Essex Chain of Lakes – Coordinates and Maps πŸ•

Essex Chain of Lakes – Coordinates and Maps πŸ•

Interactive Map

Download the KML file for use in Google Maps or GPS apps.

Printable Maps

 Essex Chain Lakes

 Essex Chain Lakes

of Oswegatchie River Campsites and Lean-Tos

List of Essex Chain of Lakes Campsites

Here is a list of Essex Chain Lake Campsites. Special restrictions and reservation exist for many of these campsites, see the DEC website for details.

You can also get this as a Google Sheet for ease of downloading into your GPS.

Name Descrip Latitude Longitude
Camp Six Rd Seasonal (Fall) Parking Area 2-3 spaces 43.8781945875647 -74.1951257407619
Camp Six Road Roadside Tentsite   43.891098208087 -74.1858223467572
Camp Six Road Roadside Tentsite   43.880775618509 -74.1920319664505
Camp Six Road Roadside Tentsite   43.8867689717605 -74.1881150206844
Cedar/Hudson River Campsite   43.8526463367848 -74.188226184425
Chain Lakes Rd South Seasonal (Fall) Parking Area   43.8398670879606 -74.2193187297406
Chain Lakes Road South Parking Lot   43.8169730010758 -74.206490005958
Chain Lakes Road South Roadside Tentsite   43.8354885828321 -74.2095424278515
Chain Lakes Road South Roadside Tentsite   43.8318737372315 -74.2087246610165
Chain Lakes Road South Roadside Tentsite   43.8284300483248 -74.2005840726962
Cornell Road Roadside Tentsite   43.9127605502315 -74.2589305446633
Cornell Road Roadside Tentsite   43.90792941637 -74.2708080639985
Cornell Road Roadside Tentsite   43.9067653589248 -74.2728139422411
Cornell Road Roadside Tentsite   43.9119638675587 -74.2629609782825
Deer Pond Road Parking Lot   43.8881877909056 -74.26459017266
Deer Pond Road Roadside Tentsite   43.8921619513765 -74.2680906874901
Deer Pond Road Roadside Tentsite   43.8896153020103 -74.2660494488172
Essex Chain Equestrian Staging Area Includes accessible mounting platform & kiosk 43.9080902992726 -74.1856206534589
Floatplane Tentsite   43.8624107973145 -74.2738175850679
Floatplane Tentsite   43.8441807728989 -74.2572948564662
Floatplane Tentsite   43.8641746165881 -74.2708879596156
Grassy Pond Tentsite   43.8668988556171 -74.2761009397051
Indian River Put-In Parking Lot   43.8016889699131 -74.2299529872379
Indian River Put-In Water Access Hand-carry launch 43.8017043411256 -74.228261437504
Outer Gooley Parking Area   43.8273906506622 -74.2007441162829
Parking Area   43.9144824495811 -74.1846526844935
Pine Lake Primtive Tentsite   43.8493835353493 -74.2458702713384
Polaris (Iron) Bridge Tentsite   43.8946526943318 -74.1651586934731
Polaris Bridge Parking Area 2-3 spaces 43.8954955101626 -74.1682746441243
Waterfront Primitive Tentsite   43.8803564638727 -74.245948680651
Waterfront Primitive Tentsite   43.8794781290843 -74.2529060663751
Waterfront Primitive Tentsite   43.8825615413222 -74.2370898191954
Waterfront Primitive Tentsite   43.8854551161564 -74.2589146456769
Waterfront Primitive Tentsite   43.8763773474625 -74.2627649431543
Waterfront Primitive Tentsite   43.8913218971427 -74.2106406874051
Waterfront Primitive Tentsite   43.865579967021 -74.2649096009151
Waterfront Primitive Tentsite   43.8796521294405 -74.2407518111291
Waterfront Primitive Tentsite   43.8904359124813 -74.2144855367511

Homes Built Before the Civil War in Middleburgh

It's been a few hours since I created a webpage that queries the state property tax database, and I thought it would be interesting to see which properties in Middleburgh were built before the Civil War (before 1861). While assessment records are often inaccurate, I am impressed with the number of properties along Main Street and River Street, which are listed as pre-dating the Civil War. Click on the purple and yellow bullets to bring up the property tax records for these properties.

Why I find it hard to find a home in the Albany-area

I have shelter at home – a drafty decrepit apartment. Until the landlord removed the mail box for construction, I had a place where I even got my mail. But it’s an interim place, even if interim has lasted longer than I ever expected it would be.

But when I spend my weekends in the wilderness – be it Rennselaerville State Forest, the Green Mountains or the Adirondacks – it’s hard to go back to Albany and find anything for any price that looks like a home to me. Vinyl siding and drywall provide shelter but in my mind not a home.

I want that cabin in the woods in a freer state with low taxes, good gun laws and few restrictions on open burning where pot is legal to smoke and grow yourself. A rural place with hills and forests but also agriculture. Small towns, where the pollution and crime and consumeristic culture are far away.

Lawton, Penna.

Just a hick town outside of Montrose, I often find myself wandering through to find my way back to New York. PA 706 is slow, but it's fun to wander through those small towns on back roads of Pennsylvania. Gas station is new, in support of the fracking business, although the ball fields complete with burn barrels (NOT JUST FOR GUN CLUBS!), have been there a long time. It's called self-reliance.

1993 - LEFT / RIGHT - 2019

How the Adirondacks remind me I still have reason to hope 🏑

I get tired of the endless number enormous, complicated and thoroughly modern houses I see on Zillow. But when I get to a more remote place like the Adirondacks and look around I know there is reason for hope. Most cabins, especially seasonal hunting cabins aren’t wrapped in plastic or are enormous though some certainly are. I really don’t get the appeal of modernity, the smart television in every room with high speed internet. I am pretty sure the house of future, as sold on television will come with a mandatory 30-yard dumpster with the amount of waste we are told is normal by the television.

I think home should be a sanctuary away from it all. Simple and not needing constant repairs or buying new shit to keep it in good condition. A simple cabin, with as few electronics and as little technology as possible. Maybe some electric lights, but not much beyond that. While I could see the benefits of having a propane heater as a backup when I’m away for an extended period of time, a wood stove, with as little space to heat as possible would be best. No washing machine, no dish washer or fancy appliances. Just a very basic propane stove, an energy efficient refrigerator, a place to charge my cellphone. 

Maybe to live a life like that I have to build it, as few houses on the market truly are like that. But there are people who live that way, as witnessed by the Adirondacks. Not all houses are spacious and β€œmodern” or covered with vinyl siding and full of white walls. Shiplap and board batten are common options in cabins, white drywall ain’t the only option. You also don’t have to have a 2,000 foot square house. Maybe such things are normal in suburbs, along with the mandatory 30-yard dumpster for all the things you get in Amazon on a daily basis, but I find it all so repulsive.