still Waiting on Giants

According to the Giants Football Blog, NY Giants CEO John Mara, is still waiting to make an announcement regarding summer camp at the University of Albany.

Froehlich Grant Makes School Boat Ride Possible


Students from Putnam were the first to board the Lake George Association’s Floating Classroom, through a grant by the Froehlich Foundation which aids local school districts. Helen Froehlich was a longtime resident of Huletts Landing.

Due to a grant from the Froehlich Foundation, elementary students from Putnam School District were the first to venture out on the Lake George Association’s Floating Classroom this spring. And this was the first time in the 20-year history of the Floating Classroom that the Putnam School District has participated. Students from Warrensburg, Glens Falls, South Glens Falls, Ticonderoga and Lake Luzerne will also be going out before the school year ends. Because of a generous grant from the Froehlich Foundation, the program can be provided at no cost in 2010 to school districts in the Lake George watershed.

“The program tied in perfectly with the New York State science curriculum for our 4 – 6th grade students,” said Meredith Beeman, a teacher at Putnam Station School. “The trip included scientific investigations and methods, and information about the water cycle and the local ecology of Lake George. The students had a fantastic time. They talked about the equipment they got to use for days. The program provided a real world hands on science experience for our students. The highlight was catching plankton and examining them under the microscopes. This activity was a good primer for the students as they are set to begin studying invasive aquatic plants in the Adirondacks using our new wireless microscope,” she said.

Last year the Lake George Association purchased and launched a new 40-ft boat, a custom-built Floating Classroom for schools throughout the Lake George Watershed and beyond. On the boat, students investigate the Lake George ecosystem, and engage in the hands-on science behind keeping the Lake’s water clean and healthy. Students catch and identify tiny animals called zooplankton that live in the lake and they measure the water’s quality and clarity.

“We instill in the students a sense of life-long stewardship for the Lake,” said Kristen Rohne, a former Queensbury student who took a trip on the floating classroom during her 7th grade year, and grew up to become the LGA’s watershed educator. “It’s an experience the students will never forget… I know I never did! The program helps the students see how important it is for people to protect Lake George.”

On the boat, students have the opportunity to use the actual tools of the water ecology trade: Secchi disks, plankton nets, field microscopes and Van Dorn bottles. Students measure water temperature, pH and dissolved oxygen, all are important indications of lake quality. In addition, they gain an understanding of how Lake George is different from other lakes, and learn about the Lake’s geographical history, and learn about threats to the lake from invasive species and pollution.

For the first time this summer, the LGA will be offering Floating Classroom trips for the general public on Wednesdays during July and August, leaving the dock at Shepard Park in Lake George at 11 am. Reservations are required. Scouting groups, homeowner associations and others are also welcome to book a trip for their group.

The Floating Classroom will visit Huletts twice this summer courtesy of the Friends of Historic Huletts.

Saturday Quote

During my second year of nursing school our professor gave us a quiz. I breezed through the questions until I read the last one: “What is the first name of the woman who cleans the school?” Surely this was a joke. I had seen the cleaning woman several times, but how would I know her name? I handed in my paper, leaving the last question blank. Before the class ended, one student asked if the last question would count toward our grade. “Absolutely,” the professor said. “In your careers, you will meet many people. All are significant. They deserve your attention and care, even if all you do is smile and say hello.” I’ve never forgotten that lesson. I also learned her name was Dorothy.

Joann C. Jones

Bits of Everything

Rogers Ranger Challenge: Fort Ann to Lake George

Are you up to the Rogers Rangers Challenge? Find out what it is on the Adirondack Almanack.

Info-graphic: Teens and Their Mobile Phones

Here’s a great graphic from Flowtown showing how teens use their cell phones.

Lawns on Lake George Face Scrutiny

The Post Star reports on manicured lawns and Lake George.

Webcam: Bald Eagles in their Nest

The Eagles of Hornsby Island webcam stays focused on a Bald Eagle nest in British Columbia.

Saturday Quote

How far that little candle throws his beams!
So shines a good deed in a naughty world.

Shakespeare
The Merchant of Venice
V, i, 90

Bits of Everything

Police, Feds Raid Whitehall Business

The Post Star has an interesting story about a local store.

Bald Eagle Now Healthy, Takes Flight

The Adirondack Journal has a heartwarming story here.

Time Travel Possible Says Famed Astrophysicist

Keep you eyes out for time travelers but to understand the theory read here.

NY Giants to Return to Albany? Maybe

The NY Giants issued a press release regarding their summer camp in Albany and then quickly amended it. Train-a-Thought Blog explores it.

Saturday Song

Jeff Bridges plays ‘The Weary Kind’ from the movie ‘Crazy Heart’.

httpv://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z8monRJzzvU

Bits of Everything

Eastern Woods Return / Face New Threats

The Washington Post had a good article documenting the historical changes to eastern forests over the last 400 years and some modern threats that they face. One might not think that deer pose a threat to the forest, but as this video points out, they eat most of the young saplings.

Blight in Whitehall, New Ideas in Lake Luzerne

I missed this Post Star article from a few weeks ago. Here’s what another local town is doing.

Christopher Llyod Coming to Vermont in Late August

This might be worth seeing. The Rutland Herald reports on the Back to Future actor playing Willy Loman.

Country Graffiti: Local Expression or Eyesore?

As you drive on many local roads throughout the area, you can’t miss the spray painted words and symbols on many nearby outcroppings. For the purpose of this piece I am refering to this as “Country Graffiti”. There may be a better term but I’ve never seen it discussed or written about so this is my own term.

I don’t particularly pay attention to it but I would think most people at least notice it occasionally. Wikipedia has this to say about graffiti in part:

“(The) name for images or lettering scratched, scrawled, painted or marked in any manner on property. In most countries, defacing property with graffiti without the property owner’s consent is considered vandalism, which is punishable by law. Sometimes graffiti is employed to communicate social and political messages. There are many different types and styles of graffiti and it is a rapidly developing art form whose value is highly contested, being reviled by many authorities while also subject to protection, sometimes within the same jurisdiction.”

I must admit I’ve never stopped and asked a property owner if these marking met the above definition of graffiti. For all I know, the owners of property could have spray painted them themselves. I haven’t seen any to be what I would consider “social or political messages” though. Usually, it’s just people’s names and a message about so and so loving so and so.

From what I’ve seen, it basically records a person’s presence at a particular spot or commemorates their romance. However, Wikipedia also notes that “this type of graffiti is dated and is left untouched for decades, offering a look into local historical minutiae”. It could be claimed that it demonstrates a dull idleness which bespeaks a pretty boring existence and/or some desire for a quick thrill.

However, the flip side is that it’s really out-of-place in a rural pristine setting. Many would argue it actually works against local economies because tourism supports so many in the Adirondacks. If our picturesque roads, which bring people into the area, are turned into blighted thoroughfares, it takes away from the experience of why tourists come here in the first place.

Maybe I’m a hermit, but I’ve never heard this discussed at any public meeting: local and/or state. I don’t even know if the Adirondack Park Agency or the State Transportation Department has a policy on it.

However I did hear a story once about a local artist in Maryland who caught some boys writing graffiti on her outside wall and made a deal with them. She would bring them into her studio and teach them how to truly “paint” and they would agree not to make any more graffiti. Perhaps that’s the best message. If you give people an education and inspire them through your talents, you not only transform their idleness into something better but you protect the world and make it a better place at the same time.

Saturday Quote

“Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys.”

P. J. O’Rourke

Happy Easter

We Wish You & Yours a Happy Easter

Resurrection, Alvise Vivarini, 1498

“And when the sabbath was past, Mary Mag’dalene, and Mary the mother of James, and Salo’me, bought spices, so that they might go and anoint him. And very early on the first day of the week they went to the tomb when the sun had risen. And they were saying to one another, “Who will roll away the stone for us from the door of the tomb?” And looking up, they saw that the stone was rolled back; — it was very large. And entering the tomb, they saw a young man sitting on the right side, dressed in a white robe; and they were amazed. And he said to them, “Do not be amazed; you seek Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. He has risen, he is not here; see the place where they laid him. But go, tell his disciples and Peter that he is going before you to Galilee; there you will see him, as he told you.”

Mark 16:1-7