Day: April 1, 2026💾

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24 Eagle Street Properties

I was looking at the map of city owned properties, and noticed that some seemed to be missing. So I did a quick query of NYSGIS database to find properties that belong to City Hall at 24 Eagle Street in Albany.

Map: Green Mountain National Forest North

C.D.C. Pauses Testing for Rabies and Pox Viruses – The New York Times

C.D.C. Pauses Testing for Rabies and Pox Viruses – The New York Times

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has temporarily paused testing for rabies and pox viruses, the family of viruses that includes smallpox and mpox, according to an update to the agency’s website on Monday.

The C.D.C. offers testing for dozens of pathogens to assist state and local public health laboratories that are not equipped to conduct them. The organization began evaluating its tests in late 2024 as part of an agencywide review.

But widespread layoffs, hiring freezes and resignations have shrunk the number of qualified scientists who can assist state labs. The C.D.C.’s rabies and pox virus teams have lost many of their members. By July, the rabies team will be down to just one person with the clinical expertise to advise state and local officials, and the pox virus team will have none.

The teams already have too few members to offer after-hours advice for states as the agency has long done, according to an official with knowledge of the situation who asked to remain anonymous because of fear of retaliation.

Welcome to April 🌸

In the Capital Region of New York, early April is a season of profound, often jarring transition. As the snow recedes from the Helderberg Escarpment and the Saratoga plains, the landscape enters a volatile “in-between” state that is as atmospheric as it is unpredictable. While the Hudson and Mohawk Rivers swell with the icy runoff of the Adirondacks, the region begins its slow, muddy march toward a true spring.

The defining characteristic of this period is a sensory tug-of-war. In the agricultural stretches of southern Albany and Montgomery counties, the air takes on a distinct character. As farmers begin to turn over the heavy, damp ground in preparation for the season, the wind carries the sharp, tangy scent of cow manure being spread across the fields. It is an earthy, pungent aroma that signals the literal awakening of the soil, a traditional marker of the farming cycle that persists even as suburban sprawl creeps closer to the silos.

Despite the dampness underfoot, this period carries a surprising elemental danger. Before the “green-up” fully takes hold, the Capital Region often experiences a spike in fire risk. The previous year’s dead grasses and fallen leaves—dried out by the biting spring winds and not yet shaded by new canopy—become a tinderbox. Local news often flickers with warnings of brush fires, a stark reminder that even in the land of late-season snow squalls, the environment remains brittle and vulnerable.

The weather itself remains an exercise in patience for those living between the Catskills and the Berkshires. A Tuesday might offer a brilliant, 65-degree afternoon that brings crowds to the Empire State Plaza, only for Wednesday to arrive with a “clipper” system that coats the budding crocuses in a layer of graupel. This is the essence of early April in the Capital Region: a messy, fragrant, and occasionally risky bridge between the white silence of winter and the lush certainty of May.

Map: Green Mountain National Forest North