Latest News

Your trusted source for local news and stories from across our region

Showing 337–348 of 462 articles

Signature Plant Sale May 18 & 19
Article

Signature Plant Sale May 18 & 19

ESPERANCE — The Landis Arboretum Signature Spring Plant, Book, and Bake Sale is Saturday and Sunday, May 18 & 19 at 174 Lape Road, Esperance. NOTE: Route 20 between Route 7 and Duanesburg Churches Road is closed to traffic as of Monday, April 15, through May 31, to facilitate a culvert replacement, according to NYSDOT. Detours utilizing Route 395 and Route 7 are posted at the closure, but drivers should anticipate travel delays and plan accordingly.

May 10, 2024 9 views
SUNY Cobleskill Fighting Tiger Weekly Recap
Article

SUNY Cobleskill Fighting Tiger Weekly Recap

COBLESKILL — The SUNY Cobleskill softball team won four-of-six home contests during the week including three-of-four versus North Atlantic Conference (NAC) opponents to close the regular season with a 19-15 overall record including an 11-3 record in conference play to earn a bid to the 2024 NAC Championship Tournament. On Wednesday the Fighting Tigers split a non-league twinbill with the visiting Gators of Russell Sage College taking the first game by a 12-4 score the losing the second game 4-1. Over the weekend Cobleskill swept a pair from the visiting Mustangs of SUNY Morrisville on Friday by scores of 6-1 and 10-2 the splitting a pair with the Mustangs on Saturday losing the opener 3-2 then taking the nightcap by a 12-4 margin. Junior centerfielder Alexia Clemons, Beaver Falls, N.Y., Beaver River High School, batting in the lead-off spot batted .471 for the week going 8-for-17 at the plate with an on-base percentage of .591including a double, a triple, a stolen base along with nine runs scored and a pair of runs batted in. The Fighting Tiger baseball team split a pair of non-conference games during the week defeating the host Gators of Russell Sage College 17-8 at Shuttleworth Park in Amsterdam, N.Y. on Tuesday night then falling at home to the nationally ranked Red Dragons of SUNY Cortland by an 8-2 margin to close the regular season with a 16-21 overall record including a 10-3 record in North Atlantic Conference (NAC) action to capture their fourth consecutive NAC Western Division Championship and a bid to the 2024 NAC Championship Tournament. Senior utilityman Matthew Snyder, Latham, N.Y., Shaker High School, batted .333 for the week going 3-for-9 during the week with a .400 on-base percentage including a walk, two home runs five RBI and two runs scored.

May 10, 2024 29 views
SUNY Hosting Baseball Tournament
Article

SUNY Hosting Baseball Tournament

COBLESKILL — SUNY Cobleskill is hosting this year’s 2024 North Atlantic Conference Baseball Tournament at Fighting Tiger Field this week with the East Division’s Husson University Eagles earning the top overall seed. The four-team double-elimination tournament that started yesterday, Thursday, May 9 through Saturday, May 11 at Fighting Tiger Baseball Field in Cobleskill, New York. With the top seed in the West Division serving as the host for the 2024 tournament, Cobleskill conquered the West after going 10-3 in conference play and 16-21 overall. The Fighting Tigers have earned the number three overall seed in the tournament. Joining them from the West is Eastern Nazarene College. The Lions earned their first bid into the NAC tournament after joining the conference this past fall. After going 9-6 in conference play and 12-19-1, Eastern Nazarene finished second in the West Division and will be the number four seed heading into games on Thursday. Husson University led the charge in the East Division (16-2 NAC East, 20-10 overall), receiving the top seed in the East as well as earning the number one overall seed in the tournament. The defending NAC champions will be looking for their fourth consecutive North Atlantic Conference title entering the tournament. Earning their first bid into the NAC tournament is conference newcomer Lesley University. The Lynx went 13-5 in East Division play and 23-14 overall to earn the number two seed in the East as well as the second overall seed in the tournament. Seeding and selection for the 2024 NAC Baseball Tournament were first done based on divisional records only. Top seeded Husson will face off against number four seed Eastern Nazarene in the tournament opener on Thursday, May 9. Second seeded Lesley and number three seed SUNY Cobleskill will follow in Thursday’s second game. For more information about the 2024 NAC Baseball Tournament, please visit www.nacathletics.com. 1. Husson (20-10, 16-2 NAC East) 2. Lesley (23-14, 13-5 NAC East) 3. SUNY Cobleskill (16-21, 10-3, NAC West) 4. Eastern Nazarene (12-19-1, 9-6, NAC West) Tournament Schedule Thursday, May 9, 2024 Game 1: #1 Husson vs. #4 Eastern Nazarene 10:00 am Game 2: #2 Lesley vs. #3 SUNY Cobleskill 1:00 pm Game 3: Game 1 loser vs. Game 2 loser 4:00 pm Friday, May 10, 2024 Game 4: Game 1 winner vs. Game 2 winner 12:00 pm Game 5: Game 3 winner vs. Game 4 loser 3:30 pm Saturday, May 11, 2024 Game 6: Game 4 winner vs. Game 5 winner 12:00 pm Game 7: If necessary 30 min. after Game 6

May 10, 2024 30 views
Mountain Eagle Welcomes New Team Members
Article

Mountain Eagle Welcomes New Team Members

The Mountain Eagle is proud to announce the hire of two experienced professionals for our team as a writer and sales leader. Chris English Please allow me to introduce myself. I am a veteran journalist who worked covering a variety of sports and news topics as a part-time and full-time staff writer for more than 40 years, and then as a correspondent for three more years, for newspapers and online publications in Bucks County, Pennsylvania, just outside Philadelphia. I grew up in Richmondville and graduated from Richmondville Central in 1977 before attending Temple University for journalism and living near Philadelphia for several decades. I recently moved back into this area to be closer to my parents and siblings and now reside in Cobleskill, and have enjoyed reacquainting myself to Schoharie County and the surrounding area. I love sports, movies (especially action), music (especially rock), and reading of all kinds _ books fiction and nonfiction, magazines and newspapers. I look forward to covering local happenings for The Mountain Eagle and its sister newspapers. Thank You. Chris English. Kristle Roennpagel is a dedicated and multi-faceted professional who has joined our newspaper team as an advertising sales representative and event coverage specialist. As a busy mother of three and devoted dog mom, Kristle brings a unique blend of energy, compassion, and community spirit to her role. With a passion for helping others and a knack for building relationships, Kristle is dedicated to delivering exceptional results for our advertisers and providing comprehensive coverage of local events. When she's not wearing her many hats, Kristle can be found supporting local causes and initiatives that make a positive impact in our community.

May 10, 2024 30 views
THE CATSKILL GEOLOGISTS BY PROFESSORS ROBERT AND JOHANNA TITUS
Article

THE CATSKILL GEOLOGISTS BY PROFESSORS ROBERT AND JOHANNA TITUS

A Day of Doing Art, Part One Ice ages consist of many climatic cycles. Cold and warm weather periods alternate with each other. The last big cycle in the Catskills was perhaps about 16,000 years ago. That, called the Grand Gorge advance, consisted of several shorter cycles. The last one of those witnessed a glacier rising about halfway up Kaaterskill Clove. It reached just above a waterfalls called Fawn’s Leap, then the climate warmed and the glacier ground to a halt. Melting followed and the ice retreated out of the clove. It left a very sizable boulder behind, and that is something geologists call a glacial erratic. See the lower left of our first picture. Erratics are rocks, often very big ones, that were transported, physically shoved by glaciers, to where we see them. Even by erratic standards this is a rather large one. It is a picturesque one too; that turned out to be very important. This is such a commonplace thing in the Catskills that it hardly even deserves mention. But something special happened right there - much later in time. In 1858 German landscape artist Paul Weber, along with another artist arrived at this same site. Weber set to work sketching that boulder and the scenic landscape behind and above it. The other artist went a little further up the canyon and worked up there. Weber looked upstream and sketched what he saw. The other looked downstream and did the same. Each picked a special view and turned it into art. Little did either of them know that they were working on some of the best paintings of their careers. Weber would turn his sketch into a magnificent oil painting. See our second illustration. His draftsmanship was perfect. His colors are actually quite a bit better than what is seen in nature. He called his image “Scene in the Catskills.” That’s the sort of title we like to see. That means that nobody knows exactly where it was actually done. But we thought we could fix that. We have spent a lot of time exploring all through the Catskills and we also know a lot of people who have also done the same. No, we don’t know every boulder by name, but we know where and how to go looking for them. We were confident that we could locate Weber’s image. It’s the sort of thing that we love to do. We asked around and we were told to go looking above that waterfalls called Fawn’s Leap. We already knew there were many large glacial erratics there and so it was a promising location. We hiked up there and did indeed find that very boulder. But there was more. Behind it we saw what we think is called Bobcat Ravine, a small stream that, ever since the end of the Ice Age, has plummeted down the south slope of Kaaterskill Clove. We placed our feet exactly where we thought Weber had been and absorbed the very same view that had inspired him. Nowadays, the trees, a new generation of them, are a little taller than they were in 1858. They block much of the view of Bobcat Ravine and the hills rising above. But, otherwise, the site has hardly changed at all. (Except for the sounds of nearby highway traffic) Still, although we had located the site of an important painting, we still needed more to flesh out the geological story. How, exactly, had this landscape been shaped. We wanted to look below the surface and into the past. We love the paintings that were done by the Hudson River School artists, but we want to see so much more. What, exactly, was the ice age history recorded in this view? We needed to see beneath what was on the surface of Weber’s painting. Let’s come back next week, catch up with that other painter and see what we can learn then. Contact the authors at randjtitus@prodigy.net . Join their facebook page “The Catskill Geologist.” Read their blogs at “thecatskillgeologist.com.”

May 10, 2024
The Catskill Conquest Rally Series Prepares for Another Successful Year
Article

The Catskill Conquest Rally Series Prepares for Another Successful Year

First overnight at Pine Hill. Historical photo courtesy Robert Selkowicz. 1907 hand-colored German Postcard. The Delaware County Historical Association has an archive of the 1907 New York State Engineer’s road building blueprints for all New York Counties. The Rikers on the Locomobile By Matthew Avitabile CATSKILLS REGION — The 2024 Catskill Conquest Rally Season information is at www. 1903autorun.com where a full schedule of events and entry form is found. Robert Selkowitz says that there is a “beautiful day of driving” ahead of participants in each rally. It’s a chance to experience the community and region on a route that highlights history and beauty. He said that there are four rallies this year, including two in the spring. One is the May 19th Saratoga ABC Rally: Artists, Battlefields and Covered Bridges, the other is the June 15th Schoharie Turnpike -Kaaterskill Clove Rally. There will be two fall rallies, the 8th Catskill Conquest Rally on September 21 and the 6th Catskills Covered Bridge Rally on Oct. 19. Both Fall rallies start at the Catskills Visitor Center on State Route 28 in Mount Tremper. The fall rallies have a route of about 135 miles, with the Catskill Conquest Rally heading to the Cauliflower Festival in Margaretville, the Franklin Railroad and Community Museum and the Hanford Mills Museum. The organizer said that it’s better to sign up before so that an orientation email can be received, but there have been participants who show up the day of. Participation is $100 per car entry fee, which includes breakfast at the start and maps. The October Catskill Covered Bridge Rally is a $50 per car entry fee. This includes visiting a private car collection in Beaverkill. Following volunteer work for the Central Catskills Collaborative and the establishment of the Catskill Mountains Scenic Byway, Selkowitz remembered the 1903 Endurance Run and sought to create an homage. The effort was to “design and create a community-based event.” The first overnight on October 7th, 1903 was in Pine Hill. Thirty four cars from seventeen makes took part, along with 125 people, including journalists and observers. It was the time when the transition from a labor system to a money system led to contracts with state funding to improve roads. By 1903 twenty miles up the Esopus Valley leading to Pine Hill had been paved with crushed local Bluestone Macadam paving. Ulster County has a historical map of the development of roads radiating out of Kingston and included the 20-mile stretch to the Esopus Valley. The Town of Shandaken was awarded a contract to pave five miles of road at the turn of the previous century. Selkowitz researched how the town determined how to pave for the first time, which he calls a “real-time transition.” The change from Ulster County to Delaware County was difficult. In both Delaware and Schoharie Counties, farmers were obligated to maintain the roads with days of labor. The work was done without proper taxation and engineers there. The road conditions made it difficult for the early cars to negotiate the roads. On October 8, 1903. as the cars entered Delaware County a cold, windy deluge of rain poured down on the old dirt roads. When they arrived in Delhi, the drivers bought “every dry piece of clothing in town.” He cited the experience of Edith and A.L. Riker. Edith was the only woman to participate in the rally. A.L. was an early pioneer of electric vehicles. He designed the Locomobile, which participated in the rally. Other engineers and builders drove entries, including Packard,Pierce Arrow and Franklin, cars that evolved into well-known brands. The Emerson in Phoenicia has been a “great sponsor” of the rally series which includes a comped room for a classic car from one of the 1903 makes to be able to stay there. The Schoharie Turnpike Rally in particular is interesting, especially the 1903 Rambler at the Old Stone Fort, one of the stops in the rally. Two Ramblers just like it went through the 800 miles of the 1903 Endurance Run in terrible conditions, both finished and one was a class winner. 25 of 30 cars completed the rally. Due to the extreme weather, penalty points for having to repair were thrown out. The veterans of the 1903 Endurance Run became known as the Mud Larks. The Rikers eventually finished the rally and Selkowitz was able to speak with their grandson. His mother had donated their archives to the Bridgeport Public Library, which Selkowitz was able to research, including an advertisement following the event and the entry form. He also found interviews with Edith Riker, the only woman who participated in the event. She said she was delighted and found it Glorious to drive at railroad speed over all sorts of roads. The rallies now enter five of the Catskills counties, with Delaware County being the “heart of the routes.” Selkowitz credited a number of individuals for aiding the project. He mentioned Carolyn Bennett of the Pratt Museum as one of many who has helped. Peter Finn published Selkowitz’s book A Painter’s Path through the Catskill Mountains , which was the genesis of the rally. “That’s part of why these rallies tie into my long heritage in the Catskills,” he said. This included being a “landscape painter looking for beauty.” His work experience included the Erpf Catskill Cultural Center. Everyone is welcome to participate, whether you have an older car or not. One year included a 1913 Maxwell. A 1917 Ford Model T Pickup Roadster and a 1928 Bentley have been past participants. We can have a range of 100 years in the ages of our cars. “We didn’t want to make it a reenactment, it is a commemoration,” he said. As of now, the earliest car registered this year is a 1952 Chrysler Saratoga, as well as a 1959 Triumph TR3 coming from Rhode Island. The drivers will be arriving dressed in racing outfits. A 1966 Shelby GT 350 one-owner car will be in three of the Catskills rallies. A 1970 BMW 2002tii and a 1995 Suzuki Cappuccino will contrast, as well as a 2016 Porsche 911 and 2018 Porsche Boxster 718. All cars are welcome, these are events for enjoyment and are noncompetitive. “I love the history and I love the region,” he said. The project became an “historical wormhole” that has grown into a wonderful program for all to enjoy. For more info or to register, visit www.1903autorun.com. For any questions, call 845-616-4550 or 845-657-6982.

May 10, 2024 30 views
Spring Exhibition at 1053 Gallery: Interplay
Article

Spring Exhibition at 1053 Gallery: Interplay

Deborah Freedman, Janice La Motta, Amy Masters of the the Interplay exhibition at 1052 Gallery Always a friendly face welcoming folks entering the 1053 Gallery Deborah Freedman’s ongoing and evolving study of the Ashokan Reservoir By Robert Brune FLEISCHMANNS — The 1053 Gallery in Fleischmanns reopens after a short break for renovations with a bouquet of colorful abstract art embracing the renewal of that which spring brings with lush landscapes and a spectrum of flowering trees and gardens. In a statement provided by co-curator Lindsay Comstock, “The mid-career artists, whose studio practices are based in Upstate New York, play with the painting process through quotidian objects, found materials, re-purposed works, and collage, in series that mark new directions for each of them. Drawing from internal and external landscapes and their personal perception of space, they re-imagine and transform physical, material, and stylistic constraints into dynamic compositions during a period of global instability.” Deborah Freeman has transformed her collection of monotype paintings by incorporating collage works, adding vibrant colors, and increasing depth with outstanding results. Comstock explains the challenges Freeman had to overcome to create her new pieces, “She has monocular vision, meaning her eyes interpret input separately, so she perceives space in a unique way. Painting became a necessity to create the three-dimensional depth that she can’t see through her eyes.” The results of this amazing artist who has been creating art from her property overlooking the Ashokan Reservoir is mesmerizing. Janice La Motta's contribution to this exhibition consists of three different collections of her work, La Motta explains, “ Of Power and Time is a series named for an essay by the poet, Mary Oliver. The work represents the initial shift towards abstraction in my work. The scale of the work is intimate at 7 x 5 inches, and the materials are oil on Yupo paper. All of the painting is done with a palette knife and incorporates a lot of drawing and mark-making with colored pencil and graphite. These pieces are worked quite spontaneously and begin with two mixed colors that I feel create an interesting color relationship I am also very interested in the small incidents that occur throughout the pieces and an awareness of the edge of the paper.” In 2020 during Covid La Motta began returning to abstract with her LS series works with smaller more intimate pieces initially meant to be concept paintings enlarged. La Motta says she had to work on a smaller scale because she was between studio spaces during the lockdowns. In La Motta’s third series, “I resumed work on the large paintings when I took a studio in High Falls in the fall of 2021. But the cost of oil paints and art supplies began to affect me. That precipitated a shift to using house paint and the eventual move toward a series that used recycled product packaging (cereal, pasta, lightbulb boxes...) as the support and starting point for the construction of the Box Top collage series. The grid of 18 collage pieces in INTERPLAY is the most recent work (all 2024). In this series, I return to the spade shape, which appeared in earlier works, and in these collages, I play with deconstructing and bisecting the form.” Amy Masters had three years ago been working on her abstract versions of outdoor barns and plants, then transitioned to subjects that represented both inside settings with window views, and not drawn her focus on abstract still life objects more closely with a bit more muted color choices (using oil sticks and wax pencils), but the color selection compliments each other with magical life. Seeing Masters at the opening reception at 1053 Gallery this past Saturday was a great joy to see her more confident and pleased with the direction of her work. The praise from this gallery packed to the rafters with fellow artists and patrons created an electric atmosphere of excitement. Mark Birman on the new Interplay exhibition and the renovation, “I’m very very excited by the direction of our gallery”. The other shift in the makeup of 1053 Gallery is that Monte Wilson is taking over the title of director of the gallery, with Comstock as co-curator. Comstock in a recent radio interview with Birman and Wilson on WIOX Roxbury Radio, “I’m excited to see Monte take up the helm as director as I sorta focus more on my writing and herbalism. I’ll still be very much involved as a curator and writing for the gallery.” Wilson having worked at the MET, Museum of Images, and doing production with the Blue Man Group doesn’t need to prove himself, as he has played a significant role in the doings of 1053 Gallery for the past few years. For more information see www.1053gallery.com

May 10, 2024 25 views
Made You Look Exhibition at Queen of Rogues
Article

Made You Look Exhibition at Queen of Rogues

By Robert Brune PHOENICIA — Christina Varga is a magnificently magical human being and artist that everyone should experience. Varga went to school at University of Florida for Journalism & Communications, made her way to NYC where she became inspired by the art scene in the Lower East Side. As she explains, Varga spent her twenties in the city, thirties in Woodstock as an art gallery owner and board member of the Woodstock Artists Association and Museum. She has since settled in Phoenicia in 2009 and as the owner of VARGA Gallery since 2019. Varga is wildly talented at promoting her artwork on Instagram @vargagallery, as well as Facebook, with the most incredibly entertaining video clips of her creating art and being such a loving mom to her two children who are often nearby in her social media posts. Varga is what the artworld calls an outsider artist in the way that she doesn’t have any formal training in the arts. Although she describes her inspiration and motivation exactly as some of the most well-educated people in the field of art, as getting into a playful childlike mindset when creating her works. Some of the works are a combination of Varga’s incorporating art pieces created by her children by adding collage and lacquer. Varga explains, “Anything I make on these collaborative works with my kids, I split with them fifty/fifty, if they sell.” Varga’s work has been shown at The American Visionary Art Museum in the 13th mega exhibit: "All Faiths Beautiful," The Cathedral Church of St. John The Divine, and at Kunsttiendaagse in Bergen, North Holland. Her work is in the collections of Uma Thurman, Grace Potter, Dweezil Zappa, Kate Pierson, and Dave Wakeling. Varga’s artwork has been featured in The Sufi Journal, Resurgence Magazine, Raw Vision as well as other regional, national, and international publications. “Golden Mosaic Buddha” was the cover art of Chronogram Magazine’s December, 2006 edition. The Queen of Rogues (QoR) gallery owned by Liz Piccoli is thrilled to be showing Varga’s magnificent collection. Varga’s work bursts with colors using repurposed plastic and items that most people discard such as classic coke bottle caps that can be discovered in several of her works of art. The work is a marvelous reflection of her high energetic personality as a celebration of all that is possible and beyond. Another element of her work is inspired by the work of Alberto Vargas who is known for his Varga Girls which were first featured in Esquire Magazine and then in Playboy. Varga explains, “My friends know I’m into making art out of vintage erotica, so they give me old magazines all the time.” The featured work of artwork is a stunning unmistakable collage portrait of Yayoi Kusama dotted with brightly colorful pom poms. At the opening reception this past Saturday, this new gallery QoR located in Glenford on Rt 28 was packed with folks from all throughout the Woodstock and Hudson Valley area. Piccoli is a perfect fit with Varga as she’s got a great welcoming host. Piccoli is also a former dancer and does choreography with the Catskills Foundation productions at the Orpheum Theatre in Tannersville, as well as being a board member of the Phoenician Theater (Directed ‘Love Letters last year). In addition to being a mom, artist and gallery owner, Varga launched The Phoenicia Festival of The Arts in beautiful Phoenicia, New York in August 2023 The festival is a town-wide event happening every August and spans the entirety of Main Street and includes a Main Street Market for Artists and Artisans in the center of town and plenty of family-friendly activities and happenings throughout town. The Phoenicia Festival of the Arts is a project 20 years in the making bringing musical, theatrical and visual events promoting diversity and unique cultural offerings. The festival showcases the town center as a gem in the panoply of cultural opportunities in the upstate region.

May 10, 2024 27 views
A Conversation About: Nest Building
Article

A Conversation About: Nest Building

By Jean Thomas I was doing my usual spring cleaning the other day. It was time to get the hedge trimmer and cut down the tall ornamental grasses. I had enjoyed them all winter and it was time to cut the old dry stems to make way for the new year of growth. The chore went smoothly until we got to the largest, the Zebra Grass. The electric edger buzzed along and we triumphantly admired the pile of trimmings. Then we saw it! There sat a beautiful nest with four speckled eggs inside. Somehow we had cut just above it without touching a thing. Panic almost ensued, but we did the only appropriate thing. We gathered bundles of the cut grass and build a protective tepee around the nest, tying it with garden twine. The picture we took helped us identify the eggs as belonging to Dark-Eyed Juncos. I call them the tuxedo birds when I see them around the feeders in the winter. Their winter coat is a dark grey with a white vest and white feathers outlining their tails. Oddly enough, my friend who was helping me garden is Eileen Goble, and she was a guest on episode 33 of the Nature Calls Podcast… https://ccecolumbiagreene.org/gardening/nature-calls-conversations-from-the-hudson-valley/episode-33-so-you-bought-a-house . We laughed about the differences in nest building between birds and people. Birds can rely on their instincts and somehow know how to find a safe site to build their homes. (Of course natural disasters like grass cutting giants for them and tornadoes for us can’t be predicted.) Their home is most often only needed for one season, and they build a new one the next year. Humans need to consider many more variables because they tend to nest, if they’re lucky, for many years in the same place. The problems are plentiful, as are the rewards. Eileen and I reminisced about her interview as a realtor. We talked about how important planning can be when buying or building a house. The episode was called, “So You Bought a House.” We didn’t get into interior decisions, but reviewed the decisions to be made outdoors. Gardening and landscaping are hugely important. Things like the quality of the soil can be researched easily with soil testing, but there are many other things going on in a home than we realize. Most often, we are buying a home from the previous inhabitant… a used nest, in a way. Rarely does a new homeowner receive a description of all the plants and animals they’ll be dealing with. Rarely do we get a list of what flowers are planted where or which areas may flood in the spring, or what wildlife we’ll be competing with for the tomato crop. Eileen and I both recommend this: hard as it may seem… wait a year before planting or making any big changes in the yard and gardens. This can save a lot of time and money. You’ll learn where the sunny and shady areas are, what areas tend to get too wet, and what perennials and bulbs have been snoozing under the soil. You’ll discover what wildlife regularly uses your property as a highway and be able to avoid planting snack bars for the four-legged ingrates. There are usually more pleasant surprises than unpleasant, but there will be surprises. So, instead of rearranging the landscape beyond basic cleanup, go to a local farmers’ market . Learn about your neighborhood while you learn about your new home. And be glad that you don’t have to build a new house every year with your beak.

May 10, 2024 28 views
Whittling Away with Dick Brooks
Article

Whittling Away with Dick Brooks

Books Telly, my trusty canine companion and I, having completed our morning chores, retired to the house for a second cup of coffee and a rawhide chewy. Having settled comfortably into my recliner and Telly nestled comfortably on his big comfy bed, it was a perfect time for our morning ponder. Sometimes it’s a discussion but since Telly was paying more attention to his chewy than to me, I just relaxed and let my mind wander around prospective topics for today’s think. I settled on books since there are a pile of them next to my chair. Books have been my friends since I was a small child. Long ago in the pre video age they transported me to far off places and introduced me to people that I would have never seen in the local JJ Newberry’s. They were the time machines that could take me anywhere. I could learn about dinosaurs, I chopped on the cherry tree with little Georgie Washington, split rails with a young Abe Lincoln and helped Alexander Bell develop the telephone. I still have many of my childhood book friends living on the shelves in the living room. Therein lies the main problem with books. They are addictive. Deep inside almost every human being lies the instinct to hoard. We evolved from a long line of hunter-gatherers and as such, we still have the desire to gather or collect things. Some collections are more obvious than others, if I started to collect old school buses, it wouldn’t be long until the neighbors started to complain. Two or three hundred cats will draw attention from the Humane Society. If you never throw anything away and the garbage builds up two or three feet high throughout the house, you probably will be spending years in therapy. Collecting books is more sociably acceptable. The more books you have the smarter people seem to think you are. They don’t have a bad odor and are easy to hide. I have boxes of them in the cellar and more boxes in the garage. There is a wall of them in the living room and a book shelf or two in almost every other room in the house. I realize that they need weeding out, the problem is what to do with them. Magazines are easy, I have no problem recycling them. Books are harder. If I’ve read it and enjoyed it, I don’t want to get rid of it because I might want to read it again. I have friends that I give books that I’ve enjoyed to but they always give them back after they have read them. They don’t want to deal with them either. Another thing that factors in to the whole book problem is money. It’s not hard to blow twenty bucks or more on a book making the disposal of said object that much harder. Who wants to drop a twenty into the recycling bin? Sometimes a church or library will ask for donations of books for a book sale, then I load up a truck or two and can dispose of them with a happy heart. They’re going to a good home and are helping raise money for a good cause and I have decreased the surplus population from our book shelves. The only problem is when I deliver them, I start looking at the donations from other overcrowded bookshelves and there’s a couple by a favorite author that I haven’t read. There’s a cookbook that the Queen would enjoy, the one on backyard ponds might be interesting. The Christmas Crafts one could be handy and the 1919 math text book would be fun to browse. I brought in two boxes of books, I leave with three boxes. Addiction is a terrible thing. Thought for the week—I’ve reached the age where “Happy Hour” is a nap. Until next week, may you and yours be happy and well. Whittle12124@yahoo.com

May 10, 2024
The Tapestry with Deb Herodes
Article

The Tapestry with Deb Herodes

Mama’s Got a Brand-New Bag In Honor of Mother’s Day When we all look back at our childhood days, there are many things we remember, but mostly, our mom is the key figure in all these memories. Although we don’t remember her hardest days, when sleep was abandoned for care of a newborn, and anxiety was at its highest level when we got sick, we do remember snuggles and kisses and gentle reminders of our misdeeds. Handholding, for safety reasons, was embarrassing once we turned five years old, but begrudgingly we would hold on, mostly because she wouldn’t let go. When siblings were born, our mothers turned into different creatures, with less sleep and more anxiety. Trying to split attention between two little ones, who both needed her attention and praise, led to a land of every other day showers for mom, because she had no time or energy to pamper herself, and often her dress-up code consisted of sweatpants and drooled-upon tee-shirts. Those moms, who stayed at home 24 hours a day for years on end, raising their children, were easy to spot. They were the ones with no make-up, no stilettoes and no apparent hairstyle; a ponytail suited them well. Hauling their kids to doctor’s appointments, even if the doctor’s appointments were for mama, the kids were there too. Grocery shopping with two or three kids hanging off, or riding in or on the grocery cart, is an experience everyone should have at least once. Yes, memories were being made, but let it be known that mom was trying with everything in her to hold on to her sanity. The house remained relatively picked up, as mama cleaned the same toy-mess, lunch-mess, snack-mess, laundry-mess, dish-mess, every moment of the day. There were no coffee breaks, and to be perfectly honest, a look in the mirror left moms wondering how they got to this position in life. The fevers, the monster-dreams and the need for her scent, drove kids into her bed late at night, that is if she wasn’t already sleeping with them, and despite her bleary eyes, her toddler’s teary eyes demanded constant patting and humming of a well- established list of bedtime songs. 6 a.m. summoned the childhood alarm clock and off they were with mom dragging behind. Living through this experience would lead to even more experiences that could not be thought of now, for fear of abandonment by the mother, but nonetheless, many were coming. Moms who worked outside the home (spoiler alert, that job never ends,) also faced the 6 a.m. alarm, which catapulted them into the shower, and then to the sides of their children’s beds. Yanking children from their dreams is not an easy job, but in the world of “working women,” it must be done. Breakfast, usually cereal and toast laid waiting for the kids, but quite often was left uneaten because the choices of cereals didn’t appeal to the little darlings. Clothes, selected the night before, to make the morning disagreements, with fashion, more bearable, were tugged on, backpacks were filled and coats, boots, etc., were handed out. Musical instruments were usually carried by mom, along with diaper bag for the baby and extra clothes for the toddler, in case of an accident at daycare. The race around the house to find mom’s purse happened daily, but eventually the rat pack would find themselves buckled in car seats, complaining all the way. One more trip into the house to grab mom’s briefcase was also a weekly occurrence, but we all got used to the car seat wait, as she retrieved all that she needed for the day. Her workday was exhausting, the pick-up of her lovelies, although they were tired and moody was exhausting, and the dinner needs of dad and her offspring were front and center. The house was always upside down and it wasn’t unusual to see socks on the dining room table and dinner plates on the bathroom floor. Her best laid plans for the evening of vacuuming, catching up on laundry, toilet scrubbing and mopping flew the coop because homework both she and we had brought home to finish for the next day took precedence. The dog was always barking for food and the fish tank was sporting dead fish from its lack of attention. 10 pm found mom asleep on the couch, with a book on her chest, and a dog at her feet. A shake to her shoulder would wake her enough to drag down to the bedroom and fall back asleep, even if she still had her work clothes on. As mothers mothered their way through the years of chaperoning, coaching, leading and directing extracurricular activities, all the same duties laid in wait, but somehow, with a Pepsi in her pocket, and Excedrin in her purse, the beat went on. Although make-up, high heels jewelry and nail polish were the first things to attract small children to mom’s belongings, it was her purse that held the most secrets. It didn’t seem to matter how many backpacks, trombones, diaper bags or groceries she had in her hands or on her shoulders, her purse was THE MOST IMPORTANT THING! Children seem to know that the money they needed for anything was housed in that purse, so they better steer clear of going into it. The strangest thing was however, that mom’s wallet never had dollar bills or change in it, just a bunch of cards. The cards worked in most places to get us what we needed, so those wallet accessories were never to be touched, even though she lost them or misplaced them often. Noticing that the purses got larger and larger, as the children grew, and diaper bags were packed away in storage, one had to wonder why such a big bag now… your kids don’t need bottles or diapers anymore. This is undoubtedly spoken by a non-mama. The things mothers can pull out of their purses for every member of their family, or any member of the human race is truly amazing. She carries everyone’s medications, both over the counter and prescriptions, along with a mound of Kleenex to snuff out the allergies of the seasons. Changes of underwear for little ones, should something go awry, are also found at the bottom of her purse, along with 10-20 receipts from various merchants she visited over the past week. Her wallet, of course, along with her checkbook takes up the most room, but a tube of lipstick and a powder palette are housed in the zipper part of the bag. Band-Aids, first aid cream, a bag of wipes for everyone’s spills, tweezers, fingernail clippers, emery boards, a keychain full of keys, a toothbrush and toothpaste and if we were lucky, some Kleenex-laden wintergreen lifesavers. An old pacifier, in a plastic bag, assorted pens, crayons, highlighters and paper to keep us all busy while we waited for the world to catch up to us, and 3 bottles of water, jammed in next to her Pepsi bottle, that were always falling out of her open purse, but nonetheless were always present in her bag, when we began our daily adventures. As Mother’s Day approaches this year, think about your mom in years gone by and consider getting her a new bag, full of photos of your children, your memories with her, a Pepsi, and a promise to carry her purse for her, whenever you are together, as years of carrying over-laden bags of absolutely everything have no doubt taken a toll her back. Happy Mother’s Day to all, and if one of your children asks what you would like for Mom’s Day, drop the names Prada, Gucci and Coach.

May 10, 2024 27 views
ASF Begins its Summer Programming with WIM Road Cycling
Article

ASF Begins its Summer Programming with WIM Road Cycling

WINDHAM — The Adaptive Sports Foundation (ASF) will conduct its first of eight Warriors in Motion® (WIM) summer events next week, as it will host its first road cycling event in Windham and the neighboring areas on May 14-16. The ASF is expecting 10 U.S. military veterans to participate next week, and they are scheduled to arrive at the Gwen Allard Adaptive Sports Center on Tuesday at lunchtime. U.S. Air Force veteran Ken Hernandez, who will be participating in his first WIM summer event, is excited to hop on his bike and ride. “I recently received a grant for a hand cycle, but because the weather has been crazy, I’ve only dabbled a little bit with it here and there,” Hernandez explained. “I can’t wait to get out there on the open road in the fresh air and the nice scenery. I’m stoked to get my bike out and put it to the test. I’m always up for a challenge and I’m excited to see where it leads.” After the WIM participants arrive and meet with the ASF staff and volunteers, the group will get fitted for their bike and safety equipment and will sit down for lunch. Once everyone is ready to ride, the group will depart for a seven-mile trek through the streets of Windham and Hensonville. After the ride, the participants will check in to their hotels and relax a little bit before they’re invited back to the ASF for a 5:30 p.m. dinner catered by Jessie’s Harvest House. Wednesday will feature an all-day ride in Columbia County on the Albany-Hudson Electric Trail, a primarily off-road section of the Empire State Trail that has both paved and stone-dust surfaces. The warriors will be picked up by the ASF shuttle bus from their hotels at 9 a.m. and will travel to Hudson, where they will begin a 22-mile journey. The participants will head northeast for 11 miles to the town of Kinderhook, where they will rest and enjoy lunch at Rothermel Park. Once everyone is ready, the WIM group will make the 11-mile trek back into Hudson to get picked up where they started. Once again, the warriors will have time to relax at their hotel before dinner at the ASF lodge. On Thursday morning, the warriors will check out of their hotels and meet at the ASF lodge for their final ride, a nine-mile trek west from the Windham Mountain Club parking lot to the Prattsville Town Park. The participants will be picked up from the park and return to the Gwen Allard Adaptive Sports Center, where they will enjoy a barbecue lunch before they depart. “Veterans are on the same playing field in programs like the ASF, everyone has a disability, whether it’s visible or invisible,” Hernandez explained. “We all get together, and we prove all those people who told us, ‘you can’t’ or ‘you’ll never be able to’ wrong. We have two options, we either prove the naysayers right or we prove them wrong, and it’s up to us to decide what we want to do.” Thanks to grants received and private donations, the ASF is able to provide bicycles (to those who need them), helmets, water bottles, all meals, hotel rooms, snacks, water, sports drinks, sunscreen, bug spray, ponchos (if necessary) and maps, both digital and paper copies.

May 10, 2024 25 views