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January 14, 2019 Morning

Good morning! Happy Coldest Week of the Year 🌬! Today doesn’t disappoint on that front. Next Monday is Martin Luther King Day.Β πŸ–€Β Mostly sunny and 10 degrees in Delmar. There is a north-northwest breeze at 5 mph. πŸƒ. Things will start to thaw out at Wednesday around 9 am. 🌑️ Winter won’t last forever or so I tell myself. I did turn the heat down a few degrees to about 57 or so, but I don’t dare go lower until mid-week when it’s going to be in the mid-30s. Too cold I risk pipes freezing and the heat unable to catch up when I get home in the evening. Hopefully this excessively cold weatherΒ πŸ”Β won’t last all winter, but who knows based on the latest outlook. The west coast is baking again, as we freeze.

Listening to Todd Rundgen, of Woodstock NY as I take the bus downtown on this sunny but cold morning.🎢 Sixty more scheduled session days left, I got my politician suit on in the words of the former Assemblyman Don Miller. πŸ‘”I like some Republicans but he was an asshole on the scale of suburbanite sprawler George Amedork. πŸ‘ΉFortunately he was only one term unlike Amedork. I do like the sun.Β Public transit makes cold mornings like this so easy. 🚌 Big Red hates the cold.

Today will be sunny 🌞, with a high of 29 degrees at 3pm. One degrees below normal. North wind around 5 mph. A year ago, we had mostly sunny in the morning, which became clear by afternoon. The high last year was 16 degrees. The record high of 66 was set in 1932. Nine inches of snow fell back in 1999.❄

The sun will set at 4:46 pm with dusk around 5:17 pm, which is one minute and 10 seconds later than yesterday. πŸŒ‡ At sunset, look for mostly clear skies πŸŒƒ and temperatures around 27 degrees. There will be a north-northwest breeze at 5 mph. Today will have 9 hours and 23 minutes of daytime, an increase of one minute and 37 seconds over yesterday.

Tonight will be partly cloudy 🌀, with a low of 16 degrees at 2am. Two degrees above normal, which is similar to a typical night around February 6th. Maximum wind chill around 17 at 6pm; Northwest wind 3 to 6 mph. In 2018, we had clear in the evening, which became mostly sunny by the early hours of the morning. It got down to 5 degrees. The record low of -20 occurred back in 1957.

It was a nice walk down at Hannacroix Preserve yesterday, πŸƒalthough a bit icy in spots. Fair bit of ice on the falls and it was cold down by the river but I’m hoping I got some good videos out of it. We are in the coldest time of winter but it might start to warm up soon and we are due for some large snow storms as soon as the weekend.❄ I honestly prefer snow on work days because if we get a blizzard on the weekend I’ll be stuck at home versus working in my nice and warm office.

Bought a shit ton of toilet paper. Yesterday I ended spending $90 at Walmart but I got 18 rolls of toilet paper (which was only $14 part of the bill). 🚽 Running low on toilet paper is no fun. I should set for the year but that’s good because when you buy in bulk you save money and less packaging waste to get rid of although I believe you can recycle the plastic bag with other bags you return to the stores. I really put a priority on buy bulk,Β because not only does it save money it reduces packaging,Β and delays how soon I have to make my yearly winter trip to the transfer station when my trash cans fill upβ™».

I am remarkably annoyed they are banning plastic bags. My liberal friends think it’s the best thing since they legalized abortion, but I don’t know.πŸ›Β I guess I don’t have an opinion on the matter but I hope they have free well cost included paper bags as an alternative.πŸ’š It’s a pain to have to remember my life reusable bags and over time they’ve gotten dirty and worn out. It’s not like any of mine ever go to the landfill,πŸ—‘ as I return most of them or they melt and burn just fine up at camp. πŸ”₯

I could live with them getting rid of plastic bags if replaced with free paper, as they tend to be a far greater litter problem then paper bags. Paper rots, plus it comes from a natural resource and is easily recycable with paper. I did a bunch of ants on the cache of bags, I was saving for recycling and reuse, I had over my refrigerator, so I stuck them outside. 🐜 Probably food I spilled, as I often reuse the bags for bringing my lunch to work.I figure the cold will kill them off, and I’ll have toΒ make sure to return them the next time I go to the store.

No plans for trips until at least February. I have plans for staying in town the next two weekends so that brings us until Ground Hog Day weekend, β›Ίand I guess snow camping is a possibility then. We will see. I am expecting quite a bit of snow by then, especially if we get the big snow storm over the Martin Luther King Day Weekend.

I would like to be able to do some more skiing,Β β›· and it would nice to have more snow before winter is over. Granted, we probably have at least two more months of winter before it starts to slack off, and really four months until it gets green up north in the Adirondacks, although early May camping in the Adirondacks can be quite fun before the black flies come out.

I have the adapter for the M2 SSD drive and I am going to try to install it tonight into my laptop,Β πŸ’ΎΒ pulling the existing drive, which I will plug in using my USB adapter. I have downloaded the Xubuntu 18.04 distribution and will burn it onto a flash drive, and us that to do a fresh install of Linux, then copy my files and data over to the drive. Sure I will have to re-download all my programs, although custom compiled software on /usr/local and /opt should be able to just be copied over, as the library versions should remain the same.

As previously noted, next Monday is Martin Luther King Day πŸ–€ when the sun will be setting at 4:55 pm with dusk at 5:25 pm. On that day in 2018, we had cloudy, mild, snow showers and temperatures between 43 and 29 degrees. Typically, the high temperature is 30 degrees. We hit a record high of 61 back in 2006.

 Shadow

Weekend at Bear Springs Mountain, Delaware Wild Forest, Warren Highlands

Based on the forecast for the long weekend, I decided to head down to the Western Catskills rather then Moose River Plains. It certainly was a bit sunnier, drier, and less snowy then it looks like they got up at Moose Plains. I simply did not another Memorial Day Weekend at Moose Plains, sitting in rain and snow showers.

I ended up heading down to the Western Catskills. Didn’t leave home until after 10 AM, because I was putzing around. So be it. I also had to stop at Walmart to buy another blaze orange hat, for hiking, because I lost mine. I knew it would be hunting season down there, and figured better safe then sorry. The previous night, they didn’t have one at Glenmont Walmart, so had to visit the Decided to head out the Warren Anderson Expressway (I-88) down to NY 10, and take that all the way south to Walton.

Fire Tower

Driving down NY 10, as soon as I reached Summit, you could see a dusting of snow on the summits around. Stopped in Stamford, drove up to Mount Utsaythana. There was a dusting of snow there too, in parts it looked like a winter wonderland. Then it was down to Walton, following NY 10 and the East Branch of Delaware River. Drove through Delhi, a small rural college town. I had been through Delhi years ago, meandering around Stamford, but not in years. Then I went down to Walton, climbed an enormous hill in the truck, and was at the Bear Spring Mountain Wildlife Management Area (aka Public Hunting Grounds).

At Bear Spring Mountain WMA there is a state DEC campground known as Bear Spring Mountain Campground. It consists of two parts, a fully developed campground with hot showers that is open during the summer months near Launt Pond, and the Spring Brook area with stud pends and a pit privy, similar to Charles Baker State Forest. Both areas are a $18 a night in summer, but from October to the end of hunting season, the lower area is free, but the water is shut-off down there. The designated campsites there are crunched together, and there is no privacy, so I can’t imagine it’s much fun camping there, especially with the smell of horses on a hot summer’s afternoon.

By the time I got down there, it was fairly early, so decided to explore a bit. Drove up to Corbett, explored the Corbett Suspension Bridge, and an old chimney from the β€œacid factory”, which made an acid from tree bark for smokelesss gunpowder. Decided to head back and explore Bear Spring Mountain WMA a bit more, and drove up West Trout Brook Road, past several hunters. There are some limited views from end of East Trout Brook Road, namely at the summit Bear Spring Mountain. There are better views from NY 206, climbing up from Walton, but with few view points. Also explored Beers Brook Road, which had some limited but nice views into the valley below, and Russ Gray Pond.

Bridge Tower

Bear Spring WMA, being a federally-funded public hunting grounds, does not allow camping. The only camping there is those tiny, smashed together developed campgrounds known as the Bear Spring State Campground, operated by the DEC. I decided it was getting late, and I would camp there tonight, especially because it looked like one of campers had packed up, and the only other person around, was a female bow hunter, on far end of the campground. I wasn’t thrilled, as it meant I would have to keep the music down, but at least the campground was deep in the valley, protected from the wind.

It wasn’t a bad night though. The pit privies were kind of gross, but probably not worst then most of the outhouses in the woods. There was surprisingly a lot of wood in woods near the campground. The truck worked well with keeping the lights on, since switching the truck’s radio back to the starting battery and evenly discharging both batteries. The radio shuts off automatically when the starting battery is starting to get a bit low, and Big Red’s DIC says β€œBattery Low: Start Engine Low”. Previously, with the starting battery at full charge, hooked up to the discharged auxiliary battery, the alternator wouldn’t kick up to full charge, so the auxiliary battery would fail to get fully charged. Now, with the starting battery slightly discharged – but with enough charge to crank the engine, things kept working well all night long. There was a little bit of sleet in the evening, but nothing major.

Russ Grey Pond

The next morning, I got a slow start. It was drizzling, and I kind of slept in. I didn’t have a tarp set up, which didn’t help. I probably didn’t break camp until 10:30 AM..I was thinking of hiking the NYC DEP trail that overlooks the Pepacton Reservoir, but I ended up turning off onto Holiday Brook Road, and deciding to check out Huggins Lake. Hugging Lake was a nice hike back, following an old woods road back there. There is a campsite down by the lake. Apparently on the ridge above Huggins Lake, there is an old growth forest, but I never got back there.

Then it was off to Mary Smith Road. On Campground Road, one of the cut-over roads, I got to a cover bridge, which had a clearance of 6’6”, which is about an inch too low for my pickup truck with the cap and racks on. So I had to turn around, and back track for about 5 miles. That sucked. Stopped and grabed a few pictures. When I got on Mary Smith Road, and back in forest preserve, I was pleasantly surprised to find three roadside campsites on it. I ended up camping at the most used of the sites – as witnessed by vegetation – along the Finger Lakes Trail/Mary Smith Trail/Middle Mountain Trail. It was a pretty nice roadside campsite.

About as soon as I scoped out the campsite, I realized it would be a pretty night up there. Despite the mountains on both sides, the north wind was whipping along the col. But I liked the campsite, and there was plenty of trees to hang a tarp up. I starting setting up camp at 2:30 PM – which was kind of early – but I figured it was too late to hike Mary Smith Hill (which wasn’t true), but it did start to rain/sleet a bit. Got the tarp up, then the lights strung up and flag up. A heavy sleet squall pounded the col, for a while bad enough I hid out in the cab of the truck. Then I went out, built a fire, and spent sometime listening to a podcast and reading a book about the 1964 World Fair in New York.

The new 60-watt equivalent LED bulb I bought worked real well in the cold, which got down below freezing that night.. But with the bulb focused on the book, it was easy reading and plenty bright. In the cold, the 60-watt equivalent LED bulb was actually brighter then the 100-watt florescent bulb I had at camp, even after fully warming up, because the cold wind made it impossible for the florescent tube to get warm enough to fully atomize the mercury in the fixture.

At times the wind picked up, and it was pretty darn cold, to say the least. I end up putting the fire out cold before bed, to reduce the risk of the fire spreading, and because the tarp partially covered the fire pit, I was afraid it could fall into the fire, and possibly set the truck on fire or cause dripping plastic to fall on it. The fire was out cold, and I went to bed around 10:30 PM. No nightmares.

Mary Smith Hill Roadside Campsite 1

After bedding down, the wind started to whip around. It literally was howling, and the tarp was snapping up and down, making quite a bit of noise. Morning came, and it was beautiful blue skies, but very cold. That was when I first saw car actually pass by on Mary Smith Hill Road – despite being a through-road, and not a super remote road at that. Had another slow breakfast, and built a small fire to burn up some camp garbage. Usually I don’t start fires in the morning, but I was chilly, and knowing that it may be a while until I got out camping again, I wanted to have a fire.

Once I finally got going, I hiked up Mary Smith Hill to the overlook. It really was a lot less further then I expected, and ha+d some interesting views to the north. Nothing totally breathtaking, but still an interesting short hike of maybe 20 minutes each way. Then I drove over to Russell Brook Falls, making a wrong turn and ending up going through Livingston Manor and the world famous fly fishing town, Roscoe. My impression of Roscoe, was it was a very a long and pokey 30 MPH zone, but with more stores then one would expect in such a rural, small town. I probably should have stopped, but I was burning daylight.

Finally made it to Morton Hill Road, and passed a Game Warden in a unmarked green suburbanite-style Jeep. The only reason I know that, was I saw him outside of the car talking to somebody in full uniform. Morton Hill Road climbs a lot from Roscoe out to where it hits Russell Brook Road. There are three campsites along Russell Brook Road, although in all of them there is a boulder barrier between the campsite and fire pit. One might still be able to use them for a pickup with a camper on them, I guess.

Russell Brook Falls 2

I hiked back to Russell Brook Falls – a beautiful but relatively unknown set of falls – at least to non-regulars to that part of state. They are less then quarter mile from the Russell Brook Falls parking area. I stopped and grabbed some pictures. Then, it’s easy hike back to back to Trout Pond, following a gated road 9/10th of a mile from the parking area. There is a slight incline on the road, but nothing to make one break a sweat, even a fat out of shape dude like me, who spends too much time sipping cold buds in the woods. The road is a designated route for people with disabilities – somebody very strong with a wheel chair could theoretically get back there, or maybe with a CP-4 disabled with an ATV permit.

Back at Trout Pond, there is a campsite on the easterly end, and the gated road continues to the west end of lake. On the west end of the lake, there are two other campsites, spaced a ΒΌ mile apart, along with two lean-tos. All are designed for those with disabilities. There is also a trout spawning shelter on one of the creeks leading into lake. One of the lean-tos was well equipped – somebody left behind some nice pots and pans, all cleaned up, and a selection of perfectly good adult beverages and soda along the back wall of the lean-to. Talk about paying it forward to the next person who will use that lean-to – most certainly a hunter this time of year.

It’s small game hunting season, heard several small game bullets ring out, while hiking back there. No hunters nearby, as far as I could see, but I did wear plenty of blaze orange. I am sure next week, there will be a lot more hunters back there. Wish them luck. Hiked back to my truck and explored Campbell Mountain Road and Campbell Brook Road, looking for additional roadside campsites, preferably the kind you can back a pickup all the way back to. No such luck. Oh, well.

Trout Pond

Then I drove down NY 30, through the hamlet of Harvard, then East Branch. Took Old Route 17 to Hancock, then poked around the Poconos and the Warren Highlands in Pennsyltucky, before eventually ending up in Susquehanna and Great Bend. The area around Hancock is very mountainous and beautiful. The Warren Highlands were rough, mostly hunting and rural landscape country, with a relatively small amount of farming going on. Lots of open burning going on too – I love Pennsylvania..

I love that wild country, and everything Pennsylvania. Fueled up, picked up certain Pennsylvania products not legal in New York and/or cheaper then New York, then hopped on I-88/Warren Anderson Expressway, and made a bee-line back to Delmar, stopping only momentarily at the rest stop on I-88. That place was creepy as all hell after dark, and not well lit either. I seriously thought of just taking a piss in some farm

I made it back to Delmar around 7 PM. It was a good adventure. Burned through more gasoline, then I had planned, although on the trip back along I-88, I average 19.9 mpg in my Big Red Silverado pickup, so not complaining.

A long-weekend trip in early November to explore the the Western Catskills.

Large NY State Forests Tend to Be Located In Rural Areas

There are many state lands across New York State.

Paddling Cayuta Lake Inlet

The problem is, for many New Yorkers, the largest and most interesting parcels — the Catskill Forest Preserve, the Adirondack Forest Preserve, larger state forests like Brookfield Horse Camp, Brashier Falls, Tug Hill State Forest, Sugar Hill, are all a long drive from where they live.

This map shows the town population versus the location of state forest and forest preserve lands that are popular for hiking, camping, fishing and hunting. I did not include state parks. Note how unpopulated most areas are with large state forests.

Down By Long Pond

To demostrate how dramatic this is, take a look at a map of urbanized or otherwise developed areas of New York State based on Landstat data. Yellows are suburban areas, while reds are urbanized downtowns with few trees or forest — the kind of people you would think would most likely want to spend time in the woods.

Craziness at the Early Vote place

Maybe we don’t want lots of urban folks coming to the state forests. Maybe there remoteness keeps people away. Yet, it shows the large disconnect from large public lands and the population centers across our state.

Deer Season Starts Today in Southern Zone

Notes on the Re-Run for Sunday, November 20th.

— Andy

This morning at the crack of dawn started the sound of big game season across the southern zone of New York. Bang! Bang! Big game season has been under way for about a week in the the Northern Zone, but is finally getting under way down here south of the Adirondacks.

Culturally it is one of the most important times of the year for Rural America. It’s a time of pride for our rural heritage, and a time when people get out in the woods, and observe the natural patterns that make up our world. Most of hunting doesn’t involve shooting, dragging back, or processing the deer, most involves staking it out and waiting for deer to walk out in clear sight, so one get aim and take down the deer. Hunting is more about observing and waiting for deer, then it is about shooting guns.

Buck


(Joesph Davis State Park, Lewsiton, NY)

The gun season for big game (deer and bear) lasts for 3 weeks in late November, with bow season and junior archery running on both ends. Yet, gun season is so successful at reducing the buck population — especially in rural areas — that it’s largely over in just one day, with 55% of the gun season buck permits being filled within two days. Hunters who don’t get a successful take the first day will come back, with diminishing results.

New York State has a deer management problem. Hunting helps out, however many areas are becoming off limits for hunters. Farmers are less likely to allow people access to their land to hunt off it, because of problems with irresponsible individuals leaving gates open and littering. Suburban sprawl means there are increasing areas where hunters are too close to buildings or roads, to legally be able to hunt. Few areas of New York State are designated bow only, but for practical reasons, it’s impossible for people to hunt by gun, which means a much lower deer take.

Home for the weekend


(Five Rivers Education Center, Delmar, NY)

Deer hunting is good for our state and collective conscience. It teaches us where food comes from, it reminds us of our deep bond to nature. Driving around seeing a freshly harvested deer on a person’s car roof or in the bed of a pickup truck, reminds us of our deep connection to world. Seeing a deer being hung from a tree, allowed to drained out or being processed, and ultimatley eaten, is probably the closest that most people will ever come to nature.

Hunting is an important part of our society. Most hunters are very responsible people, who do it out of their passion. Venison tastes awesome. If your heading out hunting or doing other things in the woods be safe. Observe where you are in the woods. Notice where hunters are parked, spot them in the woods, make your presence known. Avoid them, don’t disturb the natural world around them; stay on roads and trails. And wear blaze orange — it could save your life!