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Camping at Big Pond

Big Pond is one of the two larger ponds in the Catskills accessible to the public. Located in the Western Catskills, near Alder Pond, it has eight paddle in or hike in tent sites, and some pretty views. I spent the night camping up there on August 27.

Night is Creeping Up on Me. I didn’t realize how quickly it got late at Big Pond, and I had even started dinner. To make matters worst, my white-gas lantern wouldn’t start, so I had to do everything by flash light.

Night is Creeping Up on Me

Dark Night Before the Moonrose. All you can see is by the light of the campfire. I didn’t have a lantern, because it refused to start.

drought-status-ny [Expires September 1 2023]

Waking Up at Big Pond. Looking out the window of tent prior to dawn, with a little smoke from the fire still smoldering, and lots of fog.

Waking Up at Big Pond

Pond Prior to Sunrise. The fog rises above the pond. It looks perfect for taking photos, so I decide to hop in the kayak, and go for a paddle.

Pond Prior to Sunrise

Campsite. Yes, the beer cans are empty, and I am using that pot to boil water for coffee, because I left the coffee pot in the truck. I doesn’t matter much because I use a coffee press to make the actual coffee.

Campsite

Firepit. This is while I’m making coffee and getting ready for the day.

Firepit

Paddling Gear Back. With all the camping gear in the kayak, or most of it, including the stove and pot top on the deck. The kayak rode well with all the gear.

Paddling Gear Back

Big Pond from Parking Area. It certainly was quite pretty out there, and a great unguarded swimming beach that was packed with people.

Big Pond from Parking Area

Bear Bag. Actually it was a peanut can, with cookies and other things. And despite the bear coming through, he left my site alone, and didn’t even try to get the bear bag that was about 12-13 feet off the ground, suspended from a limb, and 10 feet plus from the tree where it hung.

Untitled [Expires November 22 2024]

Tent. Yes, occasionally I will sleep in a tent. This actually is the second time I’ve slept in a tent this year. One other time I slept in a lean-to and the rest has been truck camping.

Tent

Designated Campsite. This is one of eight designated campsites around Big Pond. They are free to use, but are limited to 6 people, and you can only stay at one site for 3 nights without a permit.

Designated Campsite

Looking Up at the Ash Trees. I was looking up at all the ash trees around the lake, and realizing that within 20-30 years they will all be gone. The maples will most likely replace them, but they also risk the Asian Longhorn Beetle.

Looking Up at the Ash Trees

Parked at Campsite. It was a pretty blue lake in the morning.

Parked at Campsite

Finally Put That Smoldering Log Out. Remind me again, never to use a big punky old log like that in a campfire. It took a ton of water and rubbing the coals to get them to snuff out.

Finally Put That Smoldering Log Out

Blue and Green. I just liked this view from the campsite.

Blue and Green

Camping at Betty Brook, Aug 26

The Betty Brook Campsite remains one of my favorite in NY State, especially because it’s a quick hour drive from downtown Albany out there, over the Thruway and the Warren Andersen Expressway. It almost never disappoints, and it was a great night.

Beautiful Saturday Morning

Morning Sun. The valley being so deep around Betty Brook the sun sets early, and rises late this time of year. Looking at the sun through the trees, a little after 9 AM.

Morning Sun

Betty Brook Road. Just looking at this road brings me home, back to my favorite camping area.

Betty Brook Road

The Campsite. And yes, I of course have my trademark Christmas lights that I always use for ambiance.

The Campsite

Betty Brook Site All Cleaned Up

I headed from here, in my truck, up to explore the Mallet Pond State Forest-area just to the north. I probably will camp up at Rossman Pond the next time I am here, because the pond is so pretty and I can paddle around with my kayak there.

Sun Altitude from Horizon

Here is a map of the Betty Brook Campsites. There is a larger one to the south, but I generally prefer the one to the north, as its smaller and the firepit and stone table is much nicer.


View Hiking in 2009 in a larger map

Camping at Cedar River Flow, August 12

Buying Firewood. There is this great place for campfire wood on Cedar River Plains Road, about 8 miles in. You get a lot of wood for $5.

Buying Firewood

Cab Full of Firewood. The seat and floor boards where stacked with firewood. It kept me going for the next 4 days, although I really didn’t have big fires until the last day when I was up at Mountain Pond. That may have violated DEC firewood regulations, at moving the wood 60 miles, but too bad. It’s my wood.

Cab Full of Firewood

Wild Blueberry Fields. I decided I wanted to drive up there from Cedar River Flow, to eat some, because I knew they would be in peak. This is an hour away (or 15 miles away at 15 MPH), up in the sandy plains of Moose River Plains from Cedar River Flow. These are some of the best blueberry fields in the Adirondacks, and despite being in season for three weeks and very popular, still have many berries to pick.

Wild Blueberry Fields

Blueberries. All I can say is delicious. And so numerous, as you look around all you see is blueberries.

Blueberries

Helldiver Pond in Evening . Watching the sun set over Mitchell Ponds Mountain.

Helldiver Pond in Evening

Moose River Plains Road After Dark. It’s an interesting road to drive after dark, being so narrow, twisty, and rough, especially after drinking all day.

Gray start to Saturday morning

Camping at Site 8. This is down by the Wakely Dam. The prior day I spent paddling around Cedar River Flow and up the river a ways.

Camping at Site 8

Picnic Table. I have yet to pick up my gear. It took a while to figure out which trees to use to set up the site, but ultimately with the steel poles, I got it set up.

Picnic Table

Kayak Tying Down Tarp. I couldn’t quite figure out how to keep the tarp tied down. I tried to use a wood stake, but it kept pulling out of the ground. The kayak worked well for this purpose.

Kayak Tying Down Tarp

Packed Up and Ready To Go. See I’m all packed up and ready to go. Kayak is on the roof, and the site is all cleaned up. I don’t leave a mess or do ny kind of damage to site. Anything unburnt in the fire pit, I haul out.

Packed Up and Ready To Go

Heading Across Wakely Dam. It certainly is not a real pretty morning out there. So be it.

Heading Across Wakely Dam

Cedar River Flow Campsite No 8. It’s a pretty descent basic little campsite. Now off to Owls Head Mountain Firetower.

Cedar River Flow Campsite No 8

Kayaking Cedar River Flow, August 2010

The Cedar River Flow is a 3 mile dammed up river, that provides a beautiful area to paddle around in between the Blue Ridge Hills, and other mountains that surround it. There are dozens of campsites along the lake, you can paddle on around in. On August 11th, I camped up at the Cedar River Flow Camping-area in my pickup truck, and paddled around the lake, up into the Cedar River a ways beyond the end of the flow.

Cedar River-Limekiln Lake Road

Hook Near Payne Brook. Where it enters the Cedar River Flow, about a 1/2 mile from the entrance of the Flow.

Hook Near Payne Brook

Across Cedar River Flow. This more open portion was a bit rougher, although the wind was pretty slack on this day. Blue Ridge is in the distance.

Across Cedar River Flow


Wakely Fire Tower. As seen from the middle of Cedar River Flow, over Sturges Hill. I previously hiked it, and it was a nice hike</>.

Wakely Fire Tower

South Over Cedar River Flow. It was pretty bright and glarey on the lake. I had my sunglasses on, and even had enough sunscreen on, along with the cowboy hat, but not putting sunscreen on my legs, left with me with bad burns on the legs.

South Over Cedar River Flow

Parked on Cedar River Flow. At one of the campsites. I really had to take a piss, because that’s what drinking beer does to me, and it’s pretty hard to do in a kayak, without hoping out.

Parked on Cedar River Flow

Campsite on Cedar River Flow. This was one of the less nicer campsites on Cedar River Flow, causally developed and not by the DEC. The nicer paddle in campsites have picnic tables, and outhouses.

Campsite on Cedar River Flow

View from Cedar River Paddle-In Campsite. Quite nice, and a sandy beach for swimming and getting clean.

View from Cedar River Paddle-In Campsite

Edge of Cedar River Flow. This was at the campsite I pulled off at to take a piss.

Edge of Cedar River Flow

Cedar River Flow Becomes Marshier. As you proceed west on Cedar River Flow, it becomes shallower and shallower, until it’s marshland. It can be a little hard to paddle if you get out of the channel, but in the channel, it’s pretty deep.

Cedar River Flow Becomes Marshier

Marshy Flow and Pillsbury Mountain. This is almost the end of the flow, before it becomes all marsh, and you have to follow the Cedar River to get farther west then this.

Marshy Flow and Pillsbury Mountain

Sturges Hills and Wilson Ridge. This is across the marshy end of Cedar River Flow, looking to the north-west.

Sturges Hills and Wilson Ridge

Tougher Paddling. Soon I will find my way onto the Cedar River, which gets much easier, despite a fairly strong current on the river.

Tougher Paddling

Canadian Geese. On the Cedar River Flow.

Canadian Geese

Pond Lillies on the Marsh and Mush. Not fun at all for paddling through on the Flow. That said, if I was in the channel, it wouldn’t be so hard, but I was looking for another stretch and piss spot. All that beer made for tough going in the boat.

Pond Lillies on the Marsh and Mush

End of Cedar River Flow. From here it’s just marshland and the river, flowing to the south west.

End of Cedar River Flow

Paddling Thru Cedar River. The current was pretty strong, but still very much paddle-able from here.

Paddling Thru Cedar River

Down Along the Cedar River. It was a pretty afternoon for paddling, but my arms where starting to feel it against the current of the river.

Salad for the Pine Bush Dinner

Navigating Oxbow in Cedar River.

Navigating Oxbow in Cedar River

Back in the Flow. The low hills of Blue Ridge and Sturges Hills follow along the landscape of the flow.

Back in the Flow

Heading East Along Cedar River Flow. Only a couple miles back to the campsite.

Heading East Along Cedar River Flow

East Across Flow.

East Across Flow

South Across Cedar River Flow.

South Across Cedar River Flow

Kayak in Site on Cedar River Flow. This is one of the beautiful kayak-in sites that the DEC is proposing to close to appease the environmental extermists who believe the public should have no access to public lands.

Kayak in Site on Cedar River Flow

Very Basic Campsite. Still it seemed like some place that would be nice to paddle in one day with a tent.

Very Basic Campsite

A Quick Swim, Then Back in Kayak. This is another nice sandy beach at Cedar River Flow.

A Quick Swim, Then Back in Kayak

Shoreline Near Payne Brook. This is the hook that jets out into Cedar River Flow.

Shoreline Near Payne Brook

Kayaking Pass an Island. On the Cedar River Flow.

Kayaking Pass an Island

Island with Pillsbury Mountain. And several other mountains, looking west down towards the Plains.

Island with Pillsbury Mountain

Past the Payne Brook. On the Cedar River Flow. Almost back to Wakely Dam, and the drive-in campsites.

Past the Payne Brook

Flooded Lake. This portion of the Cedar River Flow, demostrates how very much this area was once open plains, until the DEC flooded the area shortly after obtaining the land from Gould Paper Company in 1967.

Flooded Lake

Back to the Wakely Dam. As you can see, it’s already starting to get dark. By the time I’m out of the water, and cleaned up, it’s already 6:30 PM. I then go for a little drive up to the plains (an hour away), and pick blueberries.

At the door

The Wakely Dam. There are no posted weight restrictions on this dam, and people regularly bring their fifth wheel campers across it. That said, the Albany bureaucrats in the DEC wants to close off vehicular access, because they don’t believe the public should be allowed to camp on their own lands, especially not in something like a pickup truck or an RV.

The Wakely Dam

Getting Ready to Pull Out. I’m camping at the site right next to Wakely Dam</>, namely site No 8.

Getting Ready to Pull Out

Here is a map of the lake. The Wakely Dam is to the North, the Cedar River flows from the south in the West Canada Wilderness.

Camping at Mason Lake

There are 12 primitive campsites on or around Mason Lake, right south of the intersection of NY 30 and Jessup Lake Road, along with a scattering of designated sites in International Paper Easement. I camped there on the night of July 31st of this year. There is no firewood locally, you’ll have to buy some and haul it on the site.

NY 30

Click to download high resolution map for printing. Be aware I added these campsites, and the Unit Plan calls for changes in the layout of campsites, so the site locations may have changed.

The campsites on Mason Lake are fairly popular, and if you want one lake, you will have to get there early.

Mason Lake

Otherwise, the sites off the lake and nearby lake are often open, and the scattered designated sites throughout Perkins Clearing are rarely used. I hiked Pillsbury Mountain in the morning, and didn’t arrive until evening, so I had this site across Jessup River Road, a short walk to the lake.

Train

Campsite on Jessup River Road

Cleaning Up Site

Mason Lake in afternoon has some amazing reflections, of Floodwood Mountain. It’s not perfectly quiet, due to several campsites around, and the noise from NY 30’s traffic, but it is the closest free camping area on NY 30, just being North of Spectulator.

Mason Lake

Reflection

Lillies at Jessup River

Blackwater Falls  [Expires November 7 2023]

Mason Lake in the first light of the morning.

Mason Lake

Towards Floodwood Mountain

Mason Lake Map.

A Rainy Day at Cedar River Flow, July 23

I had originally planned on exploring Moose River Plains, on Friday July 23 during my vacation. It however rained and rain, and I had to hide out under the tarp the whole time. So I spent most of the day camping out and reading.

Getting Breakfast Ready. Yes, I have lots of cheap trashy plastic crap that I use for camping. And I use styrofoam bowls and plastic silverware as much as possible, because clean up only involves using some matches and a fire.

Northwestern Catskills

Cearel in Plastic Box. I stored all of my food in these 10 plastic boxes that I got at Walmart for $10. It helped things from getting all smashed up, and made organization much easier.

Highest Elevation Populated Places in NY State

It just poured and poured. It was a real rainy Friday. I ended up driving down to Indian Lake to buy some more ice and food, and to check the internet.

A Rainy Friday

I spent a lot of time listening to radio in the rain and reading books.

Listening to Radio in the Rain

After a while, all the rain started to make the tarp sinks due to the wet. Eventually, even the Christmas lights shorted out.

Tarp Sinks Due to Rain

But by evening, things started to clear out at the Cedar River Flow. It was refreshing after Friday’s long day of rain.

Cedar River Flow Clearing

That was Day 3 at Cedar River Plains. It was wet, but nice to take a quiet break for a while.


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Cedar River Flow, July 21

The Cedar River Flow at Moose River Plains has 10 roadside campsites along with an Assembly-area. It is popular for kayaking, camping, and exploring nearby mountains and trails such as Wakely Mountain. There are also about 20 campsites that you can paddle in along the lake, and over 150 campsites located up in Moose River Plains, a 30-60 minute drive up a rough dirt road from here.

You enter via Cedar River Road.

Cedar River Road

Half of the campsites at Cedar River Flow are located across the Wakley Dam.

Wakley Dam

Wakley Dam Bridge. It looks fairly secure. Heck, people drag their big fifth-wheel RVs across this bridge all the time, so it has to be pretty sturdy.

Wakley Dam Bridge

I camped out at Campsite No 9.

Campsite

At Cedar River Flow is the Entrance to Moose River Plains, where you have to register your vehicle in case you get lost or your car or truck is otherwise found abandoned.

Entrance to Moose River Plains

Sitting back and having a beer at Moose River Plains in the afternoon.

Afternoon

A big ass Campfire. Sigh!

 Campfire

One of the neat things is walking out on Wakely dam at night and looking up at the stars. Here is moonlight on Cedar River Flow.

Moonlight on Cedar River Flow

Here is a map of the Cedar River Flow. The camping area is located on the Northern End by the dam.


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