Huletts Post Office on POSTPlan: Your Vote Counts

So you’ve heard that the Huletts Landing Post Office is officially on the POSTPlan. This is the plan that cuts hours at rural post offices. It has been proposed that the Huletts Post Office have it’s hours cut from 8 hrs per day to 4 hrs per day. You think that’s the end of the matter. WRONG. The US Postal Service has been eliminating small rural Post Offices on the POSTPlan. This is how. Cutting the hours is but one option, all other options will lead to the closing of the Post Office. Over the next 24 months, the Postal Service will mail a letter, customer survey and the date of a community meeting to customers of post offices on the POSTPlan. USPS will provide four options for POSTPlan post offices. Choose the option for “realigned hours” in the USPS customer survey. Return it immediately to USPS. Any of the other three options will mean closure of the post office. That’s right! If any of the other three options are chosen, USPS will close the Post Office and announce that that was the preferred choice of the community.

Examples of this letter and survey can be found here.

USPS will tally the survey results and tell the fate of the post office at the community meeting.

The new realigned hours will go into effect 30 days after the community is notified of the fate of the post office, ONLY if that is the preferred option by those voting.

The Postal Service will be notifying postal customers over then next 24 months; however it is important to be ready. ONLY the Option for Realigned Hours will keep the post office open!

Realigned hours means postal service hours will be reduced to two, four, or six hours.

This message will repeat over the next two years until this letter and survey is mailed.

Please look at the draft letter and survey so you are prepared to help.

Now For Some History: 1911

Many thanks to Mark Stanton for sharing pictures of this Huletts Beer Stein from 1911. Mark has this very unique item in his collection and sent me pictures of it. I have never heard of “Elephant Mountain Golf Club” or A.W. Clarke but it appears that this is a trophy or award for winning a golf match from 1911. What a fascinating piece of memorabilia!

(Click on Images to See Full-Scale.)

New Assemblyman Sworn In


New state Assemblyman Dan Stec (R) (right) is sworn in on January 1. Stec was recently elected to represent Assembly District 114 which includes Huletts Landing. Standing to the left of Stec is Stec’s wife, Hillary (holding the Bible) and Stec’s parents, Elise and George Stec. Stec’s son, Peter, is standing in front of him. Troy City Court Judge, Matthew J. Turner, conducted the swearing-in. Assembly Minority Leader, Brian Kolb, stands next to the Judge.

Stec’s biography can be seen here.

Click on image to see larger scale.

Benefit Basket Party for Pam Hobus’ Brother, Michael Kennedy

I received this announcement from Pam Hobus. Pam is the wife of Dresden Highway Superintendent, Rick Hobus. Pam’s brother, Michael Kennedy, has been courageously battling cancer and the community is hosting a benefit basket party for him on February 9th. Even if you can’t attend, please consider making a donation. The Hobus and Kennedy families have done much for both Dresden and Whitehall, and they appreciate your generosity and concern as Michael continues his fight.

(Click on the image to see full-scale.)

School District Legal Notice

Legal Notice
Whitehall Central School District
Notice of Capital Project & School Bus Purchase

NOTICE IS GIVEN that a special meeting of the qualified voters of the Whitehall Central School District, Washington County, New York, will be held in the Large Group Instruction Room in the Junior-Senior High School Building on Buckley Road in the Town of Whitehall, New York, on January 23, 2013, between the hours of 12:00 o’clock noon (E.S.T) and 8:00 o’clock P.M. (E.S.T) during which hours the polls will be opened to vote by voting machines upon the following items:

Proposition # 1

RESOLVED:

That the Board of Education of the Whitehall Central School District is hereby authorized to remove and replace the existing Swimming Pool Roof and the existing Cafeteria Roof of the Jr-Sr. High School building located on Buckley Road in the Town of Whitehall at a cost not to exceed the sum of $240,000 and to appropriate from the unreserved portion of the School District’s General Fund Balance the sum of $240,000 for the cost or so much therefore as may be necessary for such purpose.

Proposition # 2

RESOLVED:

That the Board of Education of the Whitehall Central School District is hereby authorized to purchase one (1) forty-one (41) passenger school bus and one (1) sixty-five (65) passenger school bus for the use by the School District, at a cost not to exceed the sum of $220,000 and to appropriate from the unreserved portion of the School District’s General Fund Balance the sum of $220,000 for the cost or so much therefore as may be necessary for such purpose.

By order of the Board of Education,
Martha P. Bascue
School Districk Clerk

A Winter Walk


My brother, sister-in-law, and niece, Margot Kapusinski, stopped by yesterday and before it was too late went for a walk. If you’ve never been in Huletts in the winter, what is most noticeable is the stillness. Here are three pictures which capture the mood of the day. These pictures were taken on Friday. Today, it is snowing again.


The lake is still open.


Sunset comes early.

(Click on images to see full-scale.)

Top News Stor(ies) of Huletts: 2012

Since I’ve been writing here on the Huletts Current, I’ve gotten in the habit of posting what I consider to be the top news story of Huletts Landing from the past year.

This year, I’ve named three stories as “co-top stories” of Huletts for 2012.

Let me explain. As I went through the posts for the entire year, there were many “newsworthy items” that I could have chosen. There simply has been a lot of news this past year. My book, the Hulett Hotel Fire on Lake George was released, the Whitehall School Board had a special election because “write-in” votes ended in a tie, and the Huletts Landing Post Office ending the year on the US Postal Services POStPLAN were all very big stories in their own right.

However there were three stories which I felt were deserving of the top story so I compromised and listed them all. There was a common theme that ran through through these stories that I thought was important.

Bruce Young Reappointed as Chairman of LGPC

Bruce Young, a life-long Huletts Landing resident, was appointed to a third term as Chairman of the Lake George Park Commission (LGPC) by Governor Cuomo and confirmed by the New York State Senate. Mr. Young was originally appointed by Governor Pataki in 1996 and reappointed to a second term in 2002. What makes this so unique is that Mr. Young was appointed by two different Governors of two different political parties. In this day and age where politics has become so polarizing, it is nice to see Mr. Young appointed to a third term. We need more people like Mr. Young, who see that common ground is what binds us together. Mr. Young’s service to the community and the Lake George region is exceptionally commendable.

Huletts Island View Marina Sold

The Huletts Island View Marina was sold in 2012. The new owners are long-time Huletts residents; Tom Conrad, Jeremy Linhart and Amanda Linhart. When any business changes hands, the new owners are making an investment in the community. Many local communities are seeing first-hand what happens when entrepreneurs won’t invest in their community. The fact that Hulett residents stepped up and purchased the marina bodes well for our little piece of the world. Business owners often don’t get the credit they deserve for making communities the vibrant places they are, but Tom Conrad, Jeremy Linhart and Amanda Linhart’s love for Huletts shows in their investment.

Elephant Mountain Fire Extinguished

There are some problems that small communities can’t handle on their own. That’s what happened on July 25, 2012 when a fire was spotted on Elephant Mountain. While our local Huletts Landing Volunteer Fire Department responded and located the fire, a State Police helicopter had to be called in to extinguish the blaze. If it wasn’t for the many brave first responders who willingly put themselves on the line, a larger disaster may have occurred.

So the common theme that ran through all of these co-top stories of Huletts for 2012 was: service to the community. Service can take many forms, but all three of these stories demonstrated service in one way of the other. That’s why they are all worthy of recognition as the top-story of Huletts 2012.

Ballantynes Celebrate 70th Anniversary


Mr. and Mrs. Ballantyne, photographed here in 1945, after Mr. Ballantyne returned from World War II.

Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Ballantyne who today celebrate their 70th wedding anniversary. The Ballantyne’s are well known throughout Huletts, having originally vacationed at the Hulett Hotel in the 1950’s. Throughout their many years on Lake George, the Ballantynes have taught many how to water-ski. (Including me.)

The Ballantynes were married on December 23, 1942, 70 years ago today.

Mr. Ballantyne left shortly thereafter as an officer with the the 34th Infantry Division to fight in World War II. The performance of 34th Infantry in the mountains of Italy is considered one of the finest feats carried out by any soldiers during the war. In return, the 34th’s Infantry battalions sustained losses of about 80%. Mr. Ballantyne participated in many of the epic battles of World War II in Italy; Salerno, Monte Cassino, and Anzio, to name but a few. He would go on to win two Purple Hearts fighting in the Apennines of Italy. The officer who submitted the paperwork for his first Purple Heart was killed the day after he submitted the paperwork. “I was lucky to get back, a lot of the fellows I served with didn’t, ” said Mr. Ballantyne.

The Ballantynes have 6 children and several grandchildren and will be celebrating today with their family.

Congratulations to both Mr. and Mrs. Ballantyne on this very rare accomplishment and may the happy couple be blessed with many more years ahead!

Interview with Molly McMaster Morgoslepov


Molly McMaster Morgoslepov is a cancer survivor and an advocate for early cancer screenings.

Recently, I had the chance to interview Molly McMaster Morgoslepov. Molly is the daughter of long-time Hulett residents, Jim and Trudy McMaster, and spends time in Huletts throughout the year.

Molly is a cancer survivor and a cancer screening advocate. She shares her courageous personal journey below.

To begin, Molly, could you tell us “your story?”

I was going to school at Colorado State University, playing a lot of hockey and just enjoying how great it is out there, but also had some “stomach issues.” I remember the first time it was really obvious, I had really bad stomach pains and went to the bathroom only to find bright red blood in the toilet – a lot of it. I called my new doctor immediately and told the nurse over the phone. She told me it could be one of a few different things (none of which was cancer), and we scheduled an appointment for the following morning. When I got up the next morning and the pain and blood were both gone, I called to cancel my appointment, rationalizing that I didn’t want anyone “poking around back there.”

As the months went on, the pain was on and off and steadily getting worse. Funny thing about that was, as the pain became greater, so did my tolerance for it. My appetite started to go too, to the point that I had to force myself to eat, and finally the vomiting started. It had gotten so bad that anything I ate, I would throw back up, so I started drinking 1 milkshake a day, knowing I needed the calories, since I was still playing hockey.

Finally, I was fired from my job for calling in sick so much (I could hardly walk some days, let alone coach ice hockey and drive a Zamboni), and didn’t know what to do. I packed up my things (literally carrying one box to the car and then going back into the house to lay down for a while before taking the next box) and left Colorado to go back to my family in New York and hopefully find the root of my problem.

It took me four days to drive home by myself. A drive that I had dome by myself in 32 hours took days. I drove an hour and then napped for an hour. Drove two and napped for two. On the ride home, I remember eating only half a twinkie or something like that, and drinking only water and Gatorade.

I arrived home on a Thursday night. Mom made me a half a cup of soup and I ate half of that before collapsing into bed. From there, I threw up every hour until morning when Mom and Dad helped me to the car and took me to see a nurse practitioner. She gave me X-Rays and immediately sent me to the emergency room where I was diagnosed with having a total blockage in my large intestine and told that I would need emergency surgery.

Surgery was the next morning, and my doctor removed 25 inches of my large intestine along with a tumor the size of his two fists. I began recovering in my hospital bed, all the while thinking that everything was fine, until he came into my room early on February 19th, 1999 – my 23rd birthday. He used all sorts of big doctor words and I didn’t understand him. He finally said, “Molly, you have colon cancer.” My world stopped. All I could think about was the fact that I would die. I would lose my hair and have to go through chemotherapy. I didn’t want anyone to feel sorry for poor little Molly with cancer – didn’t want that life – so instead I started thinking of ways to kill myself. All the while, I watched my doctor’s lips move and had no idea what he was saying.

I think what scares most people is that colon cancer is a “silent killer,” most people don’t know they have it until it’s too late. How does our society combat this?

Colorectal cancer is the number two cancer killer in the country, but yet one of the only ones you can actually test for and remove before it starts, just by getting screened and having polyps removed. (Polyps are what turn into cancer.) Many people are afraid of the screening and the first step to getting them to do that is to get them to overcome the fear of talking about it. That’s why I started coming up with what I like to call “crazy things.” People may see the Colossal Colon at the mall and say it’s completely disgusting and not come near it, but those people don’t even realize that even if they won’t come in and talk about it, you know they’re going back to their dinner table that night and are saying, “Guess what I saw at the mall today.” The conversation has at least started.

I’ve heard people say that getting a colonoscopy is easier than going to the dentist. (My apologies to dentists.) Would you agree?

Getting a colonoscopy is probably easier than going to the dentist. The doctor will give you a conscious sedation (which means you will be awake but won’t feel much and won’t remember a thing!) and you may think you’ve just had the best nap ever! The worst part of having a colonoscopy is definitely the prep, which is usually started the night before and cleans out your intestines for the doctor to be able to see the inside clearly. The prep isn’t the best tasting, but it’s improved upon every year, and I promise that a diagnosis of colorectal cancer is much worse.

How did Coco, the giant colon, come about?

During the summer of 2000, I inline skated from New York to Colorado in a journey dubbed Rolling to Recovery, all to raise awareness of a disease I was told that I was too young to have. Just before I left, I got an e-mail from a young woman in Little Rock, AR named Amanda Sherwood-Roberts. She was a year older than I was and had been diagnosed with stage III colon cancer at the age of 24, right around the same time that I was. We became instant friends, almost sisters, and bonded not by talking about our disease, but just because we had both gone through similar things at a young age.

After e-mailing with Amanda for a year and a half, I got an e-mail from her cousin who told me that Amanda wasn’t doing well and wasn’t expected to live more than three months. She asked if I would come to Little Rock to meet her in person, which I did. The following week, Amanda and I were on the Today show together to tell our stories (Amanda via satellite from her couch, and I from the studio), and at the end of the interview, Katie Couric spoke with me and told me that if I could come up with anything crazy for National Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month (March), she would have me back on the show. My wheels began to turn.

Amanda lost her battle with colon cancer in January of 2002. I was angry and I was sad. I also felt guilty for surviving when she had not, but most of all I was inspired. I wanted to do something in her memory to save other people from going through what we went through. It had to be big and it had to be funny, since that was the best way to get people to talk about their colons and thus get them screened. Then one morning, it came to me. I wanted to build a giant colon filled with all sorts of yucky but educational things, in order to get people talking about the disease that no one wants to talk about. By some miracle, Amanda’s cousin and I raised all the money we needed and CoCo the Colossal Colon debuted in March of 2003 with an appearance on the Today show. Then we took her on a national tour in 2003, going to 20 major cities all over the country.

What exactly is the Colondar?

While on a national tour with the Colossal Colon in 2003, I met a young woman in Philadelphia who had been diagnosed at 22 with stage IV colon cancer. We clicked right away and started talking about the crazy-ways we could raise awareness. She said, “We should do a calendar showing our surgical scars,” and the Colondar was born. The Colon Club is going into its 10th year producing it this calendar of young people all diagnosed under the stereotypical age of 50. It’s an awesome educational tool and we find that people sit down and read it cover to cover, learning about colorectal cancer, signs and symptoms, different treatments, different aspects of the disease like fertility, etc. Since the beginning, we have shot the photos at my parents’ home in Hulett’s Landing, NY and have turned it into somewhat of a survivor retreat in the process. It’s incredible when we are able to get these young people together who have never met anyone else like them. It’s like finding a family you never knew you had.

Have you seen these educational efforts transform lives?

I have been lucky enough to see our efforts transform lives on a larger scale and smaller. I was diagnosed 13 years ago at a time when the internet was still fairly new to the main stream. It was hard to come up with any information and education on colon cancer was few and far between. Today, you can actually talk about a colonoscopy and people know what it is. People are less and less afraid to talk about it and colorectal cancer rates are finally on the decline. That’s proof.

On the smaller scale, I’ve heard so many stories about people who have seen the Colossal Colon or read through the Colondar and had a light bulb go off in their heads to get screened. One story that always stands out to me is this. In 2006, I was lucky enough to get the opportunity to play ice hockey with all 14 teams in the United Hockey League, a men’s professional hockey league. It gave us the opportunity to bring colons to a place where colons don’t belong! We had 80,000 hockey cards printed out with my colondar photo on them (a red bikini and pigtails, modeled after Wayne Gretzy’s wife’s photo shoot in Sports illustrated about ten years earlier) in hopes that more people would take them home. On the back of the card we printed my colon cancer stats, instead of my hockey stats.

About a year after the UHL Cross-Checks colon cancer took place, I got a phone call from one of my coaches from the Empire State Games. He proceeded to tell me that he had kept my hockey card on the dashboard of his car and when he started having symptoms, he knew to go to his doctor. When he asked his doctor about getting a colonoscopy, the doctor told him not to worry and that he was too young to have colon cancer. My coach then told him my story and convinced his doctor to get him a colonoscopy. Coach had 30+ polyps removed from his colon.

How is your personal journey progressing today?

In February, I will celebrate 13 years cancer free! I have two young boys, Kyril and Maks, and am happily married and living just outside of Saratoga Springs, NY. I’ve recently taken a new direction, accepting the position of Group Health & Wellness Director at the Wilton Branch of the Saratoga Regional YMCA and I couldn’t be happier. It’s taken me a long time for cancer to not be at the front of my mind every day, but I feel lucky to have finally gotten to a place where it truly isn’t. Never thought I would reach that milestone.

I am still on the Board of Directors for The Colon Club, but am excited for a new opportunity that has also come up through the Y. We have recently gotten a grant to start LIVESTRONG at the YMCA, which is a program that will allow me to physically work with cancer survivors in getting their strength and mobility back. It’s very exciting!

Molly, I can’t thank you enough for taking this time to educate the readers of the Huletts Current. Any final thoughts?

Thank you so much for letting me talk about colons and for putting it out there! Talking about it is the first step to getting people screened, so thank YOU for all of this!

Lake George Land Conservancy 2013 Scholarship Essay Contest

The Lake George Land Conservancy has announced information about their 2013 Scholarship Essay available to High School Seniors, including home-schooled students, whose school district has students living within the Lake George Watershed: Bolton Landing, Lake George, Ticonderoga or Whitehall (students who are year-round residents of Hulett’s Landing).

Submit an essay between 1000 and 2000 words covering the annual question. The questions will be creatively based in exploring the relationship of land and water – specifically, dealing with the relationship’s impact on the water quality within the Lake George Watershed. Essays are to be submitted to the Lake George Land Conservancy (LGLC) via email to hbartonbenedict@lglc.org. Please use the LGLC’s website, www.lglc.org, as a reference or call 518-644-9673. Winning essays will be posted on LGLC’s website.

2013 Essay Question:

What will Lake George be like 200 years from now? What will your descendants be doing on and around Lake George, and how will their experiences on Lake George be different from yours today?

See the announcement here for more information.

Now For Some History: 1972


Irene Phillips holding Dave Brotman in 1972.


Dave Brotman with Irene Phillip’s sheep, “Big Bill.”

I received these two pictures from Dave Brotman. Dave’s mother (Pat) was friends with Irene Phillips. They rented the Kissy cottage from 1969 to the early 80’s and Dave’s mother and Irene would send each other letters throughout the winter months. These were pictures of Dave with Irene Phillips and the sheep, of course.

Dave’s going to check with his parents to see if they have some more pictures. Irene Phillips property was just past the Catholic church as you head down Land’s End. I can still see the sheep and cats as I passed by as a child on my bike.

Many thanks to Dave for sharing these!

Huletts Post Office on POStPlan: What Does it Mean?

The Huletts Landing Post Office is officially on the POStPlan.

What can we do?

Over the next 24 months, the Postal Service will mail a letter, customer survey and the date of a community meeting to customers of post offices on the POStPlan.

Examples of this letter and survey can be found here.

USPS will provide four options for alternate mail delivery. Choose the option for “realigned hours” in the USPS customer survey. Return it immediately to USPS.

Any of the other three options could likely mean closure of the post office.

USPS will tally survey results and tell the fate of the post office at the community meeting.

The new realigned hours will go into effect 30 days after the community is notified of the fate of the post office.

The Postal Service will be notifying postal customers over then next 24 months; however it is important to be ready. ONLY the Option for Realigned Hours will help keep the post office open!

Realigned hours means postal service hours will be reduced to two, four, or six hours.

This message will repeat over the next two years until this letter and survey is mailed.

Please look at the draft letter and survey so you are prepared to help.

Mrs. Hennessy’s Obituary

HENNESSY – Patricia M, (nee Smith), 88, on December 3, 2012. Beloved wife of the late Hugh. Devoted mother of Hugh (deceased), Patricia O’Brien, Margaret Stoutenburg, Catherine Lapieki, Matthew, Michael, Maryellen, Maureen Kelly, Rosemary Simpson, and William. Cherished grandmother of 36 grandchildren and 30 great-grandchildren. Visitation Thursday 2-4, 7-9:30 at C.S. Bartholomew and Son Funeral Home, 302 Bedford Ave., Bellmore. Mass of Christian Burial Friday 10:45 AM at St. Barnabas the Apostle R.C. Church, Bellmore. Interment. Cemetery of the Holy Rood.

Mrs. Patricia Hennessy: 1924 – 2012

I’m very sorry to have to share that long-time Huletts resident, Mrs. Patricia Hennessy, passed away Monday morning, December 3, 2012.

Mrs. Hennessy was a wonderful person who will be missed by all who knew her.

“May God support us all the day long, till the shades lengthen and the evening comes, and the busy world is hushed, and the fever of life is over, and our work is done. Then in His mercy may He give us a safe lodging, and a holy rest and peace at the last.”

Calling hours Thursday 2-4 and 7-9
Clair S. Bartholomew & Son

302 South Bedford Avenue
Bellmore, New York 11710
Nassau County
(516) 785-0225

Funeral Mass Friday 10:45
St. Barnabas 2320 Bedford Avenue

Bellmore, NY 11710
Tel: 516-785-0054
Fax: 516-221-7789