Friday, February 25, 2011
Thought for the Day.....
Holding onto anger is like grasping a hot coal with the intention of throwing it at someone else. You are the one who gets burned.- Buddha
Monday, February 14, 2011
Powerball Winner!
Luck of the Irish
Stephen Kirwan of Purling and his wife Catherine accept a check for $122 million during a news conference in Albany Friday. Stephen Kirwan purchased the winning Powerball ticket at the Clothespin Laundromat in Catskill last month. Photo by Doron Tyler Antrim |
Retired fireman from Purling introduced as Greene’s first Powerball winner
By Doron Tyler Antrim
Hudson-Catskill Newspapers
Published: Saturday, February 12, 2011 2:11 AM EST
Chalk it up to the luck of the Irish.
Wearing a shiny green hat complete with a shamrock, Stephen Kirwan of Purling was announced Friday as the winner of the $122 million Powerball jackpot.
Kirwan, 68, whose home on Bailey Road burned down last winter, says some of the winnings will go to rebuild it.
He has opted to take the one lump sum payment of more than $61 million, or $40.4 million after taxes.
He and his wife Catherine, 61, accepted their prize during a news conference in the Empire State Plaza in Albany.
“It still hasn’t sunk in,” Kirwan said. “I guess I got a lifetime of luck all at once.”
On Jan. 22, Kirwan entered the Clothespin Laundromat in Catskill to purchase a Quick Draw ticket when he decided to play Powerball, too. That turned out to be a wise choice as he discovered the next morning.
“I sat at the kitchen table on Sunday morning and checked my numbers in the paper as usual,” he said. “I checked those numbers three times before I finally turned to my wife and said ‘I think I won.’”
Kirwan picked his numbers at random. “They don’t mean anything,” he said.
The odds of winning the Powerball jackpot are one in 195 million.
Kirwan claimed the ticket Feb. 7.
The Kirwans have two children, 26-year-old Stephen Kirwan Jr., who owned the former Kirwan’s Game Store in Catskill, and 25-year-old Christine Kirwan.
After moving to Purling in 1987 after 24 years with the New York City Fire Department, Kirwan began working at Stiefel Labs in Oak Hill. He retired in 2004.
While speaking to reporters following the news conference, Kirwan said he has no plans to leave Purling. “I’m comfortable where I am,” he said.
Kirwan has no definitive plans for how much of the money will be spent, but said he wants to treat his family to a cruise.
Kirwan purchased the ticket for $5. The winning numbers were 30-31-34-45-51 plus Powerball 23.
This isn’t the first time Kirwan has won money from the Lottery. He said he once won $800 from Take 5.
A married couple from Wilton, Saratoga County also accepted a Powerball prize Friday totaling $48.8 million.
Jeffrey and Christine Pintuff, both 58, have opted to take the one lump sum payment of $24.8 million, or $16.4 million after taxes.
The $1 Quick Pick ticket was purchased on Christmas Day at the Stewart’s Shop in Wilton.
The Pintuffs claimed their ticket Feb. 1.
Powerball is played in 42 states, Washington, D.C. and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Wearing a shiny green hat complete with a shamrock, Stephen Kirwan of Purling was announced Friday as the winner of the $122 million Powerball jackpot.
Kirwan, 68, whose home on Bailey Road burned down last winter, says some of the winnings will go to rebuild it.
He has opted to take the one lump sum payment of more than $61 million, or $40.4 million after taxes.
He and his wife Catherine, 61, accepted their prize during a news conference in the Empire State Plaza in Albany.
“It still hasn’t sunk in,” Kirwan said. “I guess I got a lifetime of luck all at once.”
On Jan. 22, Kirwan entered the Clothespin Laundromat in Catskill to purchase a Quick Draw ticket when he decided to play Powerball, too. That turned out to be a wise choice as he discovered the next morning.
“I sat at the kitchen table on Sunday morning and checked my numbers in the paper as usual,” he said. “I checked those numbers three times before I finally turned to my wife and said ‘I think I won.’”
Kirwan picked his numbers at random. “They don’t mean anything,” he said.
The odds of winning the Powerball jackpot are one in 195 million.
Kirwan claimed the ticket Feb. 7.
The Kirwans have two children, 26-year-old Stephen Kirwan Jr., who owned the former Kirwan’s Game Store in Catskill, and 25-year-old Christine Kirwan.
After moving to Purling in 1987 after 24 years with the New York City Fire Department, Kirwan began working at Stiefel Labs in Oak Hill. He retired in 2004.
While speaking to reporters following the news conference, Kirwan said he has no plans to leave Purling. “I’m comfortable where I am,” he said.
Kirwan has no definitive plans for how much of the money will be spent, but said he wants to treat his family to a cruise.
Kirwan purchased the ticket for $5. The winning numbers were 30-31-34-45-51 plus Powerball 23.
This isn’t the first time Kirwan has won money from the Lottery. He said he once won $800 from Take 5.
A married couple from Wilton, Saratoga County also accepted a Powerball prize Friday totaling $48.8 million.
Jeffrey and Christine Pintuff, both 58, have opted to take the one lump sum payment of $24.8 million, or $16.4 million after taxes.
The $1 Quick Pick ticket was purchased on Christmas Day at the Stewart’s Shop in Wilton.
The Pintuffs claimed their ticket Feb. 1.
Powerball is played in 42 states, Washington, D.C. and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
The art of maple syrup production
The art of maple syrup production
By Doron Tyler Antrim
Hudson-Catskill Newspapers
Published: Sunday, February 13, 2011 2:08 AM EST
A seminar about maple syrup production was held Saturday at the Agroforestry Resource Center.
Steve Childs, New York state maple specialist with Cornell University, delivered the talk to about a dozen people, some of whom said they’re looking to get into the activity for the first time — a group Childs called the “backyarders.”
It’s good to start by knowing what trees are best.
All types of maple trees can be tapped, Childs said, including sugar, black, red, silver, striped and box elder. Some are preferred more than others, though. Childs said the black maple, which gets its name from its black-colored buds, is primarily used. It lives the longest and yields the sweetest sap, he said.
Red, silver, box elder, norway and striped maples are secondary because they tend to have lower sugar content, which makes for a lengthier boiling process. (The sap must be boiled to remove the water.)
Although maples generally feature vertical bark, there are many varieties. The branches — reddish-brown in color and with sharp buds growing opposite one another — are a better giveaway. The trees have five lobes, but each variety has its own slightly different characteristics.
Knowing when to tap a tree is also important. In this case, temperature rules everything. Explaining that maples “will not do much until they can warm up,” Childs told the audience they should watch weather forecasts closely to see when temperatures will rise above freezing for a sustained period.
He said the generally followed timetable to begin tapping is from Feb. 15 to March 1.
The timing is everything, according to Childs, because tapping too early will result in dried up holes. Meanwhile, the producer will lose out on the first good flow of sap by tapping too late.
It’s only required that a hole be drilled 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 inches deep, although it must be at an upward angle. The holes can be either 5/16 or 7/16 of an inch wide. A spout placed in the hole holds up the bucket that collects the sap.
Holes should be drilled at about shoulder height. Avoid tapping in bark splits, Childs warned, as this will cause leakage and other problems.
It’s recommended there be only one tap for a tree 10 to 17 inches in diameter, two taps for a tree 18 to 24 inches in diameter and three taps for a tree 25 inches or more.
It’s important to pay attention to the color of the shavings during the drilling process, Childs said. If the shavings are light in color, then the wood is healthy. If the shavings are dark, it may mean the area has been tapped before and thus should be avoided.
If a tree can sustain being tapped more than once, it’s important to space out the holes at 1 1/2 inches apart and slightly above or below the first hole.
The sap should be collected daily or several times a day in food-safe containers, Childs said.
Although most think of the iconic galvanized buckets as the way sap is collected, tubing is a modern alternative that Childs said can be less expensive and less arduous for the small producer. The tools required in an operation using the tubing method can be expensive, though.
The tubes connect to the spouts in the tree and funnel the sap to collecting vats.
Filtering the sap is a must do, Childs said, because insects and other pests are frequently found in the buckets. The sap must be processed immediately to avoid fermentation. It must be kept cool and out of the sun.
It is then boiled to remove the water.
In order to be qualify as syrup, it must have a 66 percent sugar content.
In order for the syrup to be sold commercially, it must be filtered for nontoxic minerals. The syrup is extremely hot, 180 degrees, when it is put in a jar.
Childs said vacuum technology and a reverse osmosis device are tools that can make producing syrup a profitable enterprise because they drastically cut the time needed for boiling.
Anywhere from 7 to 25 gallons of sap can be collected from one tap, Childs said. And from that between 1 pint and 1/2 gallon of syrup will be made. It takes about 40 gallons of sap to make 1 gallon of syrup.
Saturday’s program was the latest in Cornell Cooperative Extension’s winter lecture series, which runs into March.
On Saturday, March 19, the resource center will host Maple Fest, a free event where the public can learn about producing maple syrup and view demonstrations. Taste testing will be available. Vendors will also be selling locally made maple sugar products. The event will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
For more information about maple syrup, visit the Maple Producers Associations’ website at http://www.nysmaple.com/ or Cornell Cooperative Extension’s maple syrup resource page at http://www.cornellmaple.com/.
Steve Childs, New York state maple specialist with Cornell University, delivered the talk to about a dozen people, some of whom said they’re looking to get into the activity for the first time — a group Childs called the “backyarders.”
It’s good to start by knowing what trees are best.
All types of maple trees can be tapped, Childs said, including sugar, black, red, silver, striped and box elder. Some are preferred more than others, though. Childs said the black maple, which gets its name from its black-colored buds, is primarily used. It lives the longest and yields the sweetest sap, he said.
Red, silver, box elder, norway and striped maples are secondary because they tend to have lower sugar content, which makes for a lengthier boiling process. (The sap must be boiled to remove the water.)
Although maples generally feature vertical bark, there are many varieties. The branches — reddish-brown in color and with sharp buds growing opposite one another — are a better giveaway. The trees have five lobes, but each variety has its own slightly different characteristics.
Knowing when to tap a tree is also important. In this case, temperature rules everything. Explaining that maples “will not do much until they can warm up,” Childs told the audience they should watch weather forecasts closely to see when temperatures will rise above freezing for a sustained period.
He said the generally followed timetable to begin tapping is from Feb. 15 to March 1.
The timing is everything, according to Childs, because tapping too early will result in dried up holes. Meanwhile, the producer will lose out on the first good flow of sap by tapping too late.
It’s only required that a hole be drilled 1 1/2 to 2 1/2 inches deep, although it must be at an upward angle. The holes can be either 5/16 or 7/16 of an inch wide. A spout placed in the hole holds up the bucket that collects the sap.
Holes should be drilled at about shoulder height. Avoid tapping in bark splits, Childs warned, as this will cause leakage and other problems.
It’s recommended there be only one tap for a tree 10 to 17 inches in diameter, two taps for a tree 18 to 24 inches in diameter and three taps for a tree 25 inches or more.
It’s important to pay attention to the color of the shavings during the drilling process, Childs said. If the shavings are light in color, then the wood is healthy. If the shavings are dark, it may mean the area has been tapped before and thus should be avoided.
If a tree can sustain being tapped more than once, it’s important to space out the holes at 1 1/2 inches apart and slightly above or below the first hole.
The sap should be collected daily or several times a day in food-safe containers, Childs said.
Although most think of the iconic galvanized buckets as the way sap is collected, tubing is a modern alternative that Childs said can be less expensive and less arduous for the small producer. The tools required in an operation using the tubing method can be expensive, though.
The tubes connect to the spouts in the tree and funnel the sap to collecting vats.
Filtering the sap is a must do, Childs said, because insects and other pests are frequently found in the buckets. The sap must be processed immediately to avoid fermentation. It must be kept cool and out of the sun.
It is then boiled to remove the water.
In order to be qualify as syrup, it must have a 66 percent sugar content.
In order for the syrup to be sold commercially, it must be filtered for nontoxic minerals. The syrup is extremely hot, 180 degrees, when it is put in a jar.
Childs said vacuum technology and a reverse osmosis device are tools that can make producing syrup a profitable enterprise because they drastically cut the time needed for boiling.
Anywhere from 7 to 25 gallons of sap can be collected from one tap, Childs said. And from that between 1 pint and 1/2 gallon of syrup will be made. It takes about 40 gallons of sap to make 1 gallon of syrup.
Saturday’s program was the latest in Cornell Cooperative Extension’s winter lecture series, which runs into March.
On Saturday, March 19, the resource center will host Maple Fest, a free event where the public can learn about producing maple syrup and view demonstrations. Taste testing will be available. Vendors will also be selling locally made maple sugar products. The event will be held from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
For more information about maple syrup, visit the Maple Producers Associations’ website at http://www.nysmaple.com/ or Cornell Cooperative Extension’s maple syrup resource page at http://www.cornellmaple.com/.
Thursday, February 10, 2011
Puppy Mill
NEW: Ashland puppy mill busted
By Doron Tyler Antrim
Hudson-Catskill Newspapers
Published: Thursday, February 10, 2011 12:24 PM EST
ASHLAND— Twenty Golden Retrievers, some as young as two months, were rescued from a mobile home in Ashland Tuesday following a raid by investigators from the Columbia-Greene Humane Society/SPCA and the Greene County Sheriff’s Office.
All of the dogs were found to be emaciated, according to CGHS, some weighing only 11 pounds.
“We caught these puppies just in the nick of time,” said Ron Perez, CGHS president. “Had this gone on for another week I’m certain some of the younger pups would have succumbed to starvation.”
The home is located at 580 Sutton Hollow Road. Authorities said the owners, George Leary and Emaretta Marks, will be facing charges.
Further details about the couple were not available. The Greene County Sheriff’s Office was not immediately available for comment.
In an interview, Perez said the dogs were confined in the mobile home and that this was a case of “horrible backyard breeding.”
Ashland Dog Control Officer Bruce Feml alerted the humane society about the situation.
All the dogs have been removed from the property and have been examined by Dr. Jerry Bilinski and Dr. Danielle Sand of the Chathams Small Animal Hospital.
The 20 dogs range from two to 10-months old. They will be available for adoption. Anyone interested in adopting can contact the humane society at 518-828-6044.
All of the dogs were found to be emaciated, according to CGHS, some weighing only 11 pounds.
“We caught these puppies just in the nick of time,” said Ron Perez, CGHS president. “Had this gone on for another week I’m certain some of the younger pups would have succumbed to starvation.”
The home is located at 580 Sutton Hollow Road. Authorities said the owners, George Leary and Emaretta Marks, will be facing charges.
Further details about the couple were not available. The Greene County Sheriff’s Office was not immediately available for comment.
In an interview, Perez said the dogs were confined in the mobile home and that this was a case of “horrible backyard breeding.”
Ashland Dog Control Officer Bruce Feml alerted the humane society about the situation.
All the dogs have been removed from the property and have been examined by Dr. Jerry Bilinski and Dr. Danielle Sand of the Chathams Small Animal Hospital.
The 20 dogs range from two to 10-months old. They will be available for adoption. Anyone interested in adopting can contact the humane society at 518-828-6044.
Monday, February 7, 2011
NY Police Cars.
NY fleets of police, other vehicles get scrutiny
By Michael Virtanen
The Associated Press
Published: Monday, February 7, 2011 2:08 AM EST
ALBANY — Gov. Andrew Cuomo publicly rejected $20,000 raises for 28 State Police top brass in mid-January, “shocked,” he said, that the bumps were made quietly in the last days of the Paterson administration as it ordered 900 layoffs. Government, like New York families, has to learn to do more with less, he said then.
Yet few New York families get a company car used for commuting, the way 1,400 state police command officers and investigators did, according to records obtained by The Associated Press.
In response to the inquiries, the administration says it’s looking at whether the government needs to buy, fuel and maintain nearly 60,000 vehicles in state fleets. They include nearly 3,500 trooper cars, almost half individually assigned to investigators and command officers because they may get called to duty from home, although some seldom, if ever, do. State police said they don’t keep track of recalls to duty from home.
“As part of the budget process, everything will be looked at to see where money can be saved and systems can be made more efficient,” said Cuomo spokesman Richard Bamberger.
For now, the fleet policy continues as Cuomo proposes a budget with 10 percent cuts in general fund operating costs, including $60 million cut from the State Police and no training class for new troopers for a third year.
The Budget Division in 2009 issued a directive that prohibits personal use of state cars, except at certain times when it’s “ancillary to official business.” It allows “occasional commuting purposes within a reasonable distance, where the vehicle is mainly used for agency business.”
The last official count, by then-Comptroller Edward Regan in 1992, found half of 163 troopers surveyed were recalled between one and 12 times in one year, while 10 percent were never recalled. Also, half the 1.8 million miles driven in 1991 in 180 vehicles — 150 assigned to individuals and 30 headquarters pool vehicles — were for commuting. The auditors found it was “more a custom than a practice based on need,” and that police officials told them the practice had evolved “into an unwritten condition of employment.”
Then-State Police Superintendent Thomas Constantine replied in a letter that it was not policy to provide transportation as a condition of employment, that vehicle assignments would be reviewed as positions were refilled, and command officers are always on call.
With the force down to 4,700 officers, losing about 300 positions to attrition and no rookie classes the past two years, the agency has a $34.5 million budget this year for the fleet of 3,475 vehicles, including gas, maintenance and almost half for buying new cars.
That includes 1,295 marked and 36 unmarked vehicles that are shared by patrol troopers, 1,287 assigned to investigators, 147 for undercover work, 236 to commissioned officers, 197 trucks and vans, and 277 pool cars, according to the agency.
The agency said regulations are a factor.
“Top State Police officials are required to be available for duty at any hour and regulations prohibit a response to a call in a personal vehicle,” spokesman Lt. Glenn Miner said. “As part of the budget process, the State Police will be taking a hard look at all of its policies and resources with a focus on finding efficiencies, but will also maintain its primary role of protecting all New Yorkers.”
The Internal Revenue Service exempts from reporting as fringe benefits the authorized use of police vehicles for commuting. Promotions often mean transfers to other duty stations and can mean long commutes when troopers don’t uproot their families.
The New York State Police Benevolent Association, which represents troopers, sees no reason for cutting back as long as cars are legitimately being used, but most PBA members don’t have the rank or position to have one, said union Second Vice President Daniel Sisto.
Calls to the New York State Police Investigators Association were not returned.
Yet few New York families get a company car used for commuting, the way 1,400 state police command officers and investigators did, according to records obtained by The Associated Press.
In response to the inquiries, the administration says it’s looking at whether the government needs to buy, fuel and maintain nearly 60,000 vehicles in state fleets. They include nearly 3,500 trooper cars, almost half individually assigned to investigators and command officers because they may get called to duty from home, although some seldom, if ever, do. State police said they don’t keep track of recalls to duty from home.
“As part of the budget process, everything will be looked at to see where money can be saved and systems can be made more efficient,” said Cuomo spokesman Richard Bamberger.
For now, the fleet policy continues as Cuomo proposes a budget with 10 percent cuts in general fund operating costs, including $60 million cut from the State Police and no training class for new troopers for a third year.
The Budget Division in 2009 issued a directive that prohibits personal use of state cars, except at certain times when it’s “ancillary to official business.” It allows “occasional commuting purposes within a reasonable distance, where the vehicle is mainly used for agency business.”
The last official count, by then-Comptroller Edward Regan in 1992, found half of 163 troopers surveyed were recalled between one and 12 times in one year, while 10 percent were never recalled. Also, half the 1.8 million miles driven in 1991 in 180 vehicles — 150 assigned to individuals and 30 headquarters pool vehicles — were for commuting. The auditors found it was “more a custom than a practice based on need,” and that police officials told them the practice had evolved “into an unwritten condition of employment.”
Then-State Police Superintendent Thomas Constantine replied in a letter that it was not policy to provide transportation as a condition of employment, that vehicle assignments would be reviewed as positions were refilled, and command officers are always on call.
With the force down to 4,700 officers, losing about 300 positions to attrition and no rookie classes the past two years, the agency has a $34.5 million budget this year for the fleet of 3,475 vehicles, including gas, maintenance and almost half for buying new cars.
That includes 1,295 marked and 36 unmarked vehicles that are shared by patrol troopers, 1,287 assigned to investigators, 147 for undercover work, 236 to commissioned officers, 197 trucks and vans, and 277 pool cars, according to the agency.
The agency said regulations are a factor.
“Top State Police officials are required to be available for duty at any hour and regulations prohibit a response to a call in a personal vehicle,” spokesman Lt. Glenn Miner said. “As part of the budget process, the State Police will be taking a hard look at all of its policies and resources with a focus on finding efficiencies, but will also maintain its primary role of protecting all New Yorkers.”
The Internal Revenue Service exempts from reporting as fringe benefits the authorized use of police vehicles for commuting. Promotions often mean transfers to other duty stations and can mean long commutes when troopers don’t uproot their families.
The New York State Police Benevolent Association, which represents troopers, sees no reason for cutting back as long as cars are legitimately being used, but most PBA members don’t have the rank or position to have one, said union Second Vice President Daniel Sisto.
Calls to the New York State Police Investigators Association were not returned.
Economic forum for the Catskills.
Making money off the Catskills; CCCD sets economic forum
Castle Point, in the nearby Ulster County parklands of the Shawangunk Ridge, is representative of one type of landscape that brings visitors -- and money -- to the area. (Contributed photo) |
By Jim Planck
Hudson-Catskill Newspapers
Published: Sunday, February 6, 2011 2:08 AM EST
It’s no secret that the Catskill Park Forest Preserve brings people to the area for outdoor recreation, to greater and lesser degree, during every season of the year.
And the economic benefits of having open space and parkland are always mentioned when the interests of municipalities, developers and environmentalists coincide in anything from a review at a planning board meeting to a community visioning workshop held to focus on the future.
It’s also no secret that it’s hard to get a specific grasp on exactly what should or should not be done to use parkland to improve a community’s economic health.
That answer, however, will be provided by the Arkville-based Catskill Center for Conservation and Development on Friday, Feb. 18, 1:30 p.m., at the Ashokan Center, in the Central Catskills community of Olivebridge.
The presentation -- “Economic Benefits of Parkland,” and which includes a group discussion -- is conducted in conjunction with Catskill Mountainkeeper and Catskill Heritage Alliance, with the three groups acting together in partnership as Catskill Cornucopia.
CCCD spokesperson Jonathan Mogelever said Friday the session offers an excellent opportunity to learn about parkland economics.
“Research in the Adirondack and Shawangunk Mountains,” said Mogelever, “shows that public lands are clearly beneficial to the economic health of local communities.”
“Learn how we in the Catskills can adopt the lessons of important studies from the experts who conducted them,” he said.
Those experts are Kenneth Strike, author of “Adirondack Park Regional Assessment Plan: An Appraisal,” and Brian Zweig, who conducted the “Study of the Economic Impact on the Local Economy of Minnewaska State Park Preserve, Mohonk Preserve, and Sam’s Point Preserve.”
Of the latter, Mohonk Preserve Executive Director Glenn Hoagland noted that it “provided clear, objective data on how public lands impact the economies of municipalities in and around the Shawangunks.”
“There is great value for other regions -- such as the Catskills,” said Hoagland, “to observe from this project.”
Mogelever also stressed the value of the upcoming presentation’s content.
“We are delighted,” he said, “to have (Strike and Zweig) here to discuss the economic impacts of public lands on communities, how these impacts are calculated, what the actual benefits are, and the questions to focus on when considering how public lands help strengthen local economies.”
And the economic benefits of having open space and parkland are always mentioned when the interests of municipalities, developers and environmentalists coincide in anything from a review at a planning board meeting to a community visioning workshop held to focus on the future.
It’s also no secret that it’s hard to get a specific grasp on exactly what should or should not be done to use parkland to improve a community’s economic health.
That answer, however, will be provided by the Arkville-based Catskill Center for Conservation and Development on Friday, Feb. 18, 1:30 p.m., at the Ashokan Center, in the Central Catskills community of Olivebridge.
The presentation -- “Economic Benefits of Parkland,” and which includes a group discussion -- is conducted in conjunction with Catskill Mountainkeeper and Catskill Heritage Alliance, with the three groups acting together in partnership as Catskill Cornucopia.
CCCD spokesperson Jonathan Mogelever said Friday the session offers an excellent opportunity to learn about parkland economics.
“Research in the Adirondack and Shawangunk Mountains,” said Mogelever, “shows that public lands are clearly beneficial to the economic health of local communities.”
“Learn how we in the Catskills can adopt the lessons of important studies from the experts who conducted them,” he said.
Those experts are Kenneth Strike, author of “Adirondack Park Regional Assessment Plan: An Appraisal,” and Brian Zweig, who conducted the “Study of the Economic Impact on the Local Economy of Minnewaska State Park Preserve, Mohonk Preserve, and Sam’s Point Preserve.”
Of the latter, Mohonk Preserve Executive Director Glenn Hoagland noted that it “provided clear, objective data on how public lands impact the economies of municipalities in and around the Shawangunks.”
“There is great value for other regions -- such as the Catskills,” said Hoagland, “to observe from this project.”
Mogelever also stressed the value of the upcoming presentation’s content.
“We are delighted,” he said, “to have (Strike and Zweig) here to discuss the economic impacts of public lands on communities, how these impacts are calculated, what the actual benefits are, and the questions to focus on when considering how public lands help strengthen local economies.”
Sunday, February 6, 2011
Lunar New Year
Marking the Lunar New Year
Buddhism's faithful, and many others, marked the beginning of the Lunar, or Chinese New Year this week with offerings and prayers at temples across the world. The Mahayana Temple in South Cairo was no exception as many adherants trekked to the site to worship, burn incense and make food and flower offerings before the various deities. While Feb. 3 is the official date to usher in The Year of the Rabbit, celebrations take place throughout the week. Above, a couple from Cobleskill make their offerings before a trio of bodhisattva in the main temple on Friday. In the inset photo, a group of women prepare incense offerings to Skanda, also know as Wei Tua, the leader of the celestial guard that protects Buddhist monastaries. Photo by Claude Haton |
Published: Saturday, February 5, 2011 2:08 AM EST
Buddhism's faithful, and many others, marked the beginning of the Lunar, or Chinese New Year this week with offerings and prayers at temples across the world. The Mahayana Temple in South Cairo was no exception as many adherants trekked to the site to worship, burn incense and make food and flower offerings before the various deities. While Feb. 3 is the official date to usher in The Year of the Rabbit, celebrations take place throughout the week. Above, a couple from Cobleskill make their offerings before a trio of bodhisattva in the main temple on Friday. A group of women prepare incense offerings to Skanda, also know as Wei Tua, the leader of the celestial guard that protects Buddhist monastaries.
Saturday, February 5, 2011
Biking in Round Top
Bikers mean business
Organization wants to build new trails
By Doron Tyler Antrim
Hudson-Catskill Newspapers
Published: Saturday, February 5, 2011 2:08 AM EST
ROUND TOP — Can mountain biking mean serious business here? That’s what four biking enthusiasts from Round Top believe.
The quartet — Gary Campbell, Ian Powell, Mike Henry and Lee Herchenroder — make up the Round Top Mountain Biking Association, a new nonprofit organization.
The small but dedicated group met this week with the Cairo Town Board to discuss its bold plan: To build new biking trails in the hamlet for recreational use and competitions. It also wants to begin clearly marking existing trails.
“It’s in essense trying to bring in tourism,” Campbell told the town board.
The association plans to meet with the Greene County Department of Economic Development, Tourism & Planning over the proposal.
Their eventual goal is to connect all the trails, linking them with the local resorts in what Henry calls a “trail-based economy.”
The project will take a lot of volunteer hours to complete and association members say they’ll seek grant funding. Meanwhile, the group will need to continue its collaborative relationship with the resorts — which own a lot of the land the trails are on.
Places such as Riedlbauer’s Resort and Winter Clove Inn have hosted competitive races in the past. And last summer, for the first time in the United States since 2005, the Mountain Bike World Cup was held not far from Round Top on Windham Mountain.
Powell, who was involved with putting on the World Cup, said big events could be held in Round Top once the trail network is established.
The group has begun negotiating with private property owners over pieces of land needed to complete the trail network.
“They’re blown away by how beautiful it is,” Henry said of current visitors to the trails in an interview Friday. “There’s so much here.”
The group has good reason to be confident that mountain biking equals dollars.
That’s because in places such as northwest Wisconsin, mountain biking associations have succeeded in creating new opportunities for outdoor recreation and attracting customers for the area’s businesses and restaurants.
For the Chequamegon Area Mountain Bike Association, which cares for almost 400 miles of bike trails — substantially more than Round Top hopes to build — covering six small communities, the trail network provides the perfect setting for a three-day festival in June.
“They are the forefront,” Campbell said of the Wisconsin group.
The Festival of the Trails, as it’s called, operates as a fundraiser for the organization and an educational opportunity for riders of all ages. The festival also includes an event in which local restaurants set up stations along the trail offering samples of their food.
According to association volunteer Scott Chapin, who has been in contact with Campbell about the Round Top group’s venture and spoke to The Daily Mail Friday, the festival is a huge attraction.
Chapin said groups like his have small budgets and don’t require large start up costs because much of the trail work is performed by volunteers with hand tools.
He said it’s key for any new association to have the support of the community, secure a volunteer base and outside help on trail design.
Lastly, marketing is key. “You can do a lot with sweat equity and a Facebook page,” he said.
The quartet — Gary Campbell, Ian Powell, Mike Henry and Lee Herchenroder — make up the Round Top Mountain Biking Association, a new nonprofit organization.
The small but dedicated group met this week with the Cairo Town Board to discuss its bold plan: To build new biking trails in the hamlet for recreational use and competitions. It also wants to begin clearly marking existing trails.
“It’s in essense trying to bring in tourism,” Campbell told the town board.
The association plans to meet with the Greene County Department of Economic Development, Tourism & Planning over the proposal.
Their eventual goal is to connect all the trails, linking them with the local resorts in what Henry calls a “trail-based economy.”
The project will take a lot of volunteer hours to complete and association members say they’ll seek grant funding. Meanwhile, the group will need to continue its collaborative relationship with the resorts — which own a lot of the land the trails are on.
Places such as Riedlbauer’s Resort and Winter Clove Inn have hosted competitive races in the past. And last summer, for the first time in the United States since 2005, the Mountain Bike World Cup was held not far from Round Top on Windham Mountain.
Powell, who was involved with putting on the World Cup, said big events could be held in Round Top once the trail network is established.
The group has begun negotiating with private property owners over pieces of land needed to complete the trail network.
“They’re blown away by how beautiful it is,” Henry said of current visitors to the trails in an interview Friday. “There’s so much here.”
The group has good reason to be confident that mountain biking equals dollars.
That’s because in places such as northwest Wisconsin, mountain biking associations have succeeded in creating new opportunities for outdoor recreation and attracting customers for the area’s businesses and restaurants.
For the Chequamegon Area Mountain Bike Association, which cares for almost 400 miles of bike trails — substantially more than Round Top hopes to build — covering six small communities, the trail network provides the perfect setting for a three-day festival in June.
“They are the forefront,” Campbell said of the Wisconsin group.
The Festival of the Trails, as it’s called, operates as a fundraiser for the organization and an educational opportunity for riders of all ages. The festival also includes an event in which local restaurants set up stations along the trail offering samples of their food.
According to association volunteer Scott Chapin, who has been in contact with Campbell about the Round Top group’s venture and spoke to The Daily Mail Friday, the festival is a huge attraction.
Chapin said groups like his have small budgets and don’t require large start up costs because much of the trail work is performed by volunteers with hand tools.
He said it’s key for any new association to have the support of the community, secure a volunteer base and outside help on trail design.
Lastly, marketing is key. “You can do a lot with sweat equity and a Facebook page,” he said.
Healthy Housing Markets
The following information was derived mainly from Zillow:
Across the country, home values have fallen since 2006-in some areas by as much as 50 percent. But if you have good credit and are contemplating buying, it may be a good time to bag a real estate bargain. Last week, ABC's Good Morning America teamed up with the real estate website Zillow.com to figure out the top 10 places to buy. Zillow looked at four factors to determine the top 10.
Affordability: How many years of income does the median home cost? A medium home cost of 2.5 years of salary, for example, would get a better rank than a city where homes cost 4.5 years of salary.
Unemployment: Low unemployment is usually a reliable guage of the health and stability of the local economy. Change in unemployment over the past year was also taken into account. This is an indicator of the direction that the local economy is moving. If the unemployment rate in a particular city dropped 2 percent in the past year, it will rank better than a city which experienced no change.
Foreclosures: Zillow also analyzed the percentage of homes in each marketplace that have fallen into foreclosure in the past 12 months. The lower the percentage, the healthier the local real estate market is assumed to be.
Price Increases: Zillow looked at areas that have seen an increase in home values over the past quarter of the past year.
Based upon this criteria, cities all over the country were examined. Rochester made the top 10 (and even the top 5) as the #3 housing market in the country. Rochester is one of the most affordable markets with a median home value of $121,000. 91 percent of Rochester area homes sold for a gain in October 2010, which is an indication of a healthy market. Compare that to 70 percent nationwide. The unemployment rate in Rochester is also falling, down half a percent this past year.
A full list of the top 10 (three of which are in upstate New York):
1. Utica, N.Y.
2. Oklahoma City, Okla.
3. Rochester, N.Y.
4. Pittsburgh, Pa.
5. Tulsa, Okla.
6. Albany, N.Y.
7. Lancaster, Pa.
8. Madison, Wis.
9. Green Bay, Wis.
10. Lincoln, Neb.
Now is the time to think about buying a new home..... and Mary King, Coldwell Banker Village Green, can help you in Albany and Greene Counties New York..... 518.965.0600
Across the country, home values have fallen since 2006-in some areas by as much as 50 percent. But if you have good credit and are contemplating buying, it may be a good time to bag a real estate bargain. Last week, ABC's Good Morning America teamed up with the real estate website Zillow.com to figure out the top 10 places to buy. Zillow looked at four factors to determine the top 10.
Affordability: How many years of income does the median home cost? A medium home cost of 2.5 years of salary, for example, would get a better rank than a city where homes cost 4.5 years of salary.
Unemployment: Low unemployment is usually a reliable guage of the health and stability of the local economy. Change in unemployment over the past year was also taken into account. This is an indicator of the direction that the local economy is moving. If the unemployment rate in a particular city dropped 2 percent in the past year, it will rank better than a city which experienced no change.
Foreclosures: Zillow also analyzed the percentage of homes in each marketplace that have fallen into foreclosure in the past 12 months. The lower the percentage, the healthier the local real estate market is assumed to be.
Price Increases: Zillow looked at areas that have seen an increase in home values over the past quarter of the past year.
Based upon this criteria, cities all over the country were examined. Rochester made the top 10 (and even the top 5) as the #3 housing market in the country. Rochester is one of the most affordable markets with a median home value of $121,000. 91 percent of Rochester area homes sold for a gain in October 2010, which is an indication of a healthy market. Compare that to 70 percent nationwide. The unemployment rate in Rochester is also falling, down half a percent this past year.
A full list of the top 10 (three of which are in upstate New York):
1. Utica, N.Y.
2. Oklahoma City, Okla.
3. Rochester, N.Y.
4. Pittsburgh, Pa.
5. Tulsa, Okla.
6. Albany, N.Y.
7. Lancaster, Pa.
8. Madison, Wis.
9. Green Bay, Wis.
10. Lincoln, Neb.
Now is the time to think about buying a new home..... and Mary King, Coldwell Banker Village Green, can help you in Albany and Greene Counties New York..... 518.965.0600
Thursday, February 3, 2011
Cairo Zoning
Zoning definitions take sharper focus
Panel begins arduous task of shaping terms and conditions
By Doron Tyler Antrim
Hudson-Catskill Newspapers
Published: Thursday, February 3, 2011 2:08 AM EST
CAIRO — The Cairo Zoning Commission continues to hone its draft law and answer questions submitted by the public. On Monday, the commission followed up on last month’s decision expanding the list of potential uses in the Route 145 commercial/mixed-use district.
At that January meeting, the group voted that an educational or training facility could be built there under a special-use permit. But they elected to give themselves more time in crafting a definition for what would qualify as such a facility.
On Monday, the group released its definition, which states: “A building or part thereof which is designed, constructed, or used for instruction or education including, but is not limited to elementary, parochial, private, secondary or vocational schools. It shall also mean a business organized to operate for a profit, offering instruction and training in a trade, service or an art.”
The commission also settled on a definition for the municipal district, a collection of town properties to be shielded from future development. The definition states: “To limit residential and commercial uses on town-owned lands in order to preserve access and use of land for municipal functions including but not limited to highway, and town hall and offices and for other uses that benefit the entire community.”
Under the law, all existing uses will be allowed to stay.
Released last November, the zoning law caps a three-year effort to provide business owners, builders and homeowners with clear rules governing development in the town.
The commission has met regularly over the three years to draw up the 158-page plan.
Since the law’s unveiling, the commission has made many amendments small and large to the text and zoning map.
The commission has been aided in the process by Nan Stolzenburg of Community Planning and Environmental Associates.
Cairo has never had a zoning law.
A five-member Zoning Board of Appeals, appointed by the town board, will need to be established upon passage of the law. Each member will serve a five-year term.
Enforcement of the law will fall to the zoning enforcement officer, another appointed position, which officials have said could be the same person as the code enforcement officer.
Following a public hearing by the zoning commission, the law will be handed to the town board. The board must then hold its own hearing.
All the documents, as well as the responses to public comments, can be viewed online at www.planningbetterplaces.com/cairo.
The commission’s next meeting is set for Feb. 8 at 6 p.m. at Gallagher’s Banquet Hall.
At that January meeting, the group voted that an educational or training facility could be built there under a special-use permit. But they elected to give themselves more time in crafting a definition for what would qualify as such a facility.
On Monday, the group released its definition, which states: “A building or part thereof which is designed, constructed, or used for instruction or education including, but is not limited to elementary, parochial, private, secondary or vocational schools. It shall also mean a business organized to operate for a profit, offering instruction and training in a trade, service or an art.”
The commission also settled on a definition for the municipal district, a collection of town properties to be shielded from future development. The definition states: “To limit residential and commercial uses on town-owned lands in order to preserve access and use of land for municipal functions including but not limited to highway, and town hall and offices and for other uses that benefit the entire community.”
Under the law, all existing uses will be allowed to stay.
Released last November, the zoning law caps a three-year effort to provide business owners, builders and homeowners with clear rules governing development in the town.
The commission has met regularly over the three years to draw up the 158-page plan.
Since the law’s unveiling, the commission has made many amendments small and large to the text and zoning map.
The commission has been aided in the process by Nan Stolzenburg of Community Planning and Environmental Associates.
Cairo has never had a zoning law.
A five-member Zoning Board of Appeals, appointed by the town board, will need to be established upon passage of the law. Each member will serve a five-year term.
Enforcement of the law will fall to the zoning enforcement officer, another appointed position, which officials have said could be the same person as the code enforcement officer.
Following a public hearing by the zoning commission, the law will be handed to the town board. The board must then hold its own hearing.
All the documents, as well as the responses to public comments, can be viewed online at www.planningbetterplaces.com/cairo.
The commission’s next meeting is set for Feb. 8 at 6 p.m. at Gallagher’s Banquet Hall.
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Cold is a relative thing!!!
COLD IS A RELATIVE THING
65 above zero:
Floridians turn on the heat.
People in Upstate New York plant gardens.
60 above zero:
Californians shiver uncontrollably.
People in Upstate New York sunbathe.
50 above zero:
Italian & English cars won't start.
People in Upstate New York drive with the windows down.
40 above zero:
Georgians don coats, thermal underwear, gloves, and wool hats.
People in Upstate New York throw on a flannel shirt.
35 above zero:
New York city landlords finally turn up the heat.
People in Upstate New York have the last cookout before it gets cold.
20 above Zero:
People in Miami all die.
Upstate New Yorkers close the windows.
Zero:
Californians fly away to Mexico.
People in Upstate New York get out their winter coats.
10 below zero:
Hollywood disintegrates.
The Girl Scouts in Upstate New York are selling cookies door to door.
20 below zero:
Washington DC runs out of hot air.
People in Upstate New York let the dogs sleep indoors.
30 below zero:
Santa Claus abandons the North Pole.
Upstate New Yorkers get upset because they can't start the snow-mobile.
40 below zero:
ALL atomic motion stops.
People in Upstate New York start saying...'cold enough fer ya?'
50 below zero:
Hell freezes over.
Upstate New York public schools will open 2 hours late.
Catskill hitting small screen this March
By Colin DeVries
Hudson-Catskill Newspapers
Published: Monday, January 31, 2011 10:01 AM EST
CATSKILL — The celebrated Cat’n Around Catskill public art project will appear in the living rooms of potentially millions of Americans this March, being prominently featured in an episode of the upcoming Animal Planet series “Must Love Cats.”
Production crews roamed Main Street last summer, said Linda Overbaugh, executive director of the Heart of Catskill Association/Catskill Chamber of Commerce, filming the decorative fiberglass felines for the cat-themed documentary series.
“Must Love Cats” hosted by a guitar-toting John Fulton, chronicles a coast-to-coast journey to find all things cat — from the Alamo to Main Street, Catskill and back again.
The six-part series debuts Feb.12 at 8 p.m. on Animal Planet (Mid-Hudson Cable channel 70). The episode featuring Catskill will air on March 12, Overbaugh said.
There will also be a few teases to Catskill in the episodes leading up to March 12, she added.
“I think it’ll be great,” she said. “We’ve been looking forward to it.”
Fulton and his crew filmed Overbaugh and Greene County Treasurer Peter Markou, who was at that time a member of HOCA’s board of directors, strolling down Main Street and visiting the village’s Hudson Riverfront park, Dutchmen’s Landing.
Along with the national exposure the show will bring, it may also prominently feature the work of local artists Kenny Rich and NJ Wheelock, whose cats were filmed.
Though the airing may bring the now five-year-old Cat’n Around Catskill public street art project to new heights, rumor has it this may be the project’s last year.
Overbaugh said it was “possible” the cats may retreat from Main Street and beyond in 2012.
“You just wonder how long these things can run and continue to do what they are supposed to do,” she said Sunday. “Maybe we’ll give it a break and pick it up in the next few years. Maybe we’ll switch over and do something else.”
Last year, during the fourth annual Cat’n Around Catskill Cat’s Meow Auction and Gala, 61 cats sold at auction raised more than $60,000 for local charities and HOCA, down about $20,000 from the year before when 58 cats were auctioned.
This year, Overbaugh estimated 50 cats will be sponsored, though 70 designs by local artists were submitted.
Design selections will be made on Feb. 13 during the fifth annual Artists-Sponsors Reception at Brik Gallery.
Updates and further information on Must Love Cats are available at www.facebook.com/mustlovecatsfanpage.
Production crews roamed Main Street last summer, said Linda Overbaugh, executive director of the Heart of Catskill Association/Catskill Chamber of Commerce, filming the decorative fiberglass felines for the cat-themed documentary series.
“Must Love Cats” hosted by a guitar-toting John Fulton, chronicles a coast-to-coast journey to find all things cat — from the Alamo to Main Street, Catskill and back again.
The six-part series debuts Feb.12 at 8 p.m. on Animal Planet (Mid-Hudson Cable channel 70). The episode featuring Catskill will air on March 12, Overbaugh said.
There will also be a few teases to Catskill in the episodes leading up to March 12, she added.
“I think it’ll be great,” she said. “We’ve been looking forward to it.”
Fulton and his crew filmed Overbaugh and Greene County Treasurer Peter Markou, who was at that time a member of HOCA’s board of directors, strolling down Main Street and visiting the village’s Hudson Riverfront park, Dutchmen’s Landing.
Along with the national exposure the show will bring, it may also prominently feature the work of local artists Kenny Rich and NJ Wheelock, whose cats were filmed.
Though the airing may bring the now five-year-old Cat’n Around Catskill public street art project to new heights, rumor has it this may be the project’s last year.
Overbaugh said it was “possible” the cats may retreat from Main Street and beyond in 2012.
“You just wonder how long these things can run and continue to do what they are supposed to do,” she said Sunday. “Maybe we’ll give it a break and pick it up in the next few years. Maybe we’ll switch over and do something else.”
Last year, during the fourth annual Cat’n Around Catskill Cat’s Meow Auction and Gala, 61 cats sold at auction raised more than $60,000 for local charities and HOCA, down about $20,000 from the year before when 58 cats were auctioned.
This year, Overbaugh estimated 50 cats will be sponsored, though 70 designs by local artists were submitted.
Design selections will be made on Feb. 13 during the fifth annual Artists-Sponsors Reception at Brik Gallery.
Updates and further information on Must Love Cats are available at www.facebook.com/mustlovecatsfanpage.
Gull led......
Leading the way
A sea gull appears to lead the way for a freight barge bursting through river ice Monday a tugboat pushes it southward past the Catskill Point. Photo by Claude Haton |
Published: Tuesday, February 1, 2011 2:08 AM EST
A sea gull appears to lead the way for a freight barge bursting through river ice Monday a tugboat pushes it southward past the Catskill Point.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)