Rattlesnake Hill WMA

The Rattlesnake Hill Wildlife Management Area is a 5,100 acre upland tract, situated approximately eight miles west of Dansville, New York. Roughly two-thirds of the area lies in southern Livingston County, while the remaining third lies in northern Allegany County. The tract was purchased in the 1930’s under the Federal Resettlement Administration and is one of several such areas turned over to DEC for development as a wildlife management area.

The area is appropriately named after the Timber Rattlesnake, which may be occasionally found in the more remote sections of the “Hill”.

The area offers an interesting blend of upland habitats such as mature woodland, overgrown fields, conifer plantations, old growth apple orchards and open meadows.

The area is inhabited by a variety of game species and is open to public hunting. The white-tailed deer, wild turkey, ruffed grouse, grey squirrel, cottontail rabbit and woodcock are found on the area. An occasional snowshoe hare may be observed adjacent to thick creek bottom brush or conifer plantation habitats.

A number of small marsh units have been developed and provide limited hunting for waterfowl. Some of the area’s furbearing species such as mink, beaver and raccoon may be occasionally viewed at these marsh units.

http://www.dec.ny.gov/outdoor/24443.html

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Rainy Thursday, Late Again β˜”

I guess I won’t be heading in early this morning to walk laps on the Concourse though I should still be in on time to work which ultimately is what’s important. Kind of a dreary day but it’s nice that it’s warm enough to have my windows open.

Good morning! Happy Thursday. Rain and 50 degrees in Delmar, NY. β˜” There is a southeast breeze at 7 mph. πŸƒ. The skies will clear tomorrow around 4 pm.

I really wanted to get an earlier start but it was not to be. πŸ€·β€β™‚οΈ My stomach was grumbling this morning and then I ended up going back to bed for some extra πŸ’€ sleep and then it just seemed like everything took longer than expected this morning. 😦 Blueberry pancakes this morning. πŸ₯ž

Today will have showers likely, mainly before 11am. Cloudy 🌦, with a high of 62 degrees at 4pm. Five degrees above normal, which is similar to a typical day around April 20th. Maximum dew point of 54 at 1pm. South wind 7 to 13 mph. Chance of precipitation is 70%. New precipitation amounts between a tenth and quarter of an inch possible. A year ago, we had mostly sunny skies in the morning with a few breaks of sun the afternoon. The high last year was 74 degrees. The record high of 87 was set in 2017. 1.7 inches of snow fell back in 1942.❄

Solar noon 🌞 is at 12:57 pm with sun having an altitude of 55.9Β° from the due south horizon (-14.9Β° vs. 6/21). A six foot person will cast a 4.1 foot shadow today compared to 2.2 feet on the first day of summer. The golden hour πŸ… starts at 6:56 pm with the sun in the west (276Β°). πŸ“Έ The sunset is in the west-northwest (283Β°) with the sun dropping below the horizon at 7:33 pm after setting for 2 minutes and 58 seconds with dusk around 8:02 pm, which is one minute and 8 seconds later than yesterday. πŸŒ‡ At dusk you’ll see the Waxing Crescent πŸŒ’ Moon in the west (273Β°) at an altitude of 35Β° from the horizon, 234,584 miles away. πŸš€ The best time to look at the stars is after 8:37 pm. At sunset, look for rain 🌧 and temperatures around 61 degrees. The dew point will be 55 degrees. There will be a south-southeast breeze at 14 mph. Today will have 13 hours and 16 minutes of daytime, an increase of 2 minutes and 48 seconds over yesterday.

Last night with the rain I came home on the bus 🚍 and read for several hours. Similar to what’s going to happen today. Sucks that I won’t get a chance to get out walking but so be it.

Tonight will have showers, mainly after 8pm. 🌧 Low of 59 degrees at 4am. 22 degrees above normal, which is similar to a typical night around June 16th. Maximum dew point of 58 at 5am. πŸ–οΈ Breezy, with a southeast wind 15 to 20 mph, with gusts as high as 30 mph. Chance of precipitation is 100%. New precipitation amounts between a quarter and half of an inch possible. In 2023, we had mostly clear skies in the evening, which became mostly clear by the early hours of the morning. It got down to 56 degrees. The record low of 13 occurred back in 1874.

Still looking cold and wet for the weekend. β˜” Might be best for just doing more reading πŸ“–. Saturday, a chance of showers. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 49. Breezy, with a west wind 16 to 24 mph, with gusts as high as 37 mph. Chance of precipitation is 50%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible. Sunday, partly sunny, with a high near 59. Typical average high for the weekend is 58 degrees.

Looking ahead, there are 12 weeks until Independence Day πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ when the sun will be setting at 8:37 pm with dusk at 9:10 pm. On that day in 2023, we had mostly sunny and temperatures between 84 and 54 degrees. Typically, the high temperature is 83 degrees. We hit a record high of 104 back in 1911.

Down By Long Pond

What Do I Need for a Night in the Wilderness.


Back when I was in Boy Scouts when we did backpacking, we did often did with about fifty pounds on our backs, and honestly it wasn’t a lot of fun. When I start doing some wilderness camping myself this summer, I want to pack as little as possible, but have the supplies to camp in relative comfort.

  1. Camping hammock – A camping hammock provides a comfortable place to sleep, without having to bring a sleeping pad or tent.
  2. Bug Net and bug spray – I need to get a bug net to use over my camping hammock. This is especially critical during black fly season but throughout the year, mosquito could be obnoxious while sleeping in the wilderness, especially near a lake.
  3. Two or three cigarette lighters – Lighters are important for starting fires, which will provide light, warmth, and a way to cook without bringing a camp-stove back in wilderness.
  4. Trowel – For burying poop, digging out a fire pit,
  5. Rope – For hanging the bear bag, hanging up the tarp.
  6. Water – Sufficent water for hiking, plus at night at camp.
  7. Small pot and frying pan – For boiling water if necessary, cooking on the fire.
  8. Old cloth bag – For storing food in a bear bag.
  9. Map and compass – For navigating. I rarely use a compass, but if I were to get off a trail, I could use it to navigate back onto the trail.
  10. Two or three flashlights – Flashlights break. Batteries go dead. I want to make sure I have light at night in the wilderness.
  11. Camera – For making videos and taking photos of what I’ve seen.
  12. Cellphone – For entertainment, journaling, listening to music and podcast. Might be handy in emergencies, and it’s fun to check out my exact location on the GPS, when I can find a land mark to orient myself on the trail
  13. Additional Battery Pack – To charge my phone at night, so I can have all night entertainment, music, podcasts, journal.
  14. Extra socks, pair of underwear and t-shirt. Wet clothes can be miserable. While I doubt I would need a full change of clothes, I think having a pair of socks, underwear, t-shirt is a good thing.
  15. Toilet paper – Self explanatory, it cleans up better than leaves. I’d burn it, rather then let it become litter, even if it’s burried.
  16. Small first aid kit – Just some bandages, wet wipers in small plastic bag.
  17. Multi-function Knife – For anything I’d need to cut at camp. Maybe also a bigger knife, especially during hunting season
  18. Candles – To provide additional light at camp.
  19. Flags – American flag and Don’t Tread on Me flag for decoration.

Food and meals … I want to keep things as light and simple as possible, not requiring much cooking.

  1. Water – Few things are as critical as having sufficient clean water to drink. I would probably add a shot of cider vinegar to get rid of that nasty off-taste that water sometimes has locally from the minerals.
  2. Frozen Hot Dogs, Beans/Canned Veggies or Soup – Something lightweight that wouldn’t require a lot of wait. Ideally, I’d avoid canned goods, that require the can to be carried out at the end of the trip.
  3. Cookies – Calories for energy, that are tasty for a dessert.
  4. Oatmeal – For breakfast, that is quick and easy. I could boil water for that. I probably would skip coffee for breakfast.

A few other things I might want to think about bringing …

  1. Small Tarp – While I probably wouldn’t back country in rain, it might be handy for a pop up thunderstorm.
  2. Beer – I might bring a can or two of beer to enjoy by the fire at night.
  3. Fishing pole/night crawlers/few bobbers/hooks – For fishing during the summer months to pass time, additional source of food. Not going to bring my full fishing kit. Place in small plastic bags.
  4. .22 rifle – During small game season for harvesting squirrel or rabbit. I would put it on a sling and care over the shoulder.

My goal is simple: have things that can be carried in a small, lightweight backpack that would make exploring the wilderness fun, not too bogged down.

How bad is solar for the environment? 🌞🏭

The fastest growing form of suburban sprawl over the next ten years is not likely to be shopping mauls, tract housing, or apartment complexes. Instead it’s likely to be the acres and acres of industrial solar facilities that are popping up everywhere. Some of it will be forest land chopped down and some of it will be farm land – although most will be either low quality brushy abandoned farmlands or low quality pasture and hay grounds – as they are the most affordable to develop.

Now the greenies may want you to believe that industrial solar facilities have zero impact on the land or that they may be a net improvement. I don’t know, they certainly impact the scenic characteristics of the land by developing it. Wildlife habits will be altered as will land cover. But on the flip side, solar farm development has a limited impact on compaction and damage to the soil – compared to most housing, commercial or industrial development. A solar farm ripped up, grounds tilled, fertilized and seeded after a few years probably could be largely restored as the marginal ag land or forest land they once were. Solar farms keep the land in the hands of relatively few owners which makes it easier to return to farm land or forest lands when the time comes.

I think there is a lot of wishful thinking about solar panel recycling. Yes, there are some interesting research going on but anybody who is serious knows what is going to happen to most solar panels when they are discarded – useful parts will be sold on the second hand market to other more marginalelectric companies, off-gridders and the third world. Copper wire and transformers are valuable at scrap yards. Even smaller parts like blocking diodes are likely in some cases to be resold. The I beams and racks have value on the scrap yard. Most broken or worn out panels are likely to be smashed and landfilled at construction and debris landfills, but with their aluminum frames salvaged as scrap metal. Probably there is a lot less glass and debris in the panels once they are crushed. Concrete pads and footings might be landfilled or pulverized and used as beneficial fill depending on low conditions.

I was reading that a lot of farmers actually like these mega-solar facilities despite consumption of land that produces feed. If anything, removing marginal land off the market might increase commodity prices. In many cases the solar companies aren’t buying the land but leasing it as tenants, usually with an agreement to remove the panels and frames once they are no longer useful. If the solar companies abandon the facilities, there is still a lot of scrap metal from the panels, mounting platforms, and wire that can be sold, and panels can provide power on farm or be sold. And solar facilities don’t care about the smell of manure or smoke, the noise of tractors or cattle, they don’t run their ATVs in farmers fields. And they aren’t necessarily permanent. They can be removed, scrapped and hauled to landfills and land largely restored.

My criticism over the industrial solar facilities is I’m not sure how really valuable they are as a climate solution or improving the environment. I think they are oversold compared to the amount of energy they put into the grid, they’re impacts on scenic beauty, open space and the environment downplayed. They are taking tens of thousands of acres – maybe soon hundreds of thousands of acres and turning it into industrial electricity generating facilities while having a fairly minor impact on the grid and carbon emissions. For something that is largely duplicate of the fossil plants that generate energy with far lower environmental footprint.

Probaby I’m a fool for riding my bike to work this morning πŸš΄β€β™‚οΈπŸŒ§οΈ

I am hoping the rain holds off for a while so I can ride to work. That said, who knows if I’ll get wet on the way in, and I concede I’ll probably be quite wet come the afternoon for the ride back to the express. I don’t expect to ride all that the way back to Delmar. It’s fine, I think we’ve made it to the mild part of the year, and I can’t imagine the green up is far away.

Good morning! Clouds and a bit damp with the breeze picking up, around 55 degrees in Delmar, NY. ☁️ There is a south-southeast breeze at 14 mph. πŸƒ with gusts up to 24 mph πŸ’¨πŸ’¨πŸ’¨. The dew point is 43 degrees. The skies will clear Friday around 3 pm.

At five o’clock this morning ⏰ I got the bread and spaghetti squash a cooking, along with a pot of cranberry beans. 🫘🍞 Two types of bread baked, one is carrot πŸ₯• bread and the other one is onion bread. πŸ§… Dinner tonight, which I’m sure I’ll be enjoying after getting soaked on the ride home β˜” will be chicken πŸ” soup. Eggs πŸ₯š for breakfast.

Riding in this morning 🚲 but I concede it will likely be the last time this week. πŸ˜” Just going to rain most of the second half of the week. β˜” Probably get wet riding from Menands to the old train πŸš‰ station in the evening waiting for the bus 🚍 but in the evening I don’t care and can get changed when I get back home 🏑.

Today will have showers likely, mainly after 2pm. Cloudy 🌦, with a high of 61 degrees at 3pm. Four degrees above normal, which is similar to a typical day around April 18th. Maximum dew point of 49 at 5pm. South wind around 14 mph, with gusts as high as 24 mph. Chance of precipitation is 60%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible. A year ago, we had mostly sunny skies. The high last year was 67 degrees. The record high of 86 was set in 1922. 5.7 inches of snow fell back in 1961.❄

Not going to be the nicest day ever β˜” but not so cold and I have to work. Plus I appreciate how mild it’s been and I’ve had my windows open helping to ensure lots of fresh air at night for good sleeping. πŸ› I feel well rested after last night with the windows open. πŸͺŸ I’m glad the nicer weather is back again. Yesterday felt so nice with the temperature reaching the mid seventies by afternoon with lots of sun β˜€.

Solar noon 🌞 is at 12:57 pm with sun having an altitude of 55.5Β° from the due south horizon (-15.3Β° vs. 6/21). A six foot person will cast a 4.1 foot shadow today compared to 2.2 feet on the first day of summer. The golden hour πŸ… starts at 6:55 pm with the sun in the west (276Β°). πŸ“Έ The sunset is in the west-northwest (282Β°) with the sun dropping below the horizon at 7:32 pm after setting for 2 minutes and 57 seconds with dusk around 8:01 pm, which is one minute and 9 seconds later than yesterday. πŸŒ‡ At dusk you’ll see the Waxing Crescent πŸŒ’ Moon in the west (277Β°) at an altitude of 23Β° from the horizon, 231,965 miles away. πŸš€ The best time to look at the stars is after 8:36 pm. At sunset, look for rain 🌧 and temperatures around 57 degrees. The dew point will be 50 degrees. There will be a south-southeast breeze at 6 mph. Today will have 13 hours and 14 minutes of daytime, an increase of 2 minutes and 49 seconds over yesterday.

Last night went to the park 🏞 and read for a while before coming home to knead bread. Dinner was sweet potatoes πŸ₯” and onions and other good stuff. I didn’t carry a physical book, πŸ“™ just more reading with that Libby App. It’s pretty awesome. πŸ“±

Tonight will have a chance of showers, mainly after 4am. Mostly cloudy 🌧, with a low of 50 degrees at 5am. 15 degrees above normal, which is similar to a typical night around May 20th. South wind around 6 mph. Chance of precipitation is 30%. New precipitation amounts of less than a tenth of an inch possible. In 2023, we had clear skies in the evening, which became mostly clear by the early hours of the morning. It got down to 37 degrees. The record low of 20 occurred back in 1874.

Weekend looks kind of suck again. πŸ˜• Saturday, a chance of showers before 2pm. Mostly cloudy, with a high near 51. Breezy. Chance of precipitation is 40%. Sunday, a chance of showers after 2pm. Partly sunny, with a high near 62. Chance of precipitation is 30%. Maximum dew point of 46 at 7pm. At least it will be wet until the green up reducing the fire risk. πŸ”₯ Typical average high for the weekend is 58 degrees.

Believe it or not there are 3 weeks until May πŸ•Š when the sun will be setting at 7:57 pm with dusk at 8:26 pm. On that day in 2023, we had rain and temperatures between 59 and 45 degrees. Typically, the high temperature is 66 degrees. We hit a record high of 86 back in 2001. By then things should be greening up nicely at least outside of the high country and the Adirondacks. 🌸

Broken

Many NY state agencies don’t use fips codes, but their own 6-bit number systems

So their county codes go from Albany (1) through Yates (62). It’s a very memory efficient way of storing the data, especially back in the 1960s.

Which is all fine, except there is no consistency between state agencies. The NYS Board of Elections uses “St. Lawrence” county rather then “Saint Lawrence” county in the sort. So Saint Lawrence County is number 50 rather then number 45 if you were going to spell it out. Though they’re not that concerned about memory, as they store towns and cities as strings, rather then numeric codes.

In contrast, the NYS Health Department for Medicaid and other purposes does it the traditional spelled-out way, Saint Lawrence is county number 45.

Then the NYS DOT uses their own system, that involves two alphabetic characters (16-bits), such as AL for Albany, ER for Erie, SV for Sullivan, SL for Saint Lawrence, etc. Heck of it is, if the DOT used just ordinary FIPS codes, they could store the information in only 7-bits at least in NYS (0-127, as Yates County is FIPS code 123).

How Much Land Do I Need Eventually?

Driving out to the Green Mountain National Forest via Sand Lake, there was a sign advertising 6 to 10 acre house sites. My parents have 8 acres where they live in Westerlo, and I think the town requires a least 3 acres for new home sites, to protect the rural character of the land, even if it ultimately is just promoting sprawl and McMansions with abandoned, farm fields reverting back to woods.

When I eventually move out to the country, I want to own enough land to be back from the road, have privacy, be able to shoot guns, have bonfires, heat wood, burn trash and debris, and listen to music as loud as I want to. I’m not into burning junk tires or super amplified music, but I do like have my freedom to do what I want with my land, and nobody knowing or caring. If I want to butcher a deer or hog in my backyard, so be it. I guess you could figure out far you have to be from the road to be screened, how far smoke travels, how loud your guns are. Obviously, you have to respect local laws on when you burn and how far you have to be from other people’s homes and barns to be shooting. But we all knows that sometimes smoke and noise travels farther then you would like, and that’s why it’s important to have the right kind of neighbors.

Mountains Fade Into Fog

No matter how remote you live, there are always neighbors down the way. Many country folk don’t give a fuck about how other people live their life, to them it’s live and let live. Which is good. But it only takes one person to call the cops when they smell the wrong kind of smoke, or are bothered by noise of shooting or music. Rednecks are usually good neighbors while the nosy, moved out of the city in the fancy McMansion is the worse. But you never know, so having distance is important. And sometimes a reasonable person can get annoyed or change. Good people sometimes move out and bad people move in.

Livestock and wood are another consideration. Livestock can require quite a bit of land for forage and you often don’t want them penned up right next to your house, because especially cows can be quite noisy at night and hogs smell like hogs. Wood heat can require a good supply of firewood, especially with those outdoor wood boilers – but even fireplaces can burn through a lot in a cold winter. All considerations on how much land I would need to save up to buy. But those are easy to calculate – in contrast having decent neighbors who don’t make a fuss about nothing is far more important then having a lot of land.

What is the biggest challenge I face in the next six months?

Deciding who I want to be when I grow up and how that will impact my housing choices well into the 2030s.

The condrum is simple…

  • Living in Upstate New York sucks. The taxes are high, the government regulations are stupid, everybody who lives in Upstate NY is terribly corrupt due to all the work arounds they have to build into their lives to appease the power brokers who speak of high moral causes but are primarily interested in lining their own pockets.
  • I make really good money with my patronage job that I love doing, one that finally taps into my talents with data and programming. I do good work and have a record of securing results for my clients and working inefficiencies out of processes. I find NY state politics to be endlessly fascinating drama, watching as the people’s business gets done, maybe with a cringe worthiness like gawking a fatal automobile crash.

I really see three options forward…

  • Try to hold on to my relatively inexpensive dumpy apartment in the suburbs, trying to cut costs anywhere possible in my budget so I can save as much as possible towards moving out of New York State at age 55 the earliest I can collect retirement. If I have to move find a similarly dumpy apartment. Continue to build my resume and work skills, deliver results for clients and earn more pay and invest it. Seek lower income work at age 55 outside of New York State. Continue to do trips so I can have some joy in life but the primary focus should be on taking care of my health and finances so I am in good shape come age 55 in 14 years. Obviously such an approach has risks of health declines and potential death especially in a less than healthy living environment that my apartment represents.
  • Build that solar powered and wood heated cabin on the outskirts of Albany on the edge of deep rural Upstate NY. Have a fair amount of acerage, good neighbors and be careful what and when I’m burning things in bonfires. Make sure to carefully build and engineer that property to comply with all state codes, set it up to be well screened from the roads and neighbors. Familiarize myself with all the necessary work arounds for living in Upstate New York like traveling to buy ammunition out of state. The thing is this option while the appealing middle option blocks the first option as once I build a unique property it’s likely difficult to sell and will tie up a lot of money even if it’s a more enjoyable option then the first.
  • Leave New York State and completely reboot my life from scratch, in many ways writing off a lot of the experience and salary bumps I’ve given up over the past decade and a half. There are plenty of much more wild places in America that suit my values, are far cheaper to build in and don’t require so many work arounds for every day living. Places where they respect the second amendment, where they have few restrictions on fires, taxes are low and life is affordable. Much of the Midwest and the West come to mind. Pennsylvania and West Virginia are decent options too though such states have their own problems.