Mark Your Calendars Now


Over 30 people, including many children, enjoyed having the Lake George Association’s Floating classroom stop in Huletts in 2011.

I’m pleased to announce that the Lake George Association’s Floating Classroom, will return to Huletts on Friday, July 20th at 1:00 pm, courtesy of the Friends of Historic Huletts Landing who is sponsoring this event.

A donation will be required to help defray the cost but I’ll have more specifics as the date draws closer.

So if you missed the excursion last summer, please plan on attending the trip in 2012!

(Click on image to see full-scale.)

Rabid Goat Confirmed in Essex County

A rabid goat has been confirmed north of Huletts Landing in Essex County.

In addition to this, there have been 4 rabies positive raccoon’s, multiple skunks, and 1 fox in Washington County within the past year.

Rabies is spread through the saliva or brain tissue of an infected animal. In many instances, it comes through a bite. If treatment is initiated promptly following a rabies exposure, rabies can be prevented. If a rabies exposure is not treated and a person develops clinical signs of rabies, the disease almost always results in death.

In animals, many times the animal gets aggressive. In other instances the animal grows lethargic. Seeing a nocturnal animal in the daytime can be a sign that that animal has rabies.

Exposure to rabies may be minimized by:

* having all pets vaccinated and keeping them up-to-date on their vaccinations

* avoiding contact with all wild animals, especially those acting abnormally (such as being out during the day when they are typically nighttime animals)

To control the spread of rabies in wild animals, such as raccoons, the New York State Department of Health oversees projects to distribute a special bait containing rabies vaccine. Baits are placed in areas frequented by raccoons in order to immunize them against rabies.

Please be careful, rabies has been found in numerous animals nearby.

Lake George Remains Clearer Than Other New York Lakes


The water off of Huletts Landing was measured to be some of the clearest water in the lake in 2011.

Lake George received the best reading on a measurement for clarity among 98 New York lakes in 2011, the Lake George Association announced today.

“If you want clear water in New York State, Gull Bay on Lake George is the place to be!” said Nancy Mueller, the manager of the NYS Federation of Lake Associations, Inc., the organization sponsoring New York’s Citizens Statewide Lake Assessment Program (CSLAP), in conjunction with the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation. On Lake George, the program has been coordinated by the Lake George Association for the past eight years.

Peter Leyh, an LGA member, was one of several 2011 volunteers to participate in CSLAP. Peter sampled water near Gull Bay on the north end of the lake, and sank a measuring disk for clarity, called a Secchi disk, into the lake. He was able to see the disk in the water at a depth of 11.3 meters on July 5, and he recorded a reading of 11.35 meters on August 22. Both times Peter was able to see the Secchi disk at a depth a little over 37 feet. On August 7, LGA CSLAP volunteers Jack and Cathy LaBombard, who were testing the water near Huletts Landing, recording a reading of 11.24 meters. No other lake participating in the CSLAP program this year could match these readings.

“The rainy, stormy weather had most of the readings across the state down this year– so it was nice to have a few double digit readings. They were hard to come by,” said Mueller.

Readings taken by participants on the LGA’s Floating Classroom showed similar results. “We had some good days on trips for students in the north end of the Lake, and the readings we took near Roger’s Rock were probably close to Peter’s,” said Kristen Rohne, LGA watershed educator.

“While this is great news for Lake George,” said Walt Lender, LGA executive director, “it by no means allows us to relax our efforts to protect the Lake and keep it clean. In fact, it means just the opposite. People need to know that all of these exceptionally clear readings were taken at the north end of the Lake on a perfectly calm day. The clarity and cleanliness in the south end of Lake George, near West Brook, is not anywhere close to this. We have seen a disturbing trend in loss of water clarity and quality from south to north. ”

“This helps keep things in perspective for us,” said Emily DeBolt, LGA director of education. “Yes – lake George is facing many threats – but it is still exceptionally clear, and we are exceptionally lucky. We still have time to work together to protect it and keep it this way for years to come! The key is acting now before it really truly is too late,” she said.

Every summer since 2004, the Lake George Association has coordinated volunteers to assess water quality and clarity through the CSLAP program. The data gathered is used to help manage and assess trends in New York’s many lakes. In addition to CSLAP, the Lake George Association actively encourages adults and children to learn more about lake monitoring and stewardship aboard its Floating Classroom, a specially equipped catamaran which takes groups out on the Lake from May through September.

Bits of Everything

NY Times: Adirondacks Warming?

The NY Times follows Jerry Jenkins, an ecologist with the Wildlife Conservation Society.

Hard frosts that a generation ago came in mid-September now arrive in October. Lake Champlain, a huge freshwater body that divides New York and Vermont, once froze over completely every winter, but now remains open in the middle some years.

Groups Look at Lake George Dredging Differently

The Post Star describes the debate.

Cell Service Almost Complete for Lake George

The Lake George Mirror reports that the entire basin has almost complete coverage.

Old Ticonderoga Hospital to Get New Use

The Press Republican reports on the old Moses-Ludington Hospital.

Teddy Roosevelt’s Home Set for Rehab

Yahoo and the AP take a look Roosevelt’s classic home.

Bits of Everything

Theodore Reale, Designer & Engineer of Huletts Sewer Systems, R.I.P.

Recently the Times of Ti carried the obituary of Theodore Reale. “Ted” as his friends called him, was the principal of A.P. Reale and Sons, the primary designer and contractor for both of the sewer systems that serve Huletts.

Washington County Leaders Want Budget Lowered

The Post Star reports that the 2012 Washington County budget was struck down by the county Board of Supervisors who didn’t like the 1.97% increase.

Know Every Adirondack Tree? If Not, Buy This

The Adirondack Mountain Club (ADK) is reprinting Forests and Trees of the Adirondack High Peaks Region by the late Edwin H. Ketchledge, the definitive guide to Adirondack trees. What a great gift idea! Read the Adirondack Almanack to learn more.

Zip Line Down French Mountain Spurs Two Towns

When it comes to a new zip line, both Queensbury and Lake George are ready to lead, so says the Post Star.

Bits of Everything

Popular Ti Restaurant Closes

The Times of Ti reports on the closing of the Carillon Restaurant.

Lake George Rock Climbing Gets National Exposure

The Lake George Mirror tells us about Paddle to Crag on Lake George.

Saranac Lake Community Store Profiled in NY Times

The hearty residents of Saranac Lake started their own store and made the NY Times.

Cash Coming In from Trash Plant Going

The Post Star reports that Washington county will receive a windfall because we no longer have the trash plant to operate.

Lake Saving Project Completed in English Brook

The Lake George Association has constructed a new sediment pond at English Brook. The pond is designed to capture hundreds of tons of sediment before it enters Lake George.

The Lake George Association has completed the construction of a new sediment basin at the mouth of English Brook in the town of Lake George at the southern end of the lake. Construction was completed during the last week of October. The 150-foot long sediment basin was designed by the Warren County Soil and Water Conservation District (WCSWCD) with financial assistance from the LGA. The basin will slow down the flow of water and allow sediment to fall out prior to entering the Lake. Grass pavers were also installed to enable future access to the site so that it can be maintained. The basin will be cleaned out every one to two years, when it reaches about 50-75% capacity. Each time it is cleaned out, roughly 300-400 cubic yards of material will be removed.

After Tropical Storm Irene, English Brook changed its route near its mouth: it started flowing in the same path that it did nearly 50 years ago, prior to the construction of the Northway. The last 300 feet of the brook now flows in a northeasterly direction. After input from the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC), it was determined that the stream should remain in place and the basin installed where the stream is currently flowing.


This picture, taken in November 2010, shows the path that English brook took before Tropical Storm Irene and the delta forming in Lake George.

In the aftermath of Tropical Storm Irene, WCSWCD used funds provided by the DEC to pull out trees, remediate the streambank and recreate capacity in the brook. The remainder of these funds will be used to complete more of the projects outlined in a WSCSCD 2008 English Brook Watershed Study, and the LGA will provide supplemental funding for these where possible.

English Brook is one of eight major brooks flowing into Lake George. “LGA lake saving projects make a huge difference to water quality, because stormwater runoff is the number one source of pollutants entering Lake George,” said Randy Rath, LGA project manager.

Since the construction of the Northway, the shoreline near the mouth of English Brook has moved significantly. A cottage that was once right on the lake now sits several hundred yards back. The DEC lists the brook as sediment impaired, and its delta is one of the largest on Lake George. 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.


Dave Wick, executive director of the Warren County Soil and Water Conservation District, stands at the current Lake George shoreline near the mouth of English Brook, and looks back at a cottage that was located at the water’s edge some 50 years ago. Construction of the Northway increased the amount of sediment carried downstream and caused the location of the shoreline to change significantly.

English Brook is located just north of Lake George Village at the Lochlea Estate. Earlier this summer, the LGA installed a $49,500 Aqua-Swirl stormwater separator on the property, as part of a $100,000 stormwater project. This system is collecting 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 a 48-acre subwatershed is now being captured and treated.

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 in 2009. This reservoir is slated for cleaning again in 2012. The LGA acquired funding for all of the English Brook projects through grants from the Helen V. Froehlich Foundation and the New York State Department of State and the Environmental Protection Fund, with additional funding for the Aqua-Swirl project provided by the Lake Champlain Basin Program.

Now that much of the needed upland work is complete, the culminating lake saving step for English Brook is to remove the sediment that has built up in the delta in Lake George 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.

LGA Cleans Out Sediment Basins in Hague


Last week, crews cleaned out the sediment that has built up in a retention basin on Hague Brook. This pond on the upper part of the brook was originally constructed by the LGA in 2006. Over 45 dump trucks full of material was removed from two different retention basins on the brook.

This past week, three sediment basins in Hague were cleaned out: two on Hague Brook, and a third at the mouth of Jenkins Brook. The project was a team effort by the Lake George Association, Warren County Soil and Water Conservation District, and the town of Hague. Over 1100 cubic yards of material was removed from the three sites.

“These basins are instrumental to maintaining high water quality in Lake George,” said LGA executive director Walt Lender. “We began constructing the basins several years ago, and now every one to two years we go in to clean them out. The LGA provides project support and partial funding for the construction projects as well as funding to help maintain the sites,” he added.

Approximately $5,000 of the $8,000 Hague clean-outs has been funded by the LGA, with in-kind management and project oversite by the Warren County Soil & Water Conservation District, and in-kind hauling services provided by the town of Hague. “The town of Hague realizes the importance of maintaining the basins and the health of Lake George. We were happy to contribute to the project,” said Hague Town Supervisor Dan Belden.


A long-reach excavator removes sediment from a retention basin at the mouth of Jenkins Brook.

From the upper basin on Hague Brook, crews removed 530 cubic yards of material, or roughly 31 dump trucks full. On the lower basin on Hague Brook, 285 cubic yards of material was removed, equating to roughly 16 dump trucks full. At Jenkins Brook, 345 cubic yards of sediment was removed, roughly 20 dump trucks full. Morrissey Construction provided trucking services and an operator for the long reach excavator, and Services Unlimited also provided trucking services.

Beginning in the early 1990s, an active program of utilizing upland in-stream sediment basins to capture sediment began in Warren County, spearheaded by the Warren County Soil & Water Conservation District (WCSWCD). Old reservoirs were cleaned out and new in-stream sediment basins were created. By slowing stream velocity, basins allow sediment to drop out of suspension and be captured by the basin prior to reaching Lake George.

Lake George Land Conservancy Announces New Position

The Lake George Land Conservancy has announced the hiring of Chad Knisely as the Land Conservancy’s new Land Protection and Stewardship Specialist.

Prior to joining LGLC, Chad worked as acting director for Grand River Partners in Painesville, Ohio, where he managed land protection projects, watershed planning, community outreach and organizational fundraising.

As LGLC’s Land Protection and Stewardship Specialist, Chad is responsible for the creation of a Five-Year Conservation Priority Plan as well as an annual land management strategy for existing protected properties. He also oversees all stewardship needs for LGLC’s seven preserves and nearly 20 miles of hiking trails, as well as manage the organization’s seven conservation easements and lead public hikes and educational programs.

Chad and his wife, Amy, expect to reside in the Glens Falls area with their two young sons.

Funding for this new position has been provided in part by the Land Trust Alliance (LTA) Conservation Partnership Program. The LTA awards were announced in March, when the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation and the LTA joined members of the state Legislature and land trust representatives to announce $1.4 million in Conservation Partnership Program grants. The grants, funded through the State’s Environmental Protection Fund, enable local nonprofit land trusts to increase the pace, improve the quality, and ensure the permanence of voluntary conservation of private lands, resulting in significant environmental and economic benefits for communities across the state.

Preliminary 2011 Lake Stewards Results Released


Michael Abrahamson, LGA lake steward, inspects a boat for invasive species at the Dunham’s Bay launch this summer. Dunham’s was a new location for the program this year.

The Lake George Association (LGA) has released preliminary results from the 2011 Lake Steward program. The LGA has managed training, hiring, supervision and reporting for the Lake Steward Program since 2008.

During the summer of 2011, LGA Lake stewards were posted at six different boat launches: Norowal Marina, Mossy Point, Hague Town Beach, Rogers Rock, Dunham’s Bay, and Million Dollar Beach. The stewards inspected 8,584 boats for invasive species, removed suspicious specimens from 52 boats prior to launch, and educated over 19,000 people about the threats of invasive species and how to prevent their spread.

“We had an extremely busy summer,” said Emily DeBolt, LGA director of education and outreach. “From over 8,500 boats inspected, 1,016 were at risk of bringing invasives into Lake George because they had been in a body of water other than Lake George during the past two weeks,” she said. “Right now, Lake George has only four invasive species. Some of our nearby water bodies have dozens.”

Upon launch, suspicious specimens were removed from 52 boats. Of those, 31 of the boats were carrying at least one invasive species. The LGA recovered 22 samples of Eurasian watermilfoil, 9 samples of curly-leaf pondweed, 4 of water chestnut and 2 of zebra mussel.

The stewards also inspected boats returning to the launch after boating on the Lake. Seventy-three of these boats had suspicious samples removed. Of these, 46 boats contained at least one invasive species. The LGA recovered 15 samples of Eurasian watermilfoil, 6 of curly-leaf pondweed, and 2 of water chestnut.

“Our stewards ask the boaters if they have taken preventative steps to guard against the introduction and spread of invasive species. This year, 75 percent of the boats we interacted with said they had,” said Walt Lender, executive director of the LGA. “While this is definitely positive news, and shows that people are becoming increasingly aware of the need to properly clean their boats, we want to see these numbers go even higher in the years to come,” he said.

The program grew significantly from its 2010 level, when 2,538 boats were inspected at four launches. Additional funding provided this year by the Lake Champlain Basin Program and the Lake George Park Commission allowed for more coverage during peak periods and at launches that receive the highest traffic. Additional financial support was provided by the Helen V. Froehlich Foundation. The program was originally conceived by the Invasive Species Task Force of the Lake George Watershed Coalition.

In addition to inspection, lake stewards collected additional data about lake users and invasive species spread. This information sheds light on the pathways of invasive species, and helps to identify target areas for early detection and control. A full report for the public is being prepared and will be ready later this year.

The program is closely coordinated with similar programs. Lake George, Lake Champlain, and the Adirondack Watershed Institute collaborate on training, printed materials, and data collection as members of a regional partnership, the Adirondack Park Invasive Plant Program (APIPP).

LGA Ad Series Continued

The Lake George Association ran a series of ads this summer spotlighting individuals who are contributing to improving the quality of Lake George.

Because things have been quiet lately, I thought I would continue with some of the individuals that were profiled.

Here is Peter Leyh’s LGA ad. (Click on the picture to follow the link.)

Bits of Everything

Flooding Spawns Aggressive Mosquitoes

The Burlington Free Press has an article on a new round of late mosquitoes.

Town of Whitehall Considering a 10% Tax Increase

The Post Star reports that the town of Whitehall already wants to override the new tax cap.

Milfoil Found in Lake Champlain South Bay

The Adirondack Almanack has a good overview of the problem with Milfoil in South Bay.

Mountain Lion Passed This Way

The Albany Times Union tells us that the DEC was aware of a mountain lion passing through Lake George Village last December.