Mother Nature extends her peace offering – nice weather
Much to everyone’s relief and delight, Mother Nature finally decided to reward our recent foul weather suffering with some truly gorgeous springtime weather conditions. About the only complaints might be from allergy sufferers faced with high levels of various spoors and molds brought on by an extremely wet April.
Trout streams are gradually returning to fishable levels, but it may be a couple more weeks before the tributaries to the Susquehanna are low and clear enough to fish effectively. That’s assuming we get more normal rainfall and temperatures in the coming weeks.
Turkey hunting seems to be steadily improving after a very rough start.
Hunt’s Pond unit has now gone full circle
I recall my initial trip to Hunt’s Pond. I don’t remember the year, but I was in elementary school. My dad rented a rowboat from Mr. Hunt, the owner at that time, and we spent the afternoon catching mostly bullheads and pickerel. The fact it was a large privately owned pond fascinated me since most waters that size weren’t privately owned.
Since the state purchased the pond in 1962 and the 1,147 acres of forestlands nearby, Hunt’s Pond has seen itself shuffled from one agency’s stewardship to another as budget cuts required. First it fell under Lands and Forest, then Parks and Recreation. Now it has gone full circle, once again falling under the DEC’s Div. of Lands and Forests as a state forest. The DEC is planning on presenting a Unit Management Plan (UMP) for review sometime this winter that will help guide usage of Chenango County’s newest state forest unit. state forest lands are managed for different purposes than state parks. State forests provide the public with a less-developed, more-primitive form of outdoor recreation.
Kudos To Friends of Rogers
Congratulations are due to Friends of Rogers and all the volunteers that made this year’s Earth Fest a success. It’s indeed sad that the DEC (actually the Div. of Budget) chose to close the facility, in the process probably saving barely the amount to keep our Albany politicians’ staff and perks intact for a month.
$5 Gas Hurting Everyone, but especially recreation
With the price of gas and diesel fuel still spiraling out of control, taking even a moderately long driving trip to enjoy the outdoors is becoming more and more of a burden on family budgets. With gas topping $4 and promising to top five, and no end in sight, just about everyone is thinking twice before loading up the family chariot and happily heading off to their get-away destination. This becomes even a bigger burden if the normal work week mandates burning a tankful or two of gas to and from places of employment.
As the old saying goes – when you get lemons, make lemonade – everyone is being forced to make changes in their driving habits, and that also applies to "recreational trips," be they one day or perhaps several. Unfortunately, these recreational trips often become the first casualty in this age of soaring fuel prices. Couple what it now costs us to drive our vehicles with the accompanying rise in prices for all goods – that, too, being generated by higher fuel/transportation costs – and lifestyles as we once knew them are changing almost daily.
Since people are working harder and longer today to make ends meet, and government seems intent on taking progressively bigger bites of the money we earn, recreational time is even more important than it ever was since even temporarily escaping the pressures and burdens of everyday life and survival helps us keep our sanity. In the half-a-loaf-is-better-than-no-loaf mindset, scaling back the length of the trips we use to enjoy some outdoor recreation is about our only realistic solution. On the positive side, this even allows us to discover or re-discover opportunities much closer to home.
In recent decades we've heard and read much about the recreational and tourism opportunities that exists right here in Chenango County. That said, I suspect many county residents have never or seldom investigated these, probably because they are almost under our collective noses. It often takes a visitor or non-resident to enlighten and remind us of just how many things we have available, and all within easy driving (and sometimes, walking) distance.
How many of you have walked a portion or more of the famed Finger Lakes Trail (www.fingerlakes.net/trailsystem), a major section of over 70 miles of which runs right through our county? How about a primitive camping trip to one of our many state forests' ponds, such as Hunts, Balsam or Jackson ponds, or Bowman Lake State Park with nearly 200 designated camp sites? Or a visit to Rexford Falls in Sherburne? How about a canoe, kayak or cartop boat trip down a section of the Chenango River? How about spending a day exploring DEC's Rogers Environmental Education Center with all its various, trails and lands still open? While often thought of as primarily a cross-country ski area, the miles of trails within the 1200-acre Whaupaunaucau State Forest offer easy hiking and scenic woodland beauty.
Take a break from the outdoors by visiting the Chenango County Historical Society & Museum or the Northeast Classic Car Museum or browse the Otis A. Thompson Room at the Guernsey Memorial Library. Or how about attending a show or exhibit at the Council of the Arts' Cultural Center or the Earlville Opera House? Depending on the time of year, there area also many events to see or even participate in -- the General Clinton Canoe Regatta, the Gus Macker Basketball Tournament, the Sherburne Pagent of Bands, the County Fair, Colorscape, plus several arts and crafts events that are held periodically.
For those who enjoy hitting the links, spend a day golfing on one of the seven fine courses in the county. Anglers have a huge selection of fish-filled waters in the county, ranging from pristine trout streams to ponds and lakes to the Chenango and Unadilla rivers. And with our nearly 80,000 acres of state forests and other public lands, there are more discovery trips available than most of us could cover in a lifetime.
Longer recreational trips are enjoyable but cost more money. Trips closer to home are enjoyable and cost far less. I can't really compare that with lemonade, but then again, I've always liked lemonade.
Trout streams are gradually returning to fishable levels, but it may be a couple more weeks before the tributaries to the Susquehanna are low and clear enough to fish effectively. That’s assuming we get more normal rainfall and temperatures in the coming weeks.
Turkey hunting seems to be steadily improving after a very rough start.
Hunt’s Pond unit has now gone full circle
I recall my initial trip to Hunt’s Pond. I don’t remember the year, but I was in elementary school. My dad rented a rowboat from Mr. Hunt, the owner at that time, and we spent the afternoon catching mostly bullheads and pickerel. The fact it was a large privately owned pond fascinated me since most waters that size weren’t privately owned.
Since the state purchased the pond in 1962 and the 1,147 acres of forestlands nearby, Hunt’s Pond has seen itself shuffled from one agency’s stewardship to another as budget cuts required. First it fell under Lands and Forest, then Parks and Recreation. Now it has gone full circle, once again falling under the DEC’s Div. of Lands and Forests as a state forest. The DEC is planning on presenting a Unit Management Plan (UMP) for review sometime this winter that will help guide usage of Chenango County’s newest state forest unit. state forest lands are managed for different purposes than state parks. State forests provide the public with a less-developed, more-primitive form of outdoor recreation.
Kudos To Friends of Rogers
Congratulations are due to Friends of Rogers and all the volunteers that made this year’s Earth Fest a success. It’s indeed sad that the DEC (actually the Div. of Budget) chose to close the facility, in the process probably saving barely the amount to keep our Albany politicians’ staff and perks intact for a month.
$5 Gas Hurting Everyone, but especially recreation
With the price of gas and diesel fuel still spiraling out of control, taking even a moderately long driving trip to enjoy the outdoors is becoming more and more of a burden on family budgets. With gas topping $4 and promising to top five, and no end in sight, just about everyone is thinking twice before loading up the family chariot and happily heading off to their get-away destination. This becomes even a bigger burden if the normal work week mandates burning a tankful or two of gas to and from places of employment.
As the old saying goes – when you get lemons, make lemonade – everyone is being forced to make changes in their driving habits, and that also applies to "recreational trips," be they one day or perhaps several. Unfortunately, these recreational trips often become the first casualty in this age of soaring fuel prices. Couple what it now costs us to drive our vehicles with the accompanying rise in prices for all goods – that, too, being generated by higher fuel/transportation costs – and lifestyles as we once knew them are changing almost daily.
Since people are working harder and longer today to make ends meet, and government seems intent on taking progressively bigger bites of the money we earn, recreational time is even more important than it ever was since even temporarily escaping the pressures and burdens of everyday life and survival helps us keep our sanity. In the half-a-loaf-is-better-than-no-loaf mindset, scaling back the length of the trips we use to enjoy some outdoor recreation is about our only realistic solution. On the positive side, this even allows us to discover or re-discover opportunities much closer to home.
In recent decades we've heard and read much about the recreational and tourism opportunities that exists right here in Chenango County. That said, I suspect many county residents have never or seldom investigated these, probably because they are almost under our collective noses. It often takes a visitor or non-resident to enlighten and remind us of just how many things we have available, and all within easy driving (and sometimes, walking) distance.
How many of you have walked a portion or more of the famed Finger Lakes Trail (www.fingerlakes.net/trailsystem), a major section of over 70 miles of which runs right through our county? How about a primitive camping trip to one of our many state forests' ponds, such as Hunts, Balsam or Jackson ponds, or Bowman Lake State Park with nearly 200 designated camp sites? Or a visit to Rexford Falls in Sherburne? How about a canoe, kayak or cartop boat trip down a section of the Chenango River? How about spending a day exploring DEC's Rogers Environmental Education Center with all its various, trails and lands still open? While often thought of as primarily a cross-country ski area, the miles of trails within the 1200-acre Whaupaunaucau State Forest offer easy hiking and scenic woodland beauty.
Take a break from the outdoors by visiting the Chenango County Historical Society & Museum or the Northeast Classic Car Museum or browse the Otis A. Thompson Room at the Guernsey Memorial Library. Or how about attending a show or exhibit at the Council of the Arts' Cultural Center or the Earlville Opera House? Depending on the time of year, there area also many events to see or even participate in -- the General Clinton Canoe Regatta, the Gus Macker Basketball Tournament, the Sherburne Pagent of Bands, the County Fair, Colorscape, plus several arts and crafts events that are held periodically.
For those who enjoy hitting the links, spend a day golfing on one of the seven fine courses in the county. Anglers have a huge selection of fish-filled waters in the county, ranging from pristine trout streams to ponds and lakes to the Chenango and Unadilla rivers. And with our nearly 80,000 acres of state forests and other public lands, there are more discovery trips available than most of us could cover in a lifetime.
Longer recreational trips are enjoyable but cost more money. Trips closer to home are enjoyable and cost far less. I can't really compare that with lemonade, but then again, I've always liked lemonade.
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