A New Look

So over the last few days, I’ve done a major upgrade on the Huletts Current. It’s now mobile friendly and has a new design. The site is now more secure and the only way to reach it is through the address: www.HulettsCurrent.com

We’re now with a new hosting platform and the back-end code is going through a major upgrade. After 10 years, it was time for a change.

We’ll have a link from HulettsOnLakeGeorge.com – which is also going through a major upgrade. So lots of things are not working at the moment but things should be back to normal over the next week.

Thanks for your patience and I will be updating things over the next few days. Stay tuned….

Speedo Tech Paddles


Speedo Tech Paddles

These interesting looking hand extensions are designed to help you swim with better technique but I found when you pair them with flippers on your feet, you swim like aquaman.

New technology for swimmer!

It’s Been Awhile

Due to some technical challenges and life being way too busy recently, I haven’t been able to post over the last few weeks. However, things are getting back to normal and the Memorial Day weekend will be here soon so things should begin flowing on the Huletts Current again!

Back in Business

If you’ve been trying to access the Huletts Current over the last few days, you received all types of error messages. I appreciate all those who emailed me about this. I apologize for the interruption in service. The database which stores the posts and the server which interactively serves the pages were not working together as they should have. I am hopeful that the issue has now been corrected. Thank you for your patience.

That’s a Lot of Visitors

While, I haven’t shared statistics for the Huletts Current in the past, I was fairly surprised when I checked the statistics lately.

With the month of July now almost finished, I wanted to share that 2016 is shaping up to be the most visited year in the history of the Huletts Current. The number of “visits” for the year has just recently surpassed 72,000. Now while this includes repeat visits, we’re on pace to exceed 100,000 visits for the year.

Anecdotally, people always either ask or email me to post “more news.” I continue to look for a variety of information about those things that would interest you, the reader. I can’t read minds though, so if you have news or interesting ideas, please let me know. So thank you for reading the Huletts Current, this year is shaping up to be a great one!

Temporarily Down

The Huletts Current was down during the last day, as our hosting company experienced some issues. They redirected the link to their main page as they restored service.

We should now be up and running again. All in time for Labor Day weekend!

New Board Members Join LGLC

The Lake George Land Conservancy (LGLC) welcomes three new members to its Board of Directors: Ed Becker, DVM, Elizabeth Guest, and Elizabeth Meigher.


Ed Becker

Ed Becker, DVM, is a recently retired veterinarian who built and founded The Animal Hospital P.C. in Slingerlands, NY. Dr. Becker’s interest in wildlife rehabilitation began as a young veterinarian, treating wildlife when very few veterinarians were involved. For over 25 years Dr. Becker was the consulting veterinarian to the Endangered Species Unit of the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation. He was directly involved with Pete Nye and the bald eagle reintroduction program, as well as with Barb Loucks and the peregrine falcon program.

Dr. Becker was appointed to the Guilderland NY Conservation council in 1983 and then to the Planning Board in 1986. He served on the planning board for 19 consecutive years as vice chairman when the area was under intense developmental pressure. Dr. Becker also served on the Presidents Council at Cornell University, and was on the board of directors of the Capital District Animal Emergency Clinic for many years. He has a home on Sabbath Day Point and winters in Cape Haze, Florida.


Elizabeth Guest

Elizabeth Guest has been a lifetime summer resident of Silver Bay, a fact which greatly influenced and guided her path in life. In 2000, the Ms. Guest family gifted a conservation easement on their 59 acres to LGLC, a gift that resulted in their induction as a founding member into LGLC’s Apperson Society.

Ms. Guest graduated from Skidmore College in Saratoga Springs, NY with a BA in business and math. A career at Sotheby’s auction house in New York City culminated in her position as an Impressionist and Modern paintings and sculpture expert and appraiser for the company. A natural career transition led to the field of interior design. Ms. Guest founded Elizabeth Guest Interiors LLC in 1996, with a primary focus on high-end residential design.

Ms. Guest has raised her three sons and a niece in Silver Bay every summer, continuing the tradition into the next generation of a deep and lasting love for this magnificent lake and its surrounding landscapes.


Elizabeth Meigher

Elizabeth Meigher was born in New York City and graduated from Dartmouth College in 1999 with a BA in English. After college she headed to Morgan Stanley, where she worked as a Sales Analyst for three years. In 2003 she followed her English major routes to Quest Media, where she began working for Quest, a lifestyle magazine that covers real estate, culture, history, nostalgia, entertainment, philanthropy, business and fashion. In 2005, Ms. Meigher founded Q Magazine, a quarterly publication focused on style and nostalgia.

Ms. Meigher took her first trip to Lake George when she was eight years old and has spent every summer since at her family home on Crown Island. She loves to swim, hike and sail and play with her English springer spaniel, “Tug.”

Tuesday’s Technical Problems

On Tuesday, you may have noticed that the Huletts Current went down. This was caused by a widespread attack on WordPress login pages. The attack was a large one (hundreds of hits a second to many WordPress sites spread across the Internet). At that point, the fastest solution was to drop all traffic to the login page while the hosting company looked for solutions.

The downside to this, of course, is that it blocked legitimate access to me when I wanted to login on Tuesday.

The hosting company acted quickly to put new security rules in place that would help them allow legitimate customers to login to WordPress, but would stop the attacker after a number of bad attempts. During some periods of the week the site itself went down.

These changes were rolled out Tuesday afternoon. It took a few tries to find the right balance to block the bad guy but not keep a legitimate users from logging in. The attack subsided overnight.

The attack returned in force on Wednesday during the business day. This made it obvious that the attack was based off a botnet—likely using the computers of unsuspecting office workers coming in for a normal day of work!

By this point, the hosting company and their providers were flagging almost one hundred thousand IP addresses, and more new IP addresses were showing up every second. Even though much of the attack was being thwarted, it was so large that simply handling the traffic was starting to impact the hosting servers.

The team was able to keep things stable for most of Wednesday, working hard to tweak rules as they identified new trends.

By Thursday, it was clear that the attack was not subsiding. However the breakthrough happened on Thursday, as a difference was found between the way the attack accesses WordPress and legitimate customers access WordPress. That change was rolled out on Thursday afternoon and hundreds of hits a second dropped to nearly none.

We head into the weekend in good shape, but vigilant against a returning or altered attack. In the meantime, if you are feeling any lingering effects (the most common one might be if your IP got marked as a possibly bad IP) please let me know.

Left Sidebar Change

I’ve changed things around slightly on the left sidebar this morning, adding the Hulett street name map and making sure all the links are working.

Four Years Old Today

The “big” news today is that it is November 9, 2012 which is exactly four years since my first post on the Huletts Current in 2008.

So this was my fourth full year posting on this site, and it continues to amaze me what the blog has become.

So thank you for continuing to read the Huletts Current and know I appreciate sharing the “news” with you.

As is my custom, here are the most read posts from the past year.

1.) Elephant Mountain Fire Extinguished
2.) Bruce Young Reappointed as Chairman of LGPC
3.) New Book Coming Soon
4.) Huletts Island View Marina Sold
5.) 8mm Film of the 1974 Labor Day Picnic
6.) Interview with Stanley Barber
7.) Spiny Water Flea Confirmed in Lake George
8.) Mutual Aid Fire Drill is a Success
9.) Interview with Walt Lender, LGA Executive Director
10.) Interview with School Board Candidate, Mark Ives

Now it’s on to year five!

New Wallpaper Added


The view south from Vicars island campsite # 9 has been added as a desktop wallpaper on the “Wallpaper” page.


George,

My family has been camping on the LG islands since 1961 and we’ve kept a boat at Island View Marina for the past 20 years or so. I just wanted to submit a wallpaper piicture I took from Vicars #9 looking south along the Tongue Mt Range. Hope you feel it will be useful for others, as I’ve had it as my desktop background since I took it.

Gurk Fennelly

Thanks Gurk. What better way to share memories of Huletts Landing and Lake George than to share desktop wallpaper?

I’ve added Durk’s picture to the wallpaper page. If you have a shot that you’d like to share, please send it to me and I’ll try to post it.

More on Porous Pavement

A demonstration section of porous pavement in front of the LGA offices in Lake George show the effective performance of the material during the winter months; ice and snow does not build up on the surface of the material to the degree that it does on the traditional gravel surface surrounding the porous section.

Beach Road at the south end of Lake George will be re-built this spring with an unconventional pavement: porous asphalt. Upon completion, Beach Road will become the first heavily traveled roadway in New York State (and one of the only roads in the Northeast) to be paved with porous asphalt.

“This is one of the most important lake saving projects ever for Lake George,” said Walt Lender, LGA executive director, “and a first of its kind for New York State,” he said. “The LGA recognizes both Warren County Superintendent of Public Works Jeff Tennyson, the state Department of Transportation, and the Federal Highway Administration for taking the bold steps to move forward on this revolutionary project, one we believe will get national recognition, and will set a precedent for many like it to follow in other lakeside communities,” said Lender.

The engineering firm of Barton & Loguidice (B&L) is designing the project, which has been funded with state, federal and county monies. Construction will begin in May of this year with completion in the fall of 2013. The porous pavement will be installed between Canada Street and Fort George Road.

Current plans for the timing of the project are:

– Late Feb 2012: Warren County releasing bid packages to contractors
– Early May 2012: Contract awarded
– June 2012: Groundbreaking for the project
– July 2012 – Nov. 2013: Construction


Porous asphalt is mixed with stone that is coarser than that used in conventional pavement. Without sand and finer particles in the mix, air takes up the spaces in the porous asphalt once occupied by the smaller particles. These air, or void, spaces account for approximately 15-20% of the volume in porous asphalt pavements compared to approximately 2% for conventional non-porous pavement mixes. During a storm event, water passes through the air voids in the asphalt down to an underlying stone reservoir layer comprised of clean, washed, angular shaped stone, uniformly sized in the 2” to 3” range. Stormwater is temporarily stored in this 12- to-30-inch-thick reservoir layer as it is absorbed into the underlying soils below. It is in the asphalt, stone, and underlying soil layers that trap and break down the contaminants carried by the water.

Within the past 10 years new polymers and additive fibers have been developed that are much more effective in binding the larger stone in the asphalt mix. These polymers and additive fibers have improved the durability of permeable asphalt in recent years.

One of the greatest benefits of porous pavement is the need for less road salt in the winter. Reductions in salt usage on porous pavement have shown to be 50% or greater in many communities with the greatest reductions in use coming between storms since the need for salt to control black ice is significantly reduced.

Salts (or chlorides) are a soluble (dissolved in water) contaminant and cannot be removed by the porous pavement structure, ponds, wetlands, or vegetated swales. It is by reduction of their use that will be the benefit to the lake. Other pollutants such as zinc, lead, copper, chemical oxygen demand, cadmium, and total phosphorus have shown removal rates of 40% to 95% in porous asphalt applications (source: NYSDEC).

(Click on images to see full scale.)

Three Years Old Today!

Thank you for continuing to read the Huletts Current.

Today is November 9, 2011 which is exactly three years since my first post on the Huletts Current in 2008.

So this was my third full year blogging on this site, and I continue to hear from people who enjoy reading it.

It’s difficult to collect original information and novelty news especially in the “off-season” but my committment is to continue to post those things that I think you ,the reader, will be interested in. Know that when things get a little “slow”, I’m working on putting something up on the site as quickly as possible.

Huletts has a unique charm and the “news” around town is always interesting to uncover. I’ve been told my “voice” is quite unique but that’s because I never really know what I’m going to post from one day to another.

Now what can I say about the year ahead? OK – one fun surprise and news item is on the way. I’ve been working on a major project (which has cut into my writing on this site), which I will announce the completion of here, sometime in the next year. One hint, the left sidebar will change.

For all those lovers of history and Huletts Landing…. well you’ll just have to wait. I’m not going to say when I’m going to announce it. You’ll just have to stop back and enjoy year 4!

Tomorrow, I’ll recap the top stories from year 3.

Out But Not Down

Wow what a week it’s been!

This past week has been crazy, with numerous back end problems with the Huletts Current. It’s been a frenzied few days while I’ve sorted through blog forums, web server hosting issues and numerous other glitches to bring the site up again.

My policy has always been that if the Current is experiencing technical issues I will post some type of notice so you will know what’s happening.

What resulted this past week was mind boggling confusing and probably the most difficult week I’ve had technically since I began the Huletts Current. The site stayed up for most of the week, but database issues prevented me from logging in and changing any content. I was basically locked out. I have numerous ways in which I can log on but all failed this past week, resulting in the last story I posted below on Tuesday being at the top of the blog for a complete week. Multiple contingencies had to be tested before isolating the problem.

So please accept my apologies. News has become a bit backed up while I’ve dealt exclusively with getting the blog back up and running smoothly. Now that things seem to be resolved, news will start flowing again.