Gardening for Butterflies, Hummingbirds and Songbirds, p. 36
20 YEARS
The Region’s Premier Lifestyle Magazine Since 2001
LIFL
May/June 2021
Vibrant Beauty
The art of Kate Timm Page 62
MAY/JUNE 2021 • VOL. 21, NO. 3
FingerLakesMagazine.com
GREAT PRICE! $3.95
DISPLAY THROUGH JUN ‘21
Rockwell Museum Features Vintage Photos, p. 44 • The Age of the Horse, p. 52
Untitled-1 1
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National Geographic Photographer Nathan Benn
All images ©Nathan Benn. Aerial view at dawn, Lake Keuka. May 29, 1975.
Dr. Konstantin Frank, Hammondsport, NY. October 6, 1975.
Alice Freeman at American LaFrance, Elmira, NY. June 18, 1975.
Murphy family reunion, Geneva, NY. May 25, 1975.
SPOTLIGHT EXHIBITION ON VIEW MAY 28 - SEPTEMBER 7, 2021
Smithsonian Affiliate
111 Cedar Street Corning, NY 14830 607–937–5386 @rockwellmuseum Open every day: 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Summer hours: 9 a.m. – 7 p.m. Adult admission costs $11.50. Discounts available for AAA, Military, ages 62+. Students (with ID) and local residents (zip code starting 148-, 149- or 169-) pay $5.50.
KIDS + TEENS FREE 17 + UNDER
Cover2and3.LIFL_MAYJUN2021.indd 2
Beginning in May 1975, Nathan Benn photographed the Finger Lakes over four seasons, focusing his lens on the people, heritage and industry of the region. Each Kodachrome capture is paired with Benn’s personal field notes from his visit.
EXPERIENCE AMERICAN ART WITH SPECIAL EXHIBITIONS FROM THE SHADOWS: The Photography of Chris Walters On view June 11 – December 31, 2021
THE ROCKWELL MUSEUM DOWNTOWN CORNING, NY
AIDS’ DARK TERRAIN: Woodblock Prints of Robin Tichane On view now through January 2022 ANTIGRAVITY: Elaine K. Ng On view now through February 2022
#1
Rockwell Museum, aerial photo by Brian Maloney
PICK
FOR FINGER LAKES DESTINATIONS
LEARN MORE + PLAN YOUR VISIT: ROCKWELLMUSEUM.ORG
4/5/21 2:02 PM
features
20 YEARS
LIFL
Life in the Finger Lakes • Volume 21, Number 3 • May/June 2021
36
Calling All Butterflies and Hummingbirds Three Steps to Turn Your Garden into Their Hangout
44
FLX KODACHROME National Geographic photographer Nathan Benn’s work from 1975 exhibited at the Rockwell Museum in Corning
Cover: Ode to Joy, oil on canvas, 50 x 50 inches. Painting by Kate Timm
52
The Age of the
Horse
The horse’s influence on the Finger Lakes Region M ay/J u n e 2 02 1 ~
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contents
19
6 my own words 7 letters 10 happenings 14 scrapbook 16 then & now 30 around the region
Product Picks
Our Favorite Items and Where to Find Them
- Cayuga, Monroe and Steuben Counties
86 88
advertisers
finger lakes regional map
22 15
Nooks & Crannies Twenty Years of Wandering
Dining Delicious Dishes
Enterprising Creating in the Judgement-Free Zone
17 Music
Geneva Music Festival 2021
2
58
28
Creature Comforts Lost Dogs of the Finger Lakes
55 How-To
Capturing Finger Lakes Beauty With a Camera
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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There’s No Better Time To Move! Your health and well-being remains our top priority. From universal screening to enhanced cleaning protocols and maximized safety precautions, enjoy peace of mind in an extraordinary wellness setting when you join us at Legacy at Fairways. Discover a community with unparalleled amenities and services with a vibrant, carefree lifestyle designed with you and your loved ones in mind.
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contents 61 People in the Know
Savor every season at
Alan Milanette of Timber Frames Inc.
62 Off the Easel Fine Artist Kate Timm
Independent & Enriched Senior Living
67
Offbeat A Home Library for the Ages
72 Visit FerrisHills.com to find out more!
Book Look Stories with a FLX Connection
585.393.0410 Peg Rayburn Drive, Canandaigua 4
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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The HAP campus features Independent Living Apartments and Cottages as well as Assisted Living Apartments at Laurelwood.
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my own words
The Next
Chapter
S
tarting a new chapter in life can be very exciting. The uncertainty of what’s next can also provoke feelings of anxiety and a little trepidation. But the only constant in life is change, and to embrace that concept means that you can always be growing and expanding. I recently purchased a new-to-me home in the Finger Lakes. It’s not very large, but it’s got good bones and, quite frankly, I think it looks great! After doing some cosmetic work inside I was ready to move in. I’m very excited to have a home in one of the best spots in the region. Once upon a time it was my dream to live in the Adirondacks. The first time I visited that region I was amazed at the wilderness that was not very far away. Don’t get me wrong, I still love visiting there and spending time hiking, camping and exploring that region. But after moving to the Finger Lakes in 1993, I have completely fallen in love with the region. It has everything here – metropolitan areas, villages and hamlets; farms and forests; lakes, rivers and streams. And its history, culture and arts in this area is second to none.
One of my goals this year is to create a backyard that’s cozy but low maintenance. It’s not a large area, and I’m excited to create some gardens that attract flying friends such as hummingbirds, butterflies and songbirds. Carol and Derek Doeffinger give us some really good tips on how to create such a garden on page 36. I’m also excited to be in a neighborhood where walking on safe paths and sidewalks will enable me to get outside more often. Plus, I’ll have easy access to country roads for cycling. Outdoor activities really became popular in the last year with a lot of people, and I don’t anticipate that to be changing anytime soon. The sun is out, the birds are chirping, and the temperature is much more comfortable. Here’s to a beautiful spring and early summer!
mark@lifeinthefingerlakes.com
The Finger Lakes Museum inspires appreciation and celebrates the cultures and ecology of the vast Finger Lakes Region Designated Trails
ACA Kayak Instructor Training Course
Interpretive Signs
• Wetlands open to the public with direct access to Keuka Lake. • Enjoy several designated trails maintained by staff and volunteers, a 200-foot boardwalk and interpretive signage.
FINGER LAKES
MUSEUM 6
Finger Lakes Museum 3369 Guyanoga Road Branchport, NY 14418 www.FingerLakesMuseum.org
2021 Program Calendar
May 15: Bird Walk May 15: Volunteer Site Clean-Up May 22, Sept. 11: Open House May 22: The Earth and I – Compost Workshop June 5, June 22, July 23, Aug. 21, Sept. 18: Evening, Full Moon Paddle June 12, June 26, July 3: Kayak Lessons June 17: The Earth and I Lecture – Salamanders and the Land Use History of the Finger Lakes Region June 19, July 17: Community Paddle July 8-10: ACA Kayak Instructor Training Course Aug 7: 2021 Paddle Keuka 5K Oct 2: Fall Foliage Paddle
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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letters
W
W
I
I
e were fortunate enough to get a copy of your magazine from friends of ours who live on Cayuga Lake and who subscribe to the magazine. We enjoyed it very much. We vacation on the lake, as well. My wife’s family has many generations in the Finger Lakes area, so we got our own subscription. We’re surprised we had never seen the magazine before. Keep up the good work. — Gordy Barnes am restarting my subscription to your magazine. Going into my old store preCOVID haunts to buy newsstand copies may not be a good idea at present. As I have an otherwise complete set since your first issue (that I found years later a library sale), this is very important to me! —Judy Braell
hat a pleasant surprise to see the Cayuga Lake Scenic Byway highlighted in the March/April 2021 edition of Life in the Finger Lakes! The Board of Directors of the Cayuga Lake Scenic Byway, Inc. would like to thank Helen Heizyk for her “Spring Road Trip to Cayuga Lake,” sharing some wonderful images from our byway. As the not-for-profit charged with managing the byway, we appreciate the coverage to spread the word about the many places to experience around Cayuga Lake, the largest of the Finger Lakes. Ms. Heizyk touched on a few of the assets, but to see all the different ways to enjoy our area, visit our website cayugalake.com. — Sue Poelvoorde Executive Director, Cayuga Lake Scenic Byway, Inc. just want to thank you for the article “Rabbits to the Recue” in the March/April 2021 edition of Life in the Finger Lakes. Most publications when discussing pets focus only on cats and dogs, and I really appreciate the attention you gave to what wonderful pets rabbits can be. Sadly, a few days after reading the article, my precious Dutch dwarf rabbit, Lucky passed away. I miss him following me around the house, the long walks we used to take on a nearby nature trail (a combination of me carrying him in my arms and him hopping along on a leash) and just cuddling and playing with him. I cherish the nine+ years he was part of our family. Thanks again for encouraging folks to consider rescuing a rabbit for a loving pet. — Rochelle Cohen Lempert
Opening Early June 2021!
The Finger Lakes largest year-round Christmas Store! Offering a huge selection of holiday items as well as gifts and home decor throughout the year.
Evolve for the Holidays
Come spend a day in downtown Lyons! 57 William St., Lyons, NY 14489 Find us on Facebook for current hours and more details.
315-937-8409
Bring this coupon in to redeem for a free gift at our new Lyons Christmas location!
Bring this coupon to redeem for a free gift at our Waterloo Outlets Location!
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Evolve for the Holidays 57 William St, Lyons, NY 14489
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Editorial & Production Editor....................................... Mark Stash ...........mark@lifeinthefingerlakes.com Graphic Artist............Maia VanOrman Associate Editor............... Tina Manzer Assistant Editor...............J. Kevin Fahy Freelance Editor.......Bethany Snyder
Contributors............................. Libby Cook ............................................. Carol Doeffinger ............................................Derek Doeffinger ......................................................... Kirk House ............................................ James P. Hughes ........................................Nancy E. McCarthy ................................................Cynthia McVey ............................................ Rebecca Parshall ....................... Linda Scalise Schamberger ............................................Laurel C. Wemett
Life in the Finger Lakes is published by Fahy-Williams Publishing, Inc. and owned by Eleven Lakes Publishing, Inc. Co-owners: Mark S. Stash; Timothy J. Braden. Copyright© 2021 by Eleven Lakes Publishing, Inc. No part of this publication may be reprinted or otherwise reproduced without written permission from the publisher. TO SUBSCRIBE, RENEW OR CHANGE ADDRESS: write to Life in the Finger Lakes, P.O. Box 1080, Geneva, NY 14456, or call 315-789-0458. Subscription rates: $16 for one year. Canada add $15 per year. Outside North America, add $35 per year. For renewal or change of address, include the address label from your most recent issue of Life in the Finger Lakes. For gift subscriptions, include your own name and address as well as those of gift recipients.
MASSAGE & BODYWORK | FACIALS | WAXING | SKINCARE Rasa Spa offers a holistic approach to wellness for the body and mind.
ITHACA | WATKINS GLEN | AURORA C OM E G ROW WITH US.
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We are hiring at all of our Finger Lakes locations! Learn more at rasaspa.com
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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North Star Art Gallery Editorial Office.........................................................................................................315-789-0458 Director of Advertising............................................................................................Tim Braden ........................................................................................................ tim@lifeinthefingerlakes.com
For Advertising Inquiries - 315-789-2475 Darlene Ryan...................................................................... darlene@lifeinthefingerlakes.com
Marketing Director Amy Colburn.........................................................................................................amy@fwpi.com
For Subscriptions............................................. fingerlakesmagazine.com/subscribe Business Office.......................................................................315-789-0458, 800-344-0559 Business Fax.............................................................................................................. 315-789-4263 Life in the Finger Lakes 171 Reed St. • P.O. Box 1080 • Geneva, NY 14456 FingerLakesMagazine.com Serving the 14 counties of the Finger Lakes Region February Nocturne, Ithaca, NY , oil on linen, 26x30, $2800
A drone photo captures the historic boat houses in Canandaigua. Many of these cottages have been passed down to family members, through generations. – photo by Chris Achtschin
Presenting the Works of
Brian Keeler
Boats and Bridges May - June northstarartgallery.com
743 Snyder Hill Road, Ithaca, NY 14850 • 607-323-7684
All CBC Covid-19 guidelines in place
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Food Touring the Finger Lakes
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f you have a taste for travel, the Finger Lakes Region beckons the most ardent of travelers to become acquainted with the unflawed design and natural beauty of this extraordinary area. As a food and fun hometown guide, Finger Lakes Food Tours | Tours In The Finger Lakes invites readers to “Come See & Eat With Us” as they explore the dynamic ranges of this distinct locale. And with so much to see and do, here’s a quick breakdown of the tours they will be offering in 2021. Stroll through historic Uptown Canandaigua eating … exploring … and enjoying the Chosen Spot. Their Montezuma National Wildlife Tour Adventure affords visitors the opportunity to be led on a guided exploration of a national refuge to observe numerous wildlife in their natural habitat. A Return to Yesteryear takes you to the exact spot in Canandaigua where peace and friendship has been honored since 1794 – between the Six Nations and the United States Government – and continues to this day. The lakefront and walking food tour provides an aweworthy experience for even the most discerning cerevisaphile and oenophiles. Visit flfoodtours.com for more information.
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~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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MAY 811 S. Main St. Canandaigua, NY 14424
ADDITIONAL LOCATION open this season at Port of Rochester Marina
Join now! 585-285-4566
Through June 26...Walking With Nature: American Landscapes from the Collection The exhibition, “Walking with Nature: American Landscapes from the Collection” featuring celebrated Hudson River School artists, is on view in the East Gallery. Gallery Hours: Tuesday – Friday, 10 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturday, noon - 5 p.m. Closed Sunday, Monday and Holidays. Admission: $7 per person, free to those under 18. Admission is always free to museum members. Arnot Art Museum 235 Lake Street, Elmira, NY 14901 arnotartmuseum.org 607-734-3697 May 3...Classics In Spirituality - The Teachings of Black Elk with Jan Carr Virtual event occurs from 11 a.m. - 12 p.m. Hehaka Sapa, known as Black Elk, Oglala Lakota, was a warrior, a medicine man, and a converted Catholic. Who was this spiritual leader, this teacher recognized as a medicine man of the Lakota and yet converted to Catholicism? How do his visions seem to span all faiths? The presenter is Jan Carr, founder and owner of Cobblestone Springs Retreat Center in Dundee. Zoom link: https://us02web.zoom. us/j/81022360562 May 21-23... Ferrari Challenge North America at Watkins Glen International Tickets and camping are on sale at TheGlen.com or (866) 461-RACE for the Hilliard U.S. Vintage Grand Prix. Located within five hours and 300 miles of 25 percent of the US population, Watkins Glen International is the premier road racing facility in North America, four-times voted “Best NASCAR Track” by readers of USA Today. Keep up with The Glen on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. For tickets, camping, and additional information, call or visit the website. theglen.com. 1-866-461-RACE
From Vine To Wine Since 1978, Wagner Vineyards has produced world-class wines from the deep glacial soils on the eastern slopes of Seneca Lake. 9322 STATE ROUTE 414 - LODI, NY 14860 - OPEN DAILY 10AM - 5PM - WAGNERVINEYARDS.COM
Have friends & family who
LOVE FINGER LAKES LIFE?
When you gift a subscription, the recipient receives six beautiful issues delivered directly to their mailbox throughout the year.
(800) 344-0559 FingerLakesMagazine.com M ay/J u n e 2 02 1 ~
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Clean out a little – help out a lot
D
id you know Significant Elements’ unique inventory in Ithaca is donated by community members just like you? Significant Elements is a go-to resource for renovation, restoration and DIY inspiration. Their 3-story warehouse has 10,000 square feet of quality reclaimed building materials. They accept hardware, lighting, furniture, antiques, vintage decor, plumbing, doors and windows, from the early 1800s to today. Tax-deductible donations provide job training for young people, support historic preservation education and advocacy, and help the community live sustainably. For more information visit significantelements.org/donate or call 607-277-3450. You can also send an e-mail to sara@historicithaca.org.
YOUR GENEROS IT Y G IVES US HOPE
Help make
Foodlink’s ongoing response to the pandemic has helped address an unprecedented rise in food insecurity across our region, but it wouldn’t be possible without the generosity of the communities we serve. Please consider a donation to support our mission, so that we can ensure our neighbors have safe, reliable access to healthy foods as we recover from this crisis together.
a difference at FOODLINKNY.ORG
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~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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happenings
May 22...”The Earth and I” Compost Workshop 10 a.m. - 2 p.m. Composting is a wonderful way to enhance your soil, save your food scraps from going in the landfill and make a difference for the environment. But where do you start? Barbara Cummings, Cornell Cooperative Extension Master Gardener, will present information on composting, its benefits, and how to have your own composting at home. Come for the presentation and walk away with things you need to get started on composting. Finger Lakes Museum 3369 Guyanoga Road, Branchport NY 14418 fingerlakesmuseum.org May 30... Bluegrass with Aaron Lipp and the Slacktones 1 p.m. at Ravine’s Winery. Original Rockabilly / Americana Music from Naples, New York. Bringing back the old sound with a new flame. Bluegrass, Country, Rockabilly for your soul and feet. 400 Barracks Road, Geneva NY 14456 genevamusicfestival.com/concert-schedule
JUNE
its relation to salamanders. Participants interested in attending this program can sign up via the Finger Lakes Museum website with discount tickets available for participants who want to attend all four programs in the series. Finger Lakes Museum 3369 Guyanoga Road, Branchport NY 14418 fingerlakesmuseum.org
June 17...”The Earth and I” Lecture Series: Salamanders and Land Use History of the Finger Lakes Region 7 - 8:30 p.m. The final program in “The Earth and I” program series is a Zoom lecture led by Hobart and William Smith professors Dr. Kristen Brubaker and Dr. Bradley Cosentino. Their topic will cover the relationship that we have with our land, discussing the land use history of the Finger Lakes region and
June 19...Canandaigua Antique Show at the Canandaigua Civic Center 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Sponsored by the Genesee Country Antique Dealers Association. Over 65 dealers showcasing textiles, furniture, Americana, folk art, jewelry, pottery and much more. Events at the show: all you can eat pancake breakfast sponsored by the Canandaigua Kiwanis from 7 -10 a.m., Meat The Press Food Truck from 10 a.m. - 4 p.m., wine tasting from 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. sponsored by Arbor Hill Winery, classic car show 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. Canandaigua Civic Center 250 N Bloomfield Rd, Canandaigua, NY 14424 antiquesrochester.com/canadaguia-antique-show
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Rochester • Buffalo • Finger Lakes M ay/J u n e 2 02 1 ~
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scrapbook “Family of Canada geese” – Keith Kappel
“Soaring bald eagle over South Corning” – David Phelps “Mallards at Montezuma” – FingerLakesMagazine.com photo post
“In the midst of the pandemic in 2020, I went to the New Jersey Meadowlands. The sign says it all. I’d rather be in the Finger Lakes.” – FingerLakesMagazine.com photo post
“Look out! Dinosaurs were recently spotted crossing the road at Castel Grisch Winery near Watkins Glen.” – Charles Baldwin
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~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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dining
Delicious Dishes Seafood Chowder
Stonecutters Tavern at Belhurst Creamy chowder of shrimp, crab, white fish and pancetta served in a toasted bread bowl topped with fresh scallions belhurst.com
Nolan’s Pub Burger
Nolans A fresh 8 oz Certified Angus Beef chuck patty, charbroiled to perfection. A timeless classic that never disappoints. nolansonthelake.com
Taste New York!
NY Kitchen Explore 50+ wines from across the state when you visit the Tasting Room at New York Kitchen, available by the flight, glass, or bottle to-go! nykitchen.com
Pat’s Supreme Pizza
Pat’s Pizzeria Our Supreme pizza is spread with our California tomato blend sauce, sprinkled with our premium mozzarella cheese, then loaded with a 7-combo topping making this pizza an excellent combination of fresh and savory. patspizzas.com
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then and now
Gallon of Milk
2001 vs. 2021
2001 - $2.89 2021 - $3.59
Life in the Finger Lakes magazine is 20 years old. Some things have changed since 2001. Let’s take a look!
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, prices for housing were 55.8 percent higher in 2021 versus 2001
Gallon of Gas 2001 - $1.46
Increase in Tourism Cost of Living 2001 Average cost of a new car - $25,850 U.S. Postage Stamp - $.34 Loaf of Bread - $1.82 Dozen Eggs - $.90
Visitor spending increased from $1.8 billion in 2001 to $3.3 billion in 2021, a 83 percent increase that typically was used on accommodations, food and drink, shopping, entertainment, transportation and other items. According to a historical data sheet from the Finger Lakes Tourism Alliance.
Finger Lakes Land Trust Conversation by the Numbers Publicly-accessible nature preserves
Miles of trails on their nature preserves
Total acres protected
16 in 2001 38 in 2021
29.2 in 2001 46.1 in 2021
5,485 in 2001 26,253 in 2021
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music
Ani Kavafian and Geoffrey Herd
Geneva Music Festival 2021 Season
“First Decade Retrospective” Brings Diverse Musical Influences, Formats by Cynthia McVey
T
he 2021 Season of the Geneva Music Festival, “First Decade Retrospective,” showcases the diverse musical influences the festival has celebrated since its inception, including Jazz, Latin, African American and women composers and musicians. The 2021 season features live-streamed and in-person concerts at the Smith Center for Performing Arts, Geneva On The Lake and other venues, all in keeping with CDC safety protocols. This year also sees the return of audience favorites who have taken part in the Festival over the past decade, including Hannah Collins, Eliot Heaton, Jinjoo Cho, Clive Greensmith, Eric Wong, Ettore Causa, Michelle Cann, Ani Kavafian, Kirsten Docter, Esther Park, ATLYS quartet, JP Jofre and La Voz de Tres. “We have been truly fortunate over the course of our first decade to consistently present world-class musicians,” says GMF Director and violinist Geoffrey Herd. “With the
need to move concerts to a virtual format last year, we were able to reach a wider audience base with unforgettable performances and interactive experiences. I’m thrilled the 2021 season will represent the largest variety of music offered in one year, and in formats that will make the concerts safe and accessible to wide audiences.” The season opens on May 20 with the ATLYS Quartet concert in Canandaigua. In 2019, ATLYS took audiences on a journey around the world through their music; this year, ATLYS features a world premiere, the Sonnenberg Suite by Ari Fisher. This massive work, born from ATLYS’ first visit to the Finger Lakes in the late spring of 2019, is dedicated to the spectacular, diverse and eclectic gardens of the Sonnenberg Mansion State Historic Park where the performance will take place. The following weekend, favorite GMF artists Jinjoo Cho (violin), Ettore Causa (viola), Clive Greensmith (cello) and M ay/J u n e 2 02 1 ~
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music
GENEVA MUSIC FESTIVAL IS BACK WITH LIVE CONCERTS!
Come and celebrate our First Decade Retrospective as we bring diverse musical influences to the community once again
others present a concert featuring rarely heard masterpieces by Beethoven as part of a continued celebration of the composer’s 250th birthday. The festival is also proud to continue promoting the work of women composers with the unique and intense Zwilich Septet and Fanny Mendelssohn’s romantic Piano Trio. GMF rings in Memorial Day weekend with performances that explore the long-lasting and interwoven influences of German classicism throughout Europe and America. Performances of works by Beethoven, Florence Price and Dohnanyi feature Eliot Heaton and Herd (violin), Max Geissler (cello), Michelle Cann (piano) and Eric Wong (viola). Then, on Sunday, May 30, the tune will change drastically as Aaron Lipp and the Slacktones join the festival for the first time with
• – Thursday, May 20 –
WHEN THE FLOWERS BLOOM
ATLYS at Sonnenberg Sonnenberg Gardens, Canandaigua NY – Sunday, May 23 –
FORGOTTEN MELODIES
An evening of rarely heard masterpieces Smith Opera House, Geneva NY – Saturday, May 29 –
INTERWOVEN DIALOGUES
Beethoven, Price and Dohnanyi Smith Opera House, Geneva NY – Sunday, May 30 –
AARON LIPP AND THE SLACKTONES Rockabilly and cookin’ country swing Geneva On The Lake, Geneva NY – Friday, June 4 –
POETS, PEACE AND POWER
2021 Grammy© winner baritone Dashon Burton and pianist Michelle Cann Smith Opera House, Geneva NY – Sunday, June 6 –
LA VOZ DE TRES JAZZ
Smith Opera House, Geneva NY – Thursday, June 10 –
HARD TANGO BY JP JOFRE Smith Opera House, Geneva NY – Saturday, June 12 –
THE GRAND CHAMBER MUSIC FINALE Smith Opera House, Geneva NY •
The program is subject to change Visit GenevaMusicFestival.com for the most accurate schedule and venues Tickets to each in-person concert or live-stream – $25 – ages 18 & under are free – All tick ets to be purchased from our website
G E N E VA M U S I C F E S T I VA L . c o m 18
Ettore Causa and friends
bluegrass from the band’s old-time music roots. On Friday, June 4, baritone Dashon Burton returns to the festival with Cann. These renowned artists take audiences on a musical journey featuring the dreamy and sensuous world of Schumann’s song cycle Dichterliebe (A Poet’s Love), soothing lullabies for love-sick hearts and songs that will call us back to this world, waking us up to embrace the possibilities of a new day. Performances continue that weekend with La Vos De Tres and their blend of infectious rhythms and nuanced songwriting traditions of Latin America, original compositions and picks from the Great American Songbook. They are joined on this program by Tom Bergeron on trumpet. On Thursday, June 10, award-winning bandoneon player JP Jofre presents an evening of his “Hard Tango.” The Grand Finale will then take place over the weekend and features Ani Kavafian and Herd (violin), Kirsten Docter (viola), Hannah Collins (cello) and Esther Park (piano). The program opens with a work by Jessie Montgomery, a brilliant young composer who interweaves classical music with elements of vernacular music, improvisation, language, and social justice. The program also includes Rebecca Clarke’s heartfelt Dumka and concludes with Brahms’ riveting Piano Quintet in F-Minor. The program is subject to change. Please visit genevamusicfestival.com for the most accurate schedule and venues. Tickets for adult admission to each in-person concert or live-stream are $25 (ages 18 and under are free).
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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FingerLakes Bell Co.
A bell for every Finger Lake & more. Located at the Windmill Farm & Craft Market, Finger Lakes Unique Corning, NY and online. flxbells.com
Dr. Frank’s Winery
Dr. Konstantin Frank 2020 Rkatsiteli $16.99 Elegant, aromatic, and tropical with apricot, passion fruit, pineapple, and mango with undertones of ginger, white pepper, and grassiness. A great alternative for Sauvignon Blanc drinkers. drfrankwines.com
product picks Wagner Vineyards
Wagner Vineyards Tie-Dye T-Shirt ($19.99): Celebrate the return of sunshine with this vibrant and comfortable Wagner-branded shirt! Sizes run Small through 2XL and are available on our website or in our retail shop. wagnervineyards.com
Ventosa Vineyards
Super-soft sweatshirtmaterial blanket! (now 10% OFF) Cozy, extra-large (54”x84”) sweatshirt blanket – room to share! Heavyweight jersey fabric on one side and cozy fleece on the other. 80% cotton/20% polyester fabric, hemmed edges. $31.50 VentosaVineyards.com
Smith Boys
Sea Ray SPXs available from $48,900! Smith Boys Marina in Rochester. smithboys.com
Fitch Construction ENJOY A YEAR ROUND LAKE VIEW Create a space you will use for time with your family, entertaining, dining or almost anything you can envision. By choosing to add more space and natural light, a new sunroom will extend the style and splendor of your home through any season. For a limited time SAVE UP TO $2,500 *not valid with other offers, expires 6/30/21 Call today for free design consultation at 585-377-3330 FitchConstruction.com
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product picks CabAve Kitchens Office Cabinetry at an affordable price. Get a design that’s not only beautiful, but functional to your lifestyle. Visit our website to learn more. cabave.com
Lamoreaux Winery 2020 Dry Rose – An enchanting pink hue and subtle aromas of lavender and citrus introduce you to an elegant, fruit-forward wine with a bright, refreshing finish. $16.99 lamoreauxwine.com
Pettis Pools
SAFE Reduce Chlorine or Bromine by up to 78%. Easy on eyes, ears and skin. Safe for children. SOFT natural mineral salts! SIMPLE: two compounds. Treat once per week. Provides 3-5 months of quality water! The best solution for natural spa water. Just $149! pettispools.com
Cricket on the Hearth
Cricket on the Hearth, Inc. has wood and gas fire pits to gather safely with family and friends in the great outdoors. Our specialties are fireplace inserts, stoves and the Swing Kingdom play sets which are always on display at 900 Panorama Trail S. Rochester, 14625 cricketonthehearth.com
Hornings Woodworking
Cherry liquor cabinet with wine cooler and granite counter top Horning Woodworking, Ivan Horning Jr 585-526-6100
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~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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product picks
Crown Jewelry
The Seiko 5 Sports Collection. No Batteries. No Gimmicks. A watch that meets every challenge of life. mycrowndowntown.com
Fireplace Fashions
Increase the beauty and efficiency of your fireplace. Stop in and see us today. Fireplace Fashions since 1967. 1936 Hudson Ave, in Irondequoit 585-266-8967 fireplacefashions.com
Zugibe Vineyards
2019 Dry Riesling Beautiful bouquet of citrus blossom and jasmine on the nose, with flavors of apricot, pear and grapefruit. zugibevineyards.com
Cayuga Landscape
Here’s an image of a Lotus Buddha Garden Statue. Price: $262.99 Approx. 20”x15”x28.5” tall. cayugalandscape.com.
Antique Revival
Tiffany & Co. Favrile Art Glass and Bronze Egyptian Revival Libation Glass An antique Egyptian Revival libation cup by Tiffany & Co. offers flared Favrile art glass vessel seated on cast bronze base with repeating design having symbols and stylized figures, stamped on base as photographed, circa 1890 antiquerevival.com
Lazy Acre Alapca
Hi Crafters! Did you know we carry roving and yarn from our very own alpacas? Soft and luxurious, great for knitting, spinning and felting. Not crafty? We always have a variety of hand-needle-felted items, made right here, on hand in the store. Visit our website for store hours and our online catalog. lazyacrealpacas.com
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nooks & crannies
Absorbing the
Finger Lakes Twenty Years of Wandering story and photos by James P. Hughes
L
egendary for his flowery rhetoric, Jell-O museum William Jennings Bryan (1860-1925) is perhaps the most remembered orator of his era. True to form, he portrayed a short visit to the village of Naples and its surrounding countryside as “a spread of poetry written by the Great Author of the universe.” Had Bryan traveled the Finger Lakes Region further, he might well have added to his eloquent description. In 2021, Life in the Finger Lakes is observing its 20th anniversary. With perception, prose and photography, the magazine has highlighted and celebrated all the region has to offer … its natural beauty, its history, its people. It’s a welcoming area that represents many things to many people. Once retirement arrived, spending more time absorbing Finger Lakes country was high on my priority list. Travels from lakeside to hilltop, from country lane to village, from the subtle to the grand have never disappointed. The publishing of
freelance articles and photographs of my wanderings by the magazine has been both gratifying and a privilege. So where to begin? In every season, the vineyards, waterfalls, quaint communities and crystalline lakes are remarkable … so much so that we too often take them for granted. While the natural beauty of the area is anticipated, in fact expected, there is so much more to discover. Writing under the banners of “A Proud Community” and “Nooks and Crannies,” random travels left me with a wealth of material. At every stop, conversations with friendly, helpful folks typically led to insights and surprises … often unforeseen, always enjoyable. Picking favorites is a difficult task … there have been so many. Allow me to ramble a bit with just a few memorable encounters. A Jell-O museum? The classic American dessert’s quirky
Tintype photographer John Coffer
22
~ LifeintheFingerLakes.com
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Sauerkraut and other festival foods
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Two-story outhouse
Che-qua-ga Falls in Montour Falls.
history, along with rare trinkets and early artwork, are celebrated at the Jell-O Gallery Museum in LeRoy. The sweet treat was created there, quite by accident, in 1897 by a local couple dabbling in their kitchen. “There’s Always Room for Jell-O.” John Coffer lives in a remote, rustic cabin called “Camp Tintype” near Dundee, well away from the trappings of modern society. Known as the go-to “master” of the 19th century art of tintype photography, John holds workshops on his craft for students of every stripe from Civil War buffs to hobbyists to college professors. Sauerkraut. That delicious, fermented cabbage has been celebrated at a gala festival in Phelps for more than a half century. The focus is frequently on food at many Finger Lakes fests: apples, strawberries, corn, grapes, tomatoes, maple products, potatoes and garlic among them. Indulge! An outhouse? Yes, but not just any remote, rickety outhouse! Situated in a brick tower at the stately Howe House Museum in Phelps, it is not your typical petty potty or common commode. No! This structure is a rarity, a peculiar privy … it is a twostory outhouse … two story! Ponder the logistics of that for a moment. Jim Greengrass grew up in the Steuben County village of Addison and played five seasons of Major League baseball in the 1950s, with the Phillies and the Reds. During a long and enjoyable phone chat, Jim reminisced about the “wonderful memories” and his “happiest days” growing up in the small Steuben County village. Che-qua-ga Falls. There are so many waterfalls, but the beauty, roar and mist of this 160-foot cascade dominate Main Street in Montour Falls. Che-qua-ga always makes its presence known and is so impressive and unusual that its image is used during opening credits of a popular Hallmark TV series. In 1957, the “sleepy hamlet of Apalachin” unintentionally cemented a place in gangland history when dozens of prominent mobsters gathered at a remote estate to consolidate power within the American Mafia. Foiled by State Police, the “Apalachin Meeting” publicly exposed the extent of organized crime to the nation for the first time. Even a simple tree may be notable. The Scythe Tree near Waterloo and its poignant Civil War era tale is a favorite. Another is the sturdy Robin Hood Oak. It grew from an acorn retrieved from Robin’s legendary Sherwood Forest by a Syracuse University professor in 1926, then planted upon on his campus return.
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This Balm of Gilead tree in Waterloo has grown around three scythes left there by men who have gone off to battle; the first in the Civil War, and two during World War I. Lina Robertson
Invincible spirit? My neighbor, white-haired Lina Robertson, was discussing her former business career and retirement interests, from charity work to antique collecting. Then the sedate lady divulged an unforeseen surprise! As a post-World War I teenager, she had fearlessly “barnstormed” as a wingwalker, parachutist and aviatrix. At fairs and events during the early 1920s, the resolute Lina was colorfully touted as “Daredevil Dolly.” Many, many years ago, two sisters shared a home on Rushville’s Main Street, a house that straddled the Yates/
Ontario county line. To be “fair,” officials determined that the sisters must register to vote in separate counties … and to maintain that voting status must choose bedrooms situated on the “appropriate” side of the county line. Business magnate and philanthropist John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937) is still considered “the richest person in American history.” Yet young John was born on a modest Tioga County farm near Richford. His unstable family’s vagabond existence led them to homes near Moravia and Owego before young “John D.” eventually set out to make his fortune.
Exclusive stores Luxury brands More than 170 specialty shops Athleta L.L. Bean Madewell Soft Surroundings Von Maur
Route 96, Victor www.eastviewmall.com (585) 223-4420 24
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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nooks & crannies
Syracuse’s salt industry
Salt potatoes? In the bygone days of Syracuse’s booming salt industry, a worker’s lunch typically consisted of spuds tossed into the boiling brine, creating what persists to this day as a regional favorite – savory salt potatoes. Additional unique eats to sample for first time area travelers? Try white hots and grape pie. Deftly woven into the Finger Lakes mosaic is the vivid red, white and blue of the American flag. In 1966, Congress declared “Waterloo, New York as the birthplace of Memorial Day,” the cemetery’s initial patriotic celebration was held in 1866 to honor fallen Civil War soldiers. In addition, our Pledge of Allegiance was authored by Francis J. Bellamy (1855-1931), a gentleman born and raised in Livingston County’s Mount Morris.
John D. Rockefeller’s birthplace
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nooks & crannies
Curiosity led me to knock on the door of an odd, angular, Ontario County building. What was it? For owner Cheryl Rozell, it has been home since 1965, but from 1904-1930 was a station for the R. & E. Interurban Railway. After a tour of every corner of the curious residence, Cheryl sent me home with a box of her excellent homemade cookies! Finger Lakes swim? Rejecting the climbing of Mount Kilimanjaro as somewhat prohibitive, I set out with retired friends in need of a challenging “Excellent Adventure.” We chose the task of swimming in each of the 11 Finger Lakes in one day… “swimming” defined simply as “getting wet.” With dexterity, fortitude and untold antics, we accomplished the venture, plunging into Conesus Lake on the west and finishing with Otisco on the east. A memorable
Waterloo’s National Memorial Day Museum
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~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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Excellent adventure! This Ontario County railroad station was turned into a home.
day indeed! The way is clear. Certainly, any Finger Lakes visit must include a sampling of its attractions, from wine tasting to local cuisine to countless photo ops. But like so many pebbles scattered across the ground, fascinating facts, stories and nuggets of interest abound just waiting to be gathered.
Entering its third decade of publication, Life in the Finger Lakes magazine continues to provide a reliable road map for those discoveries. During one of my conversations, a longtime resident characterized the Finger Lakes as an exceptional place, a region of “great variety with front porch friendliness.” I
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enterprising
Creating in the Judgment story and photos by Libby Cook
“I
’m what they call an outsider artist,” Corinne Stern says. “I’m not art-school trained, but I’ve wanted to be an artist since I was a little kid.” The Ithaca-based artist, teacher and entrepreneur has been living out her childhood dream and inspiring her students through collage-making from a home addition-turned-art-space called FLOOF Collage pARTy. Corinne’s friend and local artist Alice Muhlback inspired the brand when she told Corinne she admired her ability to just “floof things up.” For over nine years, Corinne’s studio has become an inviting escape for all artists. The space is packed with opportunities for self-expression. Each wall is adorned with neatly stored supplies like piano keys, fabric swatches, deconstructed designer high heels and anything else in which she finds artistic potential. Handmade signs encouraging creators of their capabilities are scattered around the room, and a stack of hot glue guns await the next project. “I find uses and beauty in all kinds of things,” Corinne says, admiring a computer circuit board transformed into a miniature cityscape. “I love taking things apart. It’s what my sister calls the ‘little scientist’ in us. I take apart everything that breaks in my house, and whatever is salvageable comes to the studio. I guess it’s my imagination, but I can see possibilities.” Much like Corinne’s art training, which includes a painting class she took when she was eight years old and a few recent art courses at Cornell, her path to building FLOOF was quite unconventional. “My husband calls it my checkered career path,” she laughs. Originally from Cincinnati, Ohio, Corinne pursued multiple careers before settling in Ithaca with her husband. She taught deaf preschool students and worked at an advertising agency as a layout artist before attending nursing school when she was 38. Corinne was a nurse for 16 years and simultaneously took up photography as a creative outlet. Eventually, she found working in the medical field to be too emotionally taxing. It
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-Free
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was difficult to witness so much pain and illness every day, so she returned her focus to a more optimistic world in art. Corinne worked as a curatorial typist at the Johnson Museum and assisted a leather crafter in making jewelry. In Ithaca, she taught hearing students for a year before launching her own fashion brand, selling renaissance and wedding hats, as well as kippahs for men and women at the Ithaca Grassroots Festival. For over a decade, she attended the festival and traveled around the country, wholesaling her hats. Today, Corinne has put all her energy and focus into growing and creating with FLOOF. Before the pandemic, Corinne welcomed students of all ages and artistic backgrounds into her studio for FLOOF events, birthday parties and after-school programs. She was delighted to share her space with other artists and wanted to incorporate teaching into the experience. “I wanted to be an art guide,” says Corinne. “I go over the color wheel and I say to my students, this isn’t just art. It’s physics. Say you make a mobile. How are you going to balance the two sides? There’s math in measuring things. There’s geography in picking up a handful of seashells and asking where they came from. It’s history.” During her after-school program visits, Corinne also helps students with life skills. “A lot of the after-school programs that I’ve taught have kids who are in English as Second Language classes,” she says. “I found this is a great way to teach English less formally. The kids teach each other, or they learn how to
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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ask me for help finishing their projects.” Corinne also makes an effort to teach her students about sustainable creation. Almost all FLOOF materials are upcycled. In her newest product, “Art-Maker Paks,” over 80% of supplies are upcycled. “This is one of my ways of giving back and saving the planet,” she says. When her guests began requesting goody bags, Corinne thought about introducing the paks. She’d offer them a bag and a chance to gather supplies from her inventory she’s named “miscellaneous madness.” The paks have kept FLOOF artistry alive throughout the pandemic. Corinne sells the paks through her Etsy account, @FLOOFCollagepARTy. She offers six different size paks, ranging from one ounce to one pound, that can be shipped or picked up at her studio. When Corinne isn’t putting together paks for her customers, she keeps busy donating supplies. She has given paks to the Belle Sherman after-school program, a local synagogue and auctions hosted by non-profits, including Hospice Care and Suicide Prevention. “I think this is important right now because people need something joyful and creative to take their mind off their stress,” she says. “It’s also empowering because you don’t need any talent to do this. I always hate it when people say, ‘I don’t have an artistic bone in my body,’ or ‘I can’t even draw a stick figure’! That’s not what art is about. Art is about expressing yourself any way you want.” Corinne is passionate about breaking down typical artist stereotypes and redefining art to be inclusive toward anyone wanting an outlet. She could limit herself to the typical artist title by drawing or painting, but she finds greater interest in guiding students to use everyday objects to make something abstract and original. “I’m a quick and dirty artist,” Corinne jokes. “In all the projects I’ve made, I don’t strive for perfection. It’s the one place in my life where I’m not critical of myself.” Corinne takes pride in operating a “judgment-free zone” in her studio, which is part of the Inclusive Recreation Resource Center and is wheelchair accessible. “I enjoy playing and I like seeing other people play, especially people with disabilities,” Corinne says. “I’ve had a lot of kids [in the studio] who were on the autism spectrum or had speech problems. For them to have that freedom to find something they feel joyful about and successful at is really important.”
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around the region
Cayuga County
Lake Ontario Fair Haven Beach State Park
Fair Haven
by Libby Cook Hannibal
T
he name Cayuga is a tribute to the Cayuga people, a native tribe of the Iroquois Confederation, who occupied the land until the end of the Revolutionary War. Cayuga County has an area of 864 square miles. With 692 square miles of land and 172 square miles of water, the county has more freshwater coastline than any other county in New York. The city of Auburn was originally founded as a town in 1793 amid a post-Revolutionary War settlement. It later became the county seat in 1805 and was eventually chartered as a city in 1848. Throughout the 1850s, the city was home to abolitionists William H. Seward and Harriet Tubman, who both owned safehouses in Auburn designated to help free fugitive slaves through the Underground Railroad. Cayuga county is bordered by some of the region’s major lakes, including Lake Ontario to the north, Skaneateles Lake and Cross Lake to the east and Cayuga Lake to the west. Owasco Lake is located at the center of the county. Cayuga County is in the western-central part of the state: west of Albany and Syracuse, east of Rochester Finger and is directly north of Ithaca. Lakes
104
Red Creek
34 38
370
Victory Cato
Conquest
34
Howland Island Wildlife Management Area
Jordan Weedsport
90
Cayuga County
5
eles neat Ska
Cayuga
Skaneateles
20
Auburn
20
Melrose Park
e c o L ak
34B
38 Scipio Center
Otisco Lake
La
Owasco
ke
Owas
Union Springs
Austin
38A
Population: 80,026
Frozen Ocean State Forest
Sherwood Aurora
Cayuga County King Ferry
Genoa
34B
41A
Median age: 37 years old
Bear Swamp State Forest
The name Cayuga means “people of the wetlands.”
Sempronius Moravia Fillmore Glen State Park
30
New York
34
Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge
Cayuga Lake
Region
Elbridge
Port Byron
Locke
38
Summer Hill State Forest
90
The Case Research Lab in Auburn invented the first commercially successful sound system for film in 1923. Cayuga county is made up of 23 towns, nine villages, two hamlets, one city and one Census-designated place.
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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Things to Do! Auburn is home to several historical sites including the Harriet Tubman National Historical Park and the Seward House Museum. There, you can tour the historic safehouses along the route of the Underground Railroad. The Cayuga Museum of History and Art is also located in Auburn. There, you can tour the historic Willard-Case mansion, home to the Case Research Lab, and learn about the history of Auburn, Cayuga County and the Finger Lakes Region. Cayuga County has over 65 miles of trails for hiking, biking and horseback riding, including the Erie Canal Recreational Trail in the village of Jordan. Emerson Park in Auburn, Cayuga Lake State Park in Seneca Falls, Long Point State Park, Fair Haven Beach State Park and Glen State Park in Moravia offer a variety of summertime activities around the lakes including camping, boating, bird-watching, fishing, swimming and waterfall chasing. Local wineries, cideries and breweries are located throughout the county. The Cayuga Lake Wine Trail is the longest-running wine trail in America and offers terrific scenic views from wineries and eateries around the lake, year-round. The Lake Ontario Wine Trail tours wineries, cideries, distilleries and local shops, farms, restaurants and bed and breakfasts around the southern edge of Lake Ontario.
Philp$ Community tti$foriea1 �oeiitg Home of the only 2-story attached brick outhouse in America!
66 Main Street, Rte. 96, Phelps, New York OPEN: Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, 10:00 a.m. till 4:00 p.m.
Contact us at 315.548.4940 or histsoc2@gmail.com phelpsnyhistory.com M ay/J u n e 2 02 1 ~
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around the region
Monroe County by Libby Cook
M
onroe County was named after James Monroe, the fifth president of the United States and the president at the time of the county’s establishment. Following the Revolutionary War, New York was organized into counties that were organized and divided again and again over several decades. Monroe County was created from a division of Genesee County and Ontario County in 1821. Monroe has an area of 1,367 square miles, with 657 square miles of land and 710 square miles of water. The city of Rochester was founded in 1788, named the county seat in 1821 and incorporated into a city in 1834. As it grew as a manufacturing center with many flour mills along the Genesee River, Rochester was one of the country’s first “boomtowns” due to its rapid population increase. Today, it is the third-most-populous city in the state, following New York City and Buffalo. Monroe County is connected to Canada by the southern shore of Lake Ontario. The county is located in the northwestern tier of New York state: west of Syracuse and Albany, northwest of Ithaca and northeast of Buffalo.
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Population: 741,770 Median age: 36 years old Rochester is the birthplace of some of the country’s major companies, including Kodak, Xerox and Western Union. Monroe County is made up of 31 hamlets, 20 towns, 10 villages, 10 Censusdesignated areas, and one city.
Finger Lakes Region
260
New York
Hamlin 18
18
272
104
Monroe County
Clarkson
North Greece 18
31
Adams Basin
390
259
386
36
North Gates31
204
Bergen 490
90 19
383 Clifton
252
15
15A Henrietta 253 90
386
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
441
Penfield
East Rochester Fairport Pittsford 490
65
31F
250
31 64
Mendon Ponds Park
Garbutt 251 Rush Industry West Rush
250
65
15A
Scottsville
Belcoda
Caledonia
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Brighton
West Henrietta 36
490
Genesee Valley Park
Genesee 252 Junction
36 Riga
Mumford
32
33A
490
383
390
386
259
286
Rochester
33A
Churchville
Union Hill
Webster
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31 Gates-
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North Chili
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Irondequoit
Greece
Spencerport 19
Lake Ontario West Irondequoit
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Brockport 31A
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Monroe County
Braddock Bay Wildlife Management Area
Hilton
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Fishers Mendon
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90 Victor
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Honeoye Falls
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Museum Day, June 19 ˜ 11 am Food ~ Music ~ Family Activities
Things to Do! Rochester has a wide variety of attractions. The George Eastman House and International Museum of Photography and Film is the world’s oldest museum dedicated to photography. There, you can visit the home of George Eastman, the founder of Kodak, and tour one of the world’s oldest film archives. The Rochester Museum & Science Center is a great option for families. At the RMSC, you can visit the science museum, planetarium and nature center. For sports fans, Rochester is home to several professionallyaffiliated sports teams. Sports enthusiasts can catch a baseball, basketball, soccer, hockey, or lacrosse game at Blue Cross Arena, Frontier Field and Marina Auto Stadium. The Seneca Park Zoo in Rochester is home to over 90 species of animals from all over the world. The zoo is open to visitors year-round. There, you can visit exhibits, including the Genesee Trail and Discovery Center, which is the zoo’s first landscape immersion exhibit and learn about environmental conservation through the zoo’s wide range of educational programs, camps and other experiences.
Peirce’s Gift Shop ~ Main Street Arts Sandy’s Floral Gallery ~ Sulfur Books Checkmates ~ Dork Forest Comics Foster Cottage Museum ~ Parks Warfield’s Restaurant ~ Salons ~ Spa Just South of NYS Thruway, Borders Route 96
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Buy your ticket today cmog.org
Monroe County is home to over 11,000 acres of all-purpose parkland, including Lake Ontario, the Genesee River, the Erie Canal and the Finger Lakes for water activities. Hamlin Beach State Park, located in the town of Hamlin on the shores of Lake Ontario, is open year-round. The park offers hiking, fishing, camping and boating, as well as ice fishing, skating, snowmobiling and cross country skiing in the winter. Irondequoit Bay State Marine Park is also a great getaway for water activities. Located north of Rochester in the town of Irondequoit, the park is open during the summer months for boating and fishing on Irondequoit Bay and Lake Ontario.
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around the region
Steuben County by David DeGolyer
Keuka is only Finger Lake shaped like a Y.
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Corning made the first glass bulbs for Edison.
hen Steuben County was first formed back in 1796, it was comprised of six towns and was larger than it is today, which is somewhat difficult to imagine given that it is currently larger than the state of Rhode Island. You’ll find over 60 communities these days ranging in size from a couple hundred residents to about 11,000 in Corning. At one time, homes, streets and towns were illuminated by the wild flickery flames of candles, torches and lanterns. When Thomas Edison needed special glass containers for his electric incandescent lamps, Corning Flint Glass created them. Steuben has long been a destination of innovation. It was there at the turn of the 20th Century, in tiny Hammondsport, that inventors, plucky aeronauts, and pioneers of flight gathered to take early aviation to new heights. It’s where men like Glenn Curtiss helped make flying a realistic mode of transportation and where women like Blanche Stuart Scott first dared to touch the sky. It was in that same small town that New York’s premiere wine region got its start and where, over a century later, the Vinifera Revolution began, forever changing winemaking in the eastern United States. In Steuben County today, scientists, winemakers and others continue to lead the way.
Hammondsport native Ruth Viola Tice Davis made the first parachute jump from an open cockpit airplane. Pleasant Valley Wine Company was U.S. Bonded Winery No. 1. Glenn Curtiss built the very first “travel trailer.”
Branchport Dansville
Wayland 63
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Finger Lakes Region
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Atlanta
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Prattsburgh
Cohocton
Arkport
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54 Bath
Steuben County
Hornell
Canisteo Adrian
Sugar Hill State Forest
South Bradford State Forest
Beaver Dams
Meads Creek State Forest
Cameron State Forest Campbell
248 Cameron
36 Greenwood State Forest
Steuben County
Lamoka Lake
Bradford Birdseye Hollow 226 State Forest
Savona
Alfred
Wayne Waneta Lake
Hammondsport
Howard
North Hornell
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Keu
Avoca
Fremont
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Canacadea State Forest
Urbana
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21
Lak e
54A Urbana State Forest
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Canaseraga
New York
Pulteney
West Hill State Forest
Cameron Mills State Forest
Cameron Mills
Painted Post Gang Mills
Turkey Ridge State Forest
Greenwood
Rathbone
Jasper
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Erwin Mountain State Forest
Addison
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Woodhull
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McCarthy Hill State Forest
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Corning
Big Flats
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Troupsburg Alice
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Things to Do!
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teuben County’s unique history isn’t just a thing of the past. Visit world-renowned Corning Museum of Glass to see mind-boggling glass art and innovations, then make your own glass keepsake. Explore the Glenn Curtiss Museum to learn about the “fastest man on earth,” then take a seaplane flight off Keuka Lake where seaplanes were first developed over 100 years ago. Stop by the Finger Lakes Boating Museum and learn how steamboats and handcrafted fishing boats made the region a tourist draw since the mid-1800s. Rent a boat, kayak, or paddleboard and get out on a stunning Keuka Lake. Where else can you taste exceptional wines at the winery that revolutionized winemaking for the entire region, enjoy hard cider from the most awarded-farm cidery in the country in 2017, hike along the Finger Lakes Trail, drive a mere 20 minutes and tour a Bison Ranch from the safety of your car or try goat yoga on a homestead just down the road, then 20 short minutes later stroll through the town square voted “best public park” in the country for 2021 before exploring an historic district with over 100 boutiques, antique shops, galleries, and restaurants? And we’re just getting started. Learn more or download the ExploreSteuben app at corningfingerlakes.com
Photo by Stu Gallagher
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Top: Queen Anne’s lace and milkweed are favorites of some butterfly caterpillars. Robin and Gene Benoit’s beautiful garden includes a big patch of bee balm. It creates a brilliant and eye-catching blanket of red that hummingbirds and butterflies can spot from a distance
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s Humminb d r i g A ruby-throated hummingbird sitting on a Mexican sunflower blossom seems right out of a Beatrix Potter tale.
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Butterflies and Humming birds
o you like butterflies and hummingbirds? We do. We like to watch them. And we like to photograph them. That’s why we have spent the past several years trying to attract more of them into our garden. Since we’ve had some success luring butterflies and hummingbirds away from the neighbors’ yards and into ours, I thought I’d pass along some of our best strategies. Does that sound overly competitive? Well, it’s actually one of our strategies. We’re not really poaching these colorful fliers from our neighbors. Indeed, we are not even competing with them. Instead, we’re cooperating with them. Three households at our end of the street share plants and exchange seeds of favorite butterfly and hummingbird flowers. This makes for an extended and more varied habitat that includes perennial gardens, annuals, herbs, a vegetable patch, a pond, a woodpile and woods with several kinds of mature trees. All these features provide extra food sources and shelter for butterflies, caterpillars, hummingbirds, orioles and gold finches. They now have a mini-reserve and can go from garden to garden. But you don’t need cooperative neighbors to increase your population of butterflies and hummingbirds. You just need to provide the right food at the right
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time in the right place. After reading extensively about butterfly life cycles and food preferences, we’ve made several additions (and a few subtractions) to our plant list. And we’ve watched how our improvements performed and adjusted accordingly. Evaluating your changes is critical because every garden differs and may require different approaches. Getting Butterflies to Belly Up to the Bar Forget the pretzels and salted nuts: butterflies, lacking mouth parts for chewing, are drinkers. A pub crawl for monarchs, viceroys, admirals, painted ladies, swallowtails and fritillaries begins with a quick fly-by check of your garden’s menu. Butterflies are near-sighted (anything beyond 10 to 20 feet is a blur), so use large swaths of bright colors to grab their attention. Planting in groups of the same flower (rather than tucking in a single specimen here and there) also gives your fliers loads of blooms to keep sipping from. They linger – and you get more time to enjoy and photograph them. Keep in mind that your goal is to open a quality and reliable restaurant for your guests, not a fried Snickers stand at a carnival. For energy, butterflies crave a wide selection of flowers that are rich in accessible
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A monarch butterfly (left) and a painted lady butterfly
nectar. Constantly tweak your garden so it offers a choice of great tastes all season long. During the high season from May through September, you have an opportunity to attract from almost nearly seventy kinds of butterflies living in the Finger Lakes. Your Reward? Entertainment In exchange for your gardening efforts, your colorful guests will delight and entertain you with their antics. You’ll see pairs of butterflies spiraling skyward in a mad courtship chase. On your knees weeding, you’ll hear an odd sound, a low “thrum” coming from just above your shoulders. Looking up, you’re just inches away from a ruby-throated hummingbird. He hovers, stares, looks you over and sizes you up. Friend or foe? And because bees will certainly crash the nectar party you’re hosting, there will be more than a few kinds stopping by. A favorite of mine, bumblebees, are built like tiny offensive linemen and also behave like them. Clambering around atop a flower, their bulky thighs padded with yellow nectar, they sometimes encounter a rival insect. No problem – they simply head-butt the competition right off the blossom.
By mid-August, a gold finch munches on a cone flower’s seeds.
Choose a Garden Upgrade that Suits You Okay, let’s get down to the business of attracting more butterflies and hummingbirds to your garden. These suggestions are intended to be integrated into your current plantings, to add extra punch to the well-loved butterfly-friendly flowers that you already have. So, keep planting those zinnias, marigolds and cosmos, but try out some of our recommendations and then check out other butterflyfriendly plants at local garden centers. The suggested quantities that follow are just starting points. Don’t hesitate to adjust them based on the size of your garden. Left, top: Mark Holdren’s full-sun stone wall garden excels for butterfly friendliness. It includes Mexican sunflowers, cone flowers, butterfly bushes and, just behind it, a natural area filled with butterfly favorites.
This monarch has just hatched from the chrysalis attached to a common milkweed.
Left: Derek is putting together a dedicated butterfly-hummingbird garden with about half the flower varieties listed in Upgrade 2.
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Our visiting hummingbirds seem to favor cardinal flowers the most.
1 The Basic Upgrade: Fast and Easy with Five Favorites Add these plants (about two hours of labor) and your overlooked garden quickly becomes a destination bistro for butterflies and hummingbirds. 4 Mexican sunflowers (Deer don’t like them – yea! Squirrels do – boo!) 6 purple cone flowers 2 non-invasive butterfly bushes 4 red cardinal flowers 3 bee balms On the subject of butterfly bushes … Plant only sterile butterfly bush varieties, as the species and older hybrids of Buddleia davidii are considered invasive and are actually banned in some states. Several new hybrids are completely safe. One line of these is the “Flutterby” series, developed by Peter Podaras when he was at Cornell University. You’ll find that “purple” cone flowers come in red, orange, yellow, green, white, pink – and purple. Fliers and pollinators love them all, but the purple ones are probably the most vigorous. Mexican sunflowers, big and bushy, dazzle with dozens of blooms. Each is three inches across, vivid reddishorange and seldom free of butterflies and hummingbirds. At their seed stage, they’re also great favorites of goldfinches and chipmunks. While “deadheading” spent blooms lengthens flower production, the acrobatics of the finches and chipmunks more than make up for fewer blooms.
In addition to offering a wealth of irises, Iris Country Garden in Geneva is one of the few local nurseries selling native butterfly plants such as Joe Pye weed, butterfly weed and common milkweed (the main source of food for monarch caterpillars).
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Butterflies and Humming birds These choices do well in all-day, full sun, but cardinal flowers like some shade and moist soil. Hummingbirds and butterflies love them, and so do we. An outstanding hybrid is Lobelia cardinalis, “Queen Victoria,” which has scarlet blossoms and purple leaves. Other varieties (some annual and some perennial, like L. cardinalis) give you a choice of red, orange, pink, purple and blue blooms, but first plant the Queen! Bee balm, which belongs to the genus Monarda, is also known as horsemint, bergamot and Oswego tea. It’s a must have. It’s not fussy. It’s what hummingbirds and butterflies have at the top of their wish lists. The wild form is tall and pinkishlavender; hybrids range in height from a tiny eight inches to over three feet. You can purchase this member of the mint family in lavender, pink, purple, scarlet, deep red, magenta and white.
2 The “Indulge Them Like Grandkids” Upgrade: Something for Everyone For this level, your goal is to provide continuous blooms from late spring through the first frost. Plant the same flowers in Upgrade 1, but double the quantity. Then add these flowers: 4 phlox, 3 pentas, 2 butterfly weeds, and 2 lantanas. Consider putting the pentas and lantanas in pots (hanging or on the ground) and moving them around to reinforce areas not performing well. Are certain flowers proving to be especially popular in your garden? Add more of them. To reduce territorial squabbles, increase the distance between flower groups. If you want to be prepared for early-arriving hummingbirds, you may want to plant columbine, foxglove and even a rhododendron or two. At this point, pause and really plan out your next move. Your goal is to provide your guests with a source or sources of nectar from late spring through the first frost, so read books, take a class, drool over catalog listings and visit friends’ gardens and public gardens. Spy on butterflies.
3 The Airbnb Upgrade: Mi Casa es Su Casa Here your goal is to provide for family needs so they keep them coming back. Consider creating a separate garden dedicated for fliers. To truly accommodate the needs of butterflies and hummingbirds, you need to fine-tune the food plants you provide and then help with their other needs, such as shelter, water, safety and offspring rearing. For this upgrade, you start by planting all the flowers listed in Upgrade 2, then start incorporating the following suggestions.
Add Native Plants For eons, butterflies and hummingbirds have evolved and adapted to native plants and used them to raise their young. Providing some native plants likely delivers some obscure critical nutrients or other health resources that will help them thrive. Native plants like common milkweed and Queen Ann’s lace feed both adults and larvae. Milkweed and butterfly weed are well known as the plants monarchs lay their eggs on because their caterpillars feed on them. Great spangled fritillary caterpillars will only eat the leaves of common blue violets (the wild kind).
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ave you encountered caterpillars among your garden plants and been curious enough to identify them? Want to raise Other native nectar producers for adult butterflies include them? Keep in mind that choosing the right food plants is Joe Pye weed, ironweed, thistles, teasel, red clover, New really important. For example, if you’d like to encourage great England asters and touch-me-nots (jewel weed). spangled fritillary caterpillars, you must provide the little crawlers Provide Water with common blue violets – the wild kind – because that is the Hummingbirds can get by with a bird bath, although they only food they will eat. do enjoy a gentle spray on hot days. But butterflies don’t bathe or After emerging from its chrysalis, an adult fritillary will drink from bird baths. To satisfy a thirsty butterfly, build a puddler. sip from a wide variety of flowers, but you may see that it is This is simply a shallow area with a thick slurry of sand, fresh water partial to bee balm, purple cone flower, milkweeds, butterfly and some flat stones to rest on. Another butterfly amenity – for question marks, red admirals and others – is well-ripened fruit. bush and Joe Pye weed. Nevertheless, when it comes time Here’s a pop quiz. Why do so many male butterflies hang out in to lay her eggs, the female will make a beeline for violet mud puddles? Answer: They are sipping dissolved salts and minerals foilage, just as a female monarch will lay her eggs only on that make their flight muscles stronger. During mating, males pass milkweed plants. these same minerals to their mates – and from the ladies, they’re forwarded on to help ensure the viability of eggs and caterpillars. (Note to self: Add a “puddler” to the garden – and don’t forget to mix in a wee dollop of plain old manure.) Accessorize Our rubythroats were wasting a whole lot of precious energy chasing each other away from favored flowers and the single nectar feeder. I couldn’t move the disputed clump of Crocosmia, but – ignoring Star Trek’s Prime Directive – I did add a second feeder about 50 feet away. For the feeder, mix ¼ cup white granulated sugar with one cup of water; change (and wash) the feeder two or three times a week.
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Butterflies and Humming birds A garden paradise for hummingbirds might include a supply of lichen bits and spider webs. You can gather some of these and then leave a few caches near their nectar feeder. These are a couple of the nesting materials that female rubythroats incorporate into their nests. The lichens help to camouflage the wall of the nest, and spider webs enable the nest to expand as the baby hummingbirds grow. Fine-Tune the Arrangement How you arrange your plants may determine how effective your garden is for building the loyalty of your flying guests. Sunlight is essential for the success of both flowers and fliers. Butterflies flourish only in warm temperatures (reportedly a minimum of 55 degrees F), so they prefer flowers in full sunlight. But they also need places where they feel safe to spread their wings and wait for the sun to warm them up. In bad weather, they need shelter from heavy rains and strong wind; you can help them by planting shrubs or small trees nearby. (Choose these not only for their own attractiveness, but also for
their ability to do double duty as food plants for both summer and winter visitors. Great examples are crabapples, dogwoods and viburnums.) Rather than install bird feeders for orioles and hummingbirds within the garden, you may want to hang fresh oranges, grape jelly and nectar feeders from tree branches, or place them on poles where you can enjoy watching from your windows or deck. Although we’ve never witnessed a hummingbird or any other passerine grab a butterfly to snack on, some experts strongly caution against incorporating both bird feeders and birdbaths into a butterfly garden. And Finally Enjoy your garden. And be patient. It may take days or weeks before your garden blooms start bringing in butterflies. Half the fun is matching wits with the wild things. And if you succeed, your garden will be colorful both on the ground and in the sky.
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Rockwell Museum Presents
FLX KODACHROME: National Geographic Photographer
Nathan Benn by Museum Staff
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Family reunion gathers on porch of Mrs. William Murphy, 13 Cortland Street, Geneva, May 25, 1975
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Top: Reverend Marion Newby of Rochester leads a meeting of spiritualists followers at the Freeville Spiritualist Camp. Freeville, New York, July 29, 1975
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Above: Oak wine casks at Widmer Wine Cellars, Naples, October 7, 1975. Left: Cub Scouts in uniform in Waterloo on Memorial Day, May 26, 1975
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hotography buffs will remember Kodachrome as one of the oldest brands of color film, known for capturing rich colors and complex lighting. While the Eastman Kodak Company in Rochester, ceased production of the film in 2010, it was the favorite of National Geographic explorers and photographers in the first decades of the publication’s transition to color. Beginning in May 1975, Nathan Benn photographed the Finger Lakes over four seasons for National Geographic magazine, focusing his lens on subjects of heritage, stability, industry and the cultural homogeneity of the region in the 1970s. A selection of those photographs will be on view in the spotlight exhibition FLX KODACHROME at The Rockwell Museum in Corning from May 28 – Sept. 7, 2021. “In 2021, all of the exhibitions and programs at The Rockwell stem from the annual theme of Environments Examined. We are exploring the myriad ways artists engage with, connect to or interrupt natural, built and social environments,” says Curator of Collections and Exhibitions Kirsty Buchanan. “Nathan Benn’s work explores the tangible landscape of the Finger Lakes Region while revealing the social climate that existed during the 1970s.” Benn’s upbringing with Jewish parents near Miami, Florida, exposed him to issues of racism, cultural segregation and social justice from an early age as the city was welcoming its first Cuban exile refugees. As a kid, his wanderlust was stoked by days spent at the Florida East Coast railroad station watching snowbirds disembark from streamlined passenger trains. Gifted a camera as a teen, Benn snapped photos for his high school paper before working his way through the University of Miami as a photographer for the Miami News and Palm Beach Post; he began his almost 20-year career with National Geographic as an intern in 1972. He now divides his time between homes in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Brooklyn, New York, with his wife Rebecca Abrams, a fine art photographer. Benn is known for embracing color photography before it was considered a suitable medium for documentary photoreportage. Over a span of two decades, his assignments were equally divided between domestic and overseas projects; 300 of his photographs were published in National Geographic magazine and hundreds more can be found in numerous National Geographic Society publications. His reportage for National Geographic included the Netherlands, the Dead Sea, Prague, South Korea, Scotland, Florida, Vermont, Massachusetts, the Mississippi River, the Finger Lakes, Hasidic Jews, the Jewish diaspora, medicinal herbs, human physiology, Bible lands archaeology in the Middle East, pre-Columbian archaeology in Peru and skyscrapers. Benn is drawn particularly to people in their authentic environment; he rarely poses or manipulates subjects. He recalls that his months in the Finger Lakes were personally gratifying, and he enjoyed the unique landscape and friendliness of the people he encountered. At the same time, he found a challenge in capturing real farmers, glassblowers, house painters and retirees of Western New York. For Benn and many documentary photographers, making meaningful
PLAN YOUR VISIT The Rockwell Museum
111 Cedar Street, Corning, NY 607-937-5386 • Rockwellmuseum.org Fall/Winter Spring Hours Open daily, 9 a.m. – 5 p.m. Closed January 1, Thanksgiving Day, December 24 and 25. Summer Hours (Memorial Day – Labor Day) Open daily, 9 a.m. – 7 p.m. Admission Adult admission costs $11.50. Discounts available for AAA, military, ages 62+. Students and local residents (zip code starting 148-, 149- or 169-) pay only $5.50. Kids and teens (17 and under) are free. Tickets may be purchased in advance at rockwellmuseum.org/admission-tickets. Walk-ins welcome. The Rockwell Museum is a Blue Star Museum, offering free admission to active military and their families, Armed Forces Day through Labor Day.
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Left: Alice Freeman, nicknamed “Rosie the Riveter,” works on assembly line at American LaFrance, makers of fire trucks. Elmira, June 18, 1975
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Below: The steam launch “Phoebe,” a rare wood burning powered boat, is piloted at north end of Skaneateles Lake by Steve Wikstrom. October 15, 1975
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Below, small: Boat houses on Canandaigua Lake, extend into the lake on manmade piers. July 28, 1975
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Dr. Konstantin Frank, owner of Vinifera Vineyards. Hammondsport, October 6, 1975
images from quotidian life can be more formidable than recording exotic subjects. FLX KODACHROME includes sweeping aerial landscapes of the Finger Lakes and surrounding small towns, as well as portraits of assembly line workers, glassblowers, winery pickers, auctioneers, parade spectators, scout troops and racing enthusiasts of the ’70s. Visitors will recognize locations such as the Watkins Glen International, Corning Glass Works (now Corning Incorporated), the Columbian Rope Company, American LaFrance, Widmer Wine Cellars, Bully Hill, Dr. Konstantin Frank Winery, the Mark Twain family farm and the boathouses of Canandaigua Lake. Kate Swanson, interpretation and public engagement educator at The
Rockwell, works to enhance featured exhibitions with engaging, interactive elements. Nathan Benn’s photography captures a moment in time in the Finger Lakes of intertwining stories. As part of the exhibition, visitors will have the opportunity to contribute their own written stories or memories that are sparked as they view the photographs, Swanson explains. “Photography is often how we make sense of the identity of a region, whether that’s through treasured vacation photos or images of familiar locales,” she says. “We hope to elicit positive memories from visitors while also pushing folks to consider the complexity of nostalgia and what we remember through rose-colored glasses.” Meaghan Frank, vice president of Dr. Konstantin Frank Winery, was pleased
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FLX KODACHROME: Nathan Benn Left: Spectators departing Watkins Glen racetrack area at dusk on the day before the Grand Prix. Watkins Glen, October 4, 1975. Below: Elmer Blair holds a 10. 41-pound prize winning lake trout at a fishing tournament on Seneca Lake. Geneva, May 25, 1975 Bottom: Spectators watch competitive teams of firemen in games at the Northern Central Convention of Volunteer Firefighters. Farmington, June 14, 1975
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See FLX KODACHROME this summer at The Rockwell starting May 28. Learn more and plan your visit at rockwellmuseum.org.
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to preview a candid portrait of her late great-grandfather in the vineyard. She notes that the grape in the photo is most likely Pinot Gris, noted for its tight cluster and deep pink color, almost ready to harvest. “This photo embodies Konstantin’s pride in his life’s work of vineyard research and experimentation,” she says. “He was the first to successfully plant Pinot Gris in America during his first vintage in 1962. His pride is evident in this photo, showing off the fruits of his labor.” Max Erlacher, a master engraver who worked with Steuben Glass in the ’60s and ’70s, was moved when he saw a capture of fragile Steuben glass contrasted with the makers’ rough hands. “It was such an exciting time,” he says. “I worked with six highly skilled engravers, mostly working on special, limited edition pieces. I remember the Madonna and Child piece so well because of the gentle figures and elegant flow and drapery of the garments. It was a pleasure to go to work each day and watch the magic of the engraving unfold.” FLX KODACHROME will be complemented by contemporary photography of the Finger Lakes Region in the special exhibition, From the Shadows: The Photography of Chris Walters, also on view at The Rockwell this summer (on view June 11 – Dec. 31, 2021). The theme of Environments Examined is expanded through AIDS’ Dark Terrain: Woodblock Prints of Robin Tichane (on view now through January 2022), as well as a unique ANTIGRAVITY installation by Elaine K. Ng (on view now through February 2022). A proud Smithsonian Affiliate, The Rockwell Museum’s permanent galleries represent a visual narrative of the everevolving American experience. The museum aims to provoke curiosity, ignite imagination, challenge perspectives and foster conversation with visitors through the works of American artists. Families will enjoy engaging gallery activities and the KIDS ROCKWELL Art Lab, located just around the corner.
DOWNTOWN
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The
Age of the
Horse
by Kirk House
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ven today, we brag about how much horsepower we have. Once upon a time, America moved by horse (and mule) (OK, and oxen, too). When the Erie Canal revolutionized transportation in 1825, it was horses and mules that pulled the boats along. Besides providing transportation, horses performed heavy labor. I asked an elderly friend about that life; he’d started his farming career behind a horse near Ithaca. “What most people don’t realize,” he said, “is that you can’t work a horse in the field all day, then
hitch it up and drive it to town. That horse needs to rest.” It made sense once I thought about it. You have a tractor for field work and a car for road use. You need one of each. Finger Lakes folks owned well over 100,000 horses at the time of the Civil War and into the 20th century. Aviation giant Glenn Curtiss famously started out in a Hammondsport bike shop, but from the barn in the back he sold harnesses and horse blankets, and that’s where he spent most of his advertising money.
A huge new harness factory was built in Bath in 1914. But with America helping feed France and Britain as well as itself, World War I spawned a roaring demand for foodstuffs, even as millions of young hands were yanked off the farms and shoved into uniforms. The new farm bureaus quickly set up tractor seminars, and internal combustion, already starting to dominate the roads, moved into the fields as well. Horses were becoming symbols of a quaint and faraway past. Steuben County Historical Society
Now and then, it’s been known to snow in the Finger Lakes. In days gone by, the goal was to pack the snow and keep it on the roads for as long as possible, rather than clearing it off. Horse-drawn sleighs glided almost silently atop the hard-packed surface.
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~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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Heritage Village of the Southern Finger Lakes
4/5/21 1:52 PM
Clockwise: The daisies are blooming in Erwin, but five men and eight horses (not to mention two boys) have no time to stop and smell them. Are they working the farm, or are they about to grade the highway? Until the early 1900s, road work was accomplished largely by a labor tax, and the rural town of Urbana had 71 highway superintendents – no doubt producing wild variations in the quality of the roads. Erwin-Painted Post Museum
Harrowing is hard work for man and horse alike, but this matched team of large animals seems to be managing. Some horses knew the job as well as their handlers did. “Vineyard horses” discing or furrowing on the hillsides learned to stop instantly when they felt an obstruction, lest they tear out the vines. Steuben County Historian Horse-powered life required a vast infrastructure of blacksmiths, feed stores, farriers, livery stables, harness-makers, “horse doctors” and veterinarians. It seems romantic now, but blacksmithing meant heavy lifting, hard labor, dangerous fires and large, cranky animals. Steuben County Historical Society
We don’t see very many photos of people riding horses – we suppose that in most of the Finger Lakes they were work animals, and riding probably wasn’t a skill that many people needed to cultivate. This welldressed gentleman has a well-kept mount, so he’s presumably a person of some prosperity; the horse may be his equivalent of a sportscar. He’s on East Market Street in Corning, crossing Cedar headed east. The building on the corner with the angled doorway now houses an AT&T store. Heritage Village of the Southern Finger Lakes
Left: A horse is one of the family, and naturally you want to make it feel at home. Dort Drake welcomes a friend onto the porch of their summer place on Keuka Lake, at Drake’s Point in Pulteney. We suspect that this scene would not have been repeated back at home in Corning. Heritage Village of the Southern Finger Lakes
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Above, right: Many horses on regular delivery routes could walk them unguided, freeing their driver to run back and forth from vehicle to doorsteps. Back in the 1930s, “Bert” made deliveries for Shults Dairy in Avoca. At the end of each day’s run he stepped up onto the curb at Prices’ Ice Cream Parlor and crowned his labors with a candy bar. Steuben County Historical Society Above: Last stage from Troupsburg! It’s 1907, and the final run for Knoxville, Pennsylvania, is about to embark. A stage ran between Prattsburgh and Hammondsport as late as World War I. Steuben County Historical Society
Left, top to bottom: The graves of World War I soldiers are often marked with such ranks as “Teamster” and “Muleteer.” The U.S. Cavalry mounted its last charge in the Philippines in 1942, and the U.S. Army used mules in the mountains of Korea. By the 1920s, though, it was clear that the age of the military horse was rapidly drawing to a close. Even so, Colonel J.F.C. Tillison, commandant of the V. A. Center in Bath, clearly thought highly of his mount. And it seems to have been mutual. Steuben County Historian We like the juxtaposition in this Hammondsport photo ... a horsedrawn dray hauling Curtiss motorcycles to be shipped out on the steam-driven train. Glenn H. Curtiss Museum Despite all the new technology readily available, up into the 1960s, Frank Pierce worked his farm in Coopers Plains largely as he had when he was young – and just as his family had worked that same farm since the 1790s. Steuben County Historical Society And the more things change, the more they stay the same. As the 21st century approached, Amish and Old-Order Mennonites began to flow into the Finger Lakes ... turning the calendar back and once again making the Lakes Country the home of the working horse. Steuben County Historical Society Horse
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e rt L ~~ LF ii fnegi n ha ek F ei ns gMe ar gL aa zk iens e. c. co omm
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how-to
Capturing
Finger Lakes Beauty with a Camera
story and photos by Linda Scalise Schamberger
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atural beauty is in abundance in the Finger Lakes Region. Taking striking photographs of that beauty takes a bit of technical know-how, some familiarity with the landscape and an affinity for exploration. From the breathtaking curve of the Milky Way to the roar of a waterfall in the rainy season, stunning views are everywhere – just waiting to be captured. Get your camera ready and follow along with these tips.
A long exposure and tripod are necessary to soften a waterfall. Try 1-2 seconds so you don’t blow out the texture of the falls. For this image, I used a neutral density filter to darken the light coming in for that longer exposure during the day, which is not possible otherwise. Use the lowest ISO setting possible, along with f/11 or higher.
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how-to
Above: Shooting the Milky Way requires some prep work, as you need to know the best time of year and the exact time it rises – it changes nightly – to capture the Galactic Center. I use an app called SkySafari to get this data. I shoot in portrait (vertical layout) to gain the full aspect of the Milky Way along with a nice foreground. Your camera must be on a tripod, as a long exposure that brings in a lot of light is needed. Shooting a 20-second exposure is best here; anything longer will capture a bit of movement in the stars from earth’s rotation and result in a more blurry look. You want the stars to be sharp and crisp. Above, right: Consider shooting autumn foliage on a cloudy day, as sometimes the harsh light from the sun can drown out the beautiful colors and result in too much contrast. I shoot with a telephoto lens to capture both the ski lift wires and the vibrant colors in the distance on the mountains. It’s best to underexpose this capture a bit so you don’t blow out the vibrant colors of the leaves. A typical exposure setting for this photo would be f/11, 1/250 shutter speed (SS), ISO 250
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A wide-angle lens is almost a must to capture a full rainbow, unless you blend two images together as many photographers do. Under exposure is best here – and remember to work quickly, as rainbows fade so fast. My lens choice here was a 15-30mm wide angle and shooting wide at 15mm. White balance can be set to auto.
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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A telephoto lens was used to capture this more close-up look and bring in the dynamics of the falls at Letchworth State Park. If you want to soften the waterfall, use a tripod for a several-second exposure. A neutral density filter was used for this long exposure during the day.
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creature comforts
Lost Dogs of the Finger Lakes
Posting Pups Gone Missing
by Nancy E. McCarthy
It’s an unimaginable nightmare if your dog takes off and vanishes.
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euniting lost dogs with owners is the mission of Lost Dogs of the Finger Lakes, a Tompkins County-based volunteer group launched in 2013. LDOTFL has attracted over 36,000 dog lovers to their Facebook page and last year posted 700 photos of lost or found dogs. With such a large base of followers, information is quickly shared. “Viral” posts alert residents and engage communities resulting in countless happy endings. “Many dogs, upon reunion with their owners, will cry out over and over in a way that I can only describe as the sound of pure joy. It brings tears to my eyes every time as there is no sound as beautiful,” says Charlene Mottler who assumed the role of Lost Dogs’ volunteer director when founder Lisa Freelove moved out of state last
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year. The current Lost Dogs team also includes assistant director Jacque Harrington and five other volunteers. Reinventing the wheel Using Facebook to locate lost pets isn’t a new idea but what motivated Freelove to start her own page was the absence of crucial details from many lost and found dog posts. Though well-intentioned, some lacked photos or pet descriptions, town of origin or owner contact information. It was often unclear how to report a dog sighting or connect a picked up pup with its owner. And something else was missing besides the dog— how animal shelters and dog control officers (DCOs) interact in lost dog situations which vary in different towns or counties. So Freelove, along with Charlene
Mottler and Karen Wadsworth, developed an improved template starting with concise posts including all pertinent details plus current photo. Behind the scenes, they began connecting anxious owners with the right resources in their locality. LDOTFL became one of those resources when their mission expanded to include involvement in extreme cases of recovering fearful dogs on the run. These scenarios require understanding lost dog behavior, sharing techniques with owners on how to safely lure a panicked pup back home and coordinating with local agencies such as shelters or DCOs to humanely trap them. One primary function of a DCO is responding to stray/lost dog sightings, so it was shocking to Mottler that many owners didn’t even know
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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Volunteer director Charlene Mottler with her beloved dog Joey, who passed away in 2019.
their town had a DCO. To address this critical gap, LDOTFL compiled a comprehensive DCO and shelter contact list from cities to hamlets in the 10 counties they cover—Mottler calculates nearly 10,000 square miles. Search and rescue Strategic trapping became a passion for Mottler who leads LDOTFL’s volunteer search and rescue team. “My first case was staking out a dumpster with Lisa at Taco Bell in Ithaca in the middle of the night; waiting for an elusive dog to appear,” says Mottler. “From that point, I was hooked.” After much research and independent study, she began taking trapping and rescue courses. Most missing dogs don’t require herculean efforts to reunite them with their owners. Typically the more difficult cases revolve around dogs adopted into loving homes coming from heartbreaking situations: animal hoarders, puppy mills, chained or caged dogs or outright physical abuse. “One of our hardest cases by far was Wren who lived her entire two years of life inside a crate,” says Mottler. “She came from a hoarding situation and escaped within two weeks of arriving at her new home.” Wren was on the run in deep woods near her Brooktondale home in Tompkins County for 47 days. She was finally caught by LDOTFL with support from her owners, multiple animal agencies, community involvement and a customized trap built for the crateaverse pup.
If a runaway dog is sighted, trapping is a useful rescue tool. Scent trails of smeared food start from the sighting area and lead toward a food station placed in a safe location. A trail camera monitors the station. Once the dog finds the station and an eating pattern is established, a humane trap is transported to the site. Food is left outside and inside the trap but not set. Desensitizing the pup to the trap’s presence is especially important for skittish canines that fear confinement. Once the camera captures the dog entering the trap to eat, it is later set with a trigger plate or motion sensor. Team Tara In January 2020, Pastor Garrett Plitt adopted Tara from the Finger Lakes SPCA (FLSPCA) in Bath, Steuben County. Tara, a Lab mix, was part of an animal cruelty case. She was Plitt’s first dog and his constant companion. About six months after adoption, something spooked Tara during a walk and she broke free with her leash trailing behind her. Tara was missing for 10 days with sightings back and forth across New York and Pennsylvania state lines including her own backyard in Lindley, New York. Plitt was devastated. While Googling lost dog pages, he found and contacted LDOTFL. Mottler immediately set in motion the time-tested techniques to lure Tara back home. Her SOS text to Vicki Mosgrove, executive
Right: In June 2020, Juno, a farm dog not accustomed to indoor living, escaped for three days in South Dansville. Her new owner Meliea DeStefano lured Juno to safety with coaching from LDOTFL.
Where’s My Dog? “By far, the top two causes for dogs to become separated from their humans is being let outside without supervision or not leashed with properly fitting collars or harnesses,” says Mottler. Noises, like gunshots or fireworks, can also send a pup into a panic. Newly adopted dogs rescued from a rough life bolt through doors, jump over or dig under fences. Seniors get confused and wander away. The list goes on! Here are tips from LDOTFL to help you find your missing furry friend. • Check your yard, street and nearest yards. • Call your local DCO and animal shelter to report your lost pup. • Go door-to-door to alert your neighbors. • Contact Lost Dogs of the Finger Lakes. • Share LDOTFL’s post on your own Facebook page and community pages. • Hang scent items, such as pillowcase or socks, and smear pungent food around your property’s perimeter. • Post flyers with photo and contact information within a mile radius of your house. Expand the radius if your dog remains missing. • If your pet is chipped, make sure its profile is current. Notify the microchip company. • Dogs are drawn to farms. Visit nearby farmers to alert them.
Left: Wren was safely trapped after 47 days on the run.
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BELHURST Garrett Plitt and his dog Tara
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director of FLSPCA, included a request for a trap. Then Mottler coached Plitt on how to lay scent trails to lead Tara to the backyard. FLSPCA coordinated pick-up of traps loaned by Elmira Animal Control and Shelter and Hornell Area Humane Society. This intensive effort required close collaboration and communication between Plitt, volunteers and agencies. When the trail cam captured Tara's nervous behavior around the trap, it was determined that a much larger size was needed. FLSPCA purchased an 8’ x 8’ poultry pen and added a customized door and trigger mechanism. Plitt could also monitor the trap from a window in his home. “I remember the relief in Garrett's voice when he called that she was in the custom trap,” says Mosgrove. Mottler received an exuberant text: “WE GOT HER!” Then Mosgrove, along with FLSPCA volunteer Sue Arthur, drove over to help Plitt bring Tara safely into the house. “That week-and-a-half felt like a year. When I got her back it felt like a heavy weight was lifted from my shoulders,” says Plitt. Tara is doing great now: friendly, less fearful and fully recovered from her scary flight. But Plitt always walks his best friend with a firm grip on her leash. “I’m not taking any risks,” he says. As for Mottler? She was thrilled but ready for the next case. Mottler has enough stories for a book—which she intends to write someday. Find Lost Dogs of the Finger Lakes on Facebook.
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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people in the know
Alan Milanette Timber Frames Inc
L
ocated near Canandaigua, Timber Frames, Inc. uses a method of construction sometimes called “post and beam” for each of the individual timber frame homes they build. Their craftsmen cut and secure their framing timber one by one, by interlocking mortise and tenon joints, pegged with oak trunnels.
What is one new project that you’re working on that especially excites you? This year’s outdoor patio addition to the Billboro Winery is a small piece of the exciting future for the Finger Lakes food and beverage industry.
When did Timber Frames Inc. start? What is it known for? Alan: In 1977 my wife and I erected our first Timber Frame home and fell in love with the concept. By 1980 we were exclusively doing timber framing. Each structure is made up of joinery hand cut by skilled craftsman in our local shop in South Bristol. Timber Frames is known for its innovative and one-of-a-kind designs uniquely crafted for the Finger Lakes geography. We are also known for building customer relationships that have lasted a lifetime.
What part of the Finger Lakes do you like the most? The reason we love all of the Finger Lakes is because it has it all. My wife and I are avid boaters, hikers, music lovers, cross country skiers, and epicureans. What is one of your most defining moments in life? In 1976 my wife and I took a road trip around the United States to find a place to call home. After a 12-week tour, we made our way back to the Finger Lakes and literally bought the house next door where we started our family and Timber Frames, Inc.
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off the easel
Paintings
Larger than Life
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~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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Fine Artist Kate Timm by Nancy E. McCarthy
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andscape and still life are distinct genres and rarely are these two subjects combined in one painting. Fine artist Kate Timm’s work is among those rare exceptions. Her vibrant paintings depict charming tabletop arrangements of colorful objects as foreground with a window view of a natural landscape as background. The relationship between the two is seamless. The realistic images beckon us to the table to pluck a piece of candy from a pretty dish or sniff a fragrant floral arrangement while taking in the breathtaking outdoor scenery beyond. Timm’s works are very large. “It allows the viewer to be a part of the space,” she explains. An average sized oil painting is 50 x 50 inches. The allure of landscape The outdoors plays an important role in her artwork and her life. Timm, one of six siblings, enjoyed exploring the woods and fields with her brothers near their childhood home in Skaneateles. From an early age she developed a love of the local landscape, of birding and gardening. “To this day, I garden and can tomatoes, pickles, hot peppers, and assorted fruits, jams and jellies,” she says. These homemade canned goods were the subjects of her first still life paintings. Today the landscape represented in her paintings is exclusively the 124 acre property surrounding the farm in Sterling where she lives with her husband Al Bremmer. From
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Autumn Reflections, oil on canvas, 62” x 42”, Juror’s Citation Award, 83rd Annual National Juried Art Exhibition, Cooperstown Art Association, 2018.
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Left: 8 Glasses, 2 Roosters, oil on canvas, 62” x 42.”
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the large 1,600 square foot studio she shares with Bremmer, an abstract painter, she captures all seasons: the stark winter whites and dull browns, the burst of new growth in spring, summer’s rich pops of color and a riot of deep autumn hues. Timm has amassed a variety of items for her still life compositions such as bird nests and cages, fish aquariums and fabrics. She sources natural materials from her own vegetable and flower gardens. Brightly colored candies, like jellybeans and gumdrops, add a touch of whimsy to some arrangements. Timm collects glassware, too, with a fondness for vintage Murano, Depression and Anchor Hocking. The majority of objects come from antique shops and yard sales or are donated by family and friends. “Even though vintage and antique materials are used, the paintings are meant to be contemporary and current in nature,” says Timm. Her collections are curated and stored on shelving her husband built. Capturing the natural light flowing in, around and through the selected objects is the unifying force of depicting indoors and outdoors in a single painting. Every element of the painting, including Timm’s use of light, is equally important. Psychology and art “There’s a motivation, a need to produce art,” says Timm who delights in the process and the result. “If I am out of the studio for too long, I get a little crazy.” She paints daily since her 2014 retirement from her 27 years as an art media specialist at SUNY Oswego. SUNY Oswego was impactful in her personal and professional life. It was where Timm attained two Bachelor’s of Art degrees – one in psychology and another in art, followed by a Master’s of Art in 1976. Top left: October, oil on canvas, 62”x52” Bottom left: Spring Flowers Jellybeans, oil on canvas. 52” x 52”
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~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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Kate Timm in her studio
The Artist’s Process A painting begins with the selection and placement of still life objects to complement the landscape view. For instance, an autumn landscape might include seasonal flowers and vegetables. Items are adjusted until a composition evolves. Similar colors unify, like red gladioli and red apples, while pairing an ornate green candy dish with simple red glassware provides contrast. Contemporary relatable items, like comic books and birds, provide some whimsy. Timm photographs the arrangement numerous times to finally select a composition that will be successful as a painting. The image is then projected onto the canvas and the outline of the objects is drawn. It’s a time-saving device to eliminate the freehand drawing process. Painting the most perishable items first, she refers to the actual still life as well as photographs for visual input. Professional oil paints, odorless thinner and stand oil plus a variety of sable and synthetic brushes are used. Timm builds, stretches and tripleprimes her canvases. An average-size oil painting of 50” x 50” requires 3-4 months to complete. She also paints with watercolor on paper. The images are generally as complex but the paintings are smaller and require 1-2 months for completion.
Though her initial career path was clinical psychology, after taking some art electives her trajectory changed dramatically. During college, Timm was a realist painter with landscape and street scenes as preferred subjects. She was influenced by the turn of the 20th century Ashcan School painters (a group of artists in New York City inspired by painter Robert Henri and known for gritty urban scenes, a dark palette and gestural brushwork). As an undergrad, she learned about the unusual artwork of contemporary artists Janet Fish and Jane Freilicher who combined still life with landscape. Though it may have planted a seed, Timm didn’t consider intertwining these genres for her own work until years later. Timm met her future husband at SUNY Oswego while in graduate school. Bremmer, now a retired Professor Emeritus, was an art professor at the college for 35 years. While both were employed there, the couple made many friends; some of whom became collectors of their work. Their friends Sara Varhus and her husband David Hill, retired English professors, own four Timm paintings. Their favorite is Haying Time. “We love that the painting prompts questions,” says Varhus. In the landscape, freshly
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off the easel
Autumn Mix, oil on canvas, 52”x52”
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cut hay lies in rows and the trees are lush green. “The still life seems to echo the theme of a bountiful harvest, but in the midst is an animal skull, and if you look closely, there are little spots of decay on some of the vegetables,” Varhus explains. “And all of this is arranged on a fabric printed with the words to ‘The Yellow Submarine.’” Dr. Stephen Weber, a self-described art addict and retired president of SUNY Oswego, purchased Timm’s Pescevino and Tamaracks. The 42” x 88” oil painting was part of a solo exhibit at the college. “It is a beautiful, well-executed painting that perfectly captures the spirit and atmosphere of that lovely place: the gray autumn sky, the gently rolling hills, the remains of recently-harvested corn,” says Weber. “Kate’s talent for color, perspective, and composition are extraordinary and quite distinctive.” In 1980, Timm and Bremmer moved to their farm in Sterling, an area they loved. Relaxing into a more rural lifestyle, she gradually began painting the views she enjoyed from home instead of cityscapes. With the addition of vibrant still life materials, her intent was to capture the beauty and unique quality of ordinary objects, set with a background of the Upstate New York landscape. The format has worked beautifully for the artist for nearly four decades. Timm has exhibited widely in solo and group shows in distinguished venues such as the Memorial Art Gallery in Rochester, Everson Museum of Art in Syracuse and Schweinfurth Art Center in Auburn, garnering many awards along the way. She is represented exclusively by Oxford Gallery in Rochester and will be part of their upcoming “In a Different Light” exhibition running from October 16 through November 26. No doubt Timm’s mastery of light in her artwork will shine brightly. Visit oxfordgallery.com to view or purchase Kate Timm’s paintings.
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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offbeat
A
Home Library for the
Ages story and photos by Rebecca Parshall
A young patron enjoys the freedom of sitting to peruse picture books on a sunny afternoon.
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offbeat
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or many years, our family in Middlesex has been collecting books. All six of our children love reading, making us frequent visitors to libraries, book stores and used book sales. Over the past 12 years of homeschooling, we have amassed a collection of over 3,000 books, most of which are classics or high-quality vintage literature geared toward children and young adults. Books are one of the ways that our children connect to one another – relationships built on sharing quality literature are strong because children can always find something about which to reminisce (“Remember the time when Mom read us Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea?”), and something about which to debate (“Why do you think Jo should have married Laurie?”). Shared literary experience provides a scaffold on which children build vocabulary by using new words in conversation with one another, and it helps cement the traits that build character, as heroes and heroines model the traits we wish our children to exhibit as adults. Reading the classics, especially those outside of our time period, provide
Above: Fossils and other nature finds are frequently on display and children love to add to the collection. Right: The two-room library, located in the old summer kitchen of the house which was built in 1820, has its own entrance.
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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Bed • Breakfast • Events Apple Country Retreat
2215 Lord’s Hill Rd • Tully, NY 13159 315-748-3977 • www.applecountryretreat.com
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canandaigua | marketplace
offbeat
Enjoy a delectable meal on the shores of Canandaigua Lake. Juvenile fiction is a favorite of many young readers, and the right book can turn a nonreader into a lifelong book lover.
The P. Tribastone Fine Art Gallery 32 South Main Street Canandaigua, NY Open 10-6 Tues-Sat
www.depaul.org (585) 396-3390
Life in the Finger Lakes
NEW! DECALS ORDER ONLINE
fingerlakesmagazine.com/store
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six beautiful issues each year (800) 344-0559 FINGERLAKESMAGAZINE.COM
children with valuable perspective about the age in which they live. We had discussed cataloging our collection – scattered on various shelves in different rooms – in order to enable us to find a book more quickly, but the time required for this project would be substantial. It would require touching every single book, finding its appropriate entry using a library cataloging app, labeling each one, then using the Dewey Decimal System for shelving so that it could be located quickly. The potential benefits of such a project were great: We could more easily loan books to other homeschooling families and people interested in good literature, and we could avoid duplicate purchases because we would have remote access to an online catalog. Enter COVID-19. Before the pandemic, our life of homeschooling
~ LifeintheFingerLakes.com
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canandaigua | marketplace six children afforded little free time for tackling such a project. Our activities mostly revolved around the children’s hobbies, our flock of fiber sheep, and hives of honey bees and community service projects. Now we had expanses of time that were suddenly at our disposal, day after day. Our 14-year-old daughter spearheaded the effort to catalog the books, taking on the task as energetically as she approaches a new weaving project on her floor loom. It took weeks, but was made much easier by the fact that apps exist to create an online catalog from your book collection. They also recommend the most appropriate Dewey Decimal or Library of Congress number for accurate shelving. We used the free app LibraryThing for this task. Taking the project to the next level required construction help, which we received from McHugh Carpentry in Shortsville, who brought our organizational vision to fruition. Our library project is still ongoing. We never stop collecting books, and more shelving is in the works. We have a small community of patrons and we enjoy plucking books based on queries (“What do you have on China for kids?”). We have a collection of books that are out-of-print and hard to find, and they are often written at a surprisingly high reading level, as most older books are. Today we have a small number of dedicated patrons who seek our books not because we have the current bestsellers in kids’ literature or because we have a big selection of recent authors, but because they appreciate good literature that doesn’t talk down to a child, that inspires, and is written by authors passionate about their subject matter. We are grateful to the many people, including homeschooling families and school libraries in the surrounding areas, who have donated books that have outlived their usefulness in those places and have renewed lives in our library. For more information and a link to the catalog, email Rebecca Parshall at rwparshall@frontiernet.net.
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Cindy’s Glass Crafts & Collectables Canandaigua’s Gift Store & More
Come see our 60+ Artists, Craftsmen and Antique dealers 155 South Main Street Canandaigua NY 585-394-5007 Store hours: Mon-Wed 10AM - 5PM • Thurs-Sat 10AM-6PM • Sun 1-6PM email: cinderellaglassworks@yahoo.com
The Finger Lakes Choice For
Exceptional Ingredients
Original Artwork Paintings, Mixed Media, Drawings, Pastel, Jewelry, Ceramics, Sculpture, Hand Executed Prints
Workshops & Classes 71 S. Main Street, Canandaigua, NY 585-394-0030 www.prrgallery.com Sun/Mon. Closed; Tues-Sat. 11-5pm.
CANANDAIGUA• ROCHESTER • ITHACA
Visit us online at folivers.com
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Stories with a FLX Connection by Laurel C. Wemett
F
rom Watkins Glen to Geneva, from Syracuse to Rochester and points in between, we have the Finger Lakes covered with new books with an FLX connection. It’s time to find out why hard cider is experiencing a rebirth and how the Erie Canal affected “Salt City.” Curl up with one of these absorbing tales of real-life figures who left their mark or relatable stories of contemporary fictional families dealing with life’s challenges. See the reviews on page 74.
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~ LifeintheFingerLakes.com
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shopping & services | marketplace
SPRING PLANTINGS HAVE ARRIVED!
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Spring Flowers, Vegetables, Hanging Baskets, Deck Pots, Perennials, Shrubs, Trees, Pottery, Statues, Birdbaths, Fountains, Outdoor Furniture & Much More! NEW! – Curbside Service, Online Ordering Stop by gardeners’ paradise at ... Now Open for the Season, 7 Days mayflowernurserygarden.com 2505 NY 332, Canandaigua • 585-396-9660
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Brazilian Wax for Men & Women
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naples | marketplace
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The Doctors Blackwell: How Two Pioneering Sisters Brought Medicine to Women – and Women to Medicine Janice P. Nimura W. W. Norton & Company wwnorton.com 2021
Produce “Always the Freshest!” Spring features all our Beautiful Flowers & Veggie Plants from our Greenhouses!
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Gift Shop, Jams, Jellies & Hunt Country & Arbor Hill Wines! Family Pride Since 1955 OPEN EVERYDAY 8:00AM - 6:00PM 202 S. Main St, Naples (585) 374-2380 JosephsWaysideMarket.com
Premium Homemade Ice Cream Rich, Creamy Custards Great Service • ice cream cakes • ice cream pies • real fruit smoothies • old fashioned shakes, floats • fresh fruit sundaes Try our Borrow-A-Bike Program! Pick out a bike, sign it out & ride it around town. Bring it back when you’re done!
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S
isters Elizabeth and Emily Blackwell, who immigrated to America with their parents and numerous siblings from Bristol, England in 1832, are the subjects of this compelling and wellresearched biography. Each sought a medical career in 19th century America and Europe at a time when only men became doctors. Elizabeth was the first woman to obtain a medical degree. In 1849, after receiving rejections from many medical schools, she was admitted to Geneva Medical College (now Hobart College) through a student vote – a lighthearted gesture. She later earned their respect. Emily, less well known, also succeeded in becoming a doctor. Like her sister, she pursued additional training in European hospitals. Elizabeth practiced medicine in New York City, establishing a dispensary in 1857. The sisters later started the Woman’s Medical College of the New York Infirmary in 1868 to increase the number of rigorously educated female doctors. Under Emily’s guidance, it survived for 30 years after Elizabeth returned to Europe. These life stories rely on the Blackwell family’s correspondence to reveal the sisters’ opinions on contemporary medical practices and details of their personal lives and relationships. Janice P. Nimura is the author of Daughters of the Samurai: A Journey from East to West and Back, a New York Times Notable book in 2015. Her essays and book reviews have appeared in many publications.
Cider Revival: Dispatches from the Orchard Jason Wilson Harry N. Abrams abramsbooks.com 2019
C
ider was America’s original favorite beverage. During Prohibition, orchards were destroyed and neglected. Other alcoholic drinks surpassed it, but cider is now experiencing a rebirth. New York State leads the nation with about 90 licensed cideries. The story behind the cider
8665 Rte. 21 South, Naples
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585-374-5980
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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The Easiest Way to Explore the Finger Lakes Over 500 Finger Lakes destinations! Pre-planned DayTrips! Wineries • Breweries • Food • Fun • More!
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Pottery, Jewelry, Glass, Photography, Paintings, Wood, Metal, Fiber, Sculpture, Soaps, Culinary Delights, and more.
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shopping & services
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revival unfolds through conversations with those involved in apple orchards found in the Finger Lakes, the Catskills, New England, the West Coast and beyond. The Finger Lakes is playing a pivotal role in cider’s resurgence. “The thin isthmus between deep blue Cayuga and Seneca Lakes may have the finest concentration of artisan cideries in the nation,” writes Jason Wilson. His broad knowledge of wine and spirits makes him well suited to discuss ciders and he draws comparisons between cider production and winemaking. Wine comes from fermented grapes while cider is made from fermented apples. The perfect unblemished dessert or culinary apples produce “modern” sweet ciders that are lower in alcohol. The book’s focus is the heritage ciders made today by smaller producers using assorted heirloom apple varieties such as the Northern Spy and wild apples foraged from uncultivated trees. An award-winning journalist and knowledgeable travel-writer, Jason Wilson has served as a judge at North America’s largest cider competition. An appendix offers top cider bars and notable American cideries to help readers to sample ciders for themselves.
Faces of Civil War Nurses Ronald S. Coddington Johns Hopkins University Press press.jhu.edu 2020
A
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Visit our locations. Farmington Pittsford Plaza Corner of Routes Monroe Ave. 96 & 332 (CVS Plaza) (Next to Shear Ego) 585-742-6218 585-385-0750 Strong Memorial Hospital Thompson Hospital Destiny USA Mall (Syracuse, NY)
Lukacs Pottery Shop for unique, functional art and other fine handmade items 7060 State Route 14 • Sodus Point, NY 14555 315-483-4357 • lukacspottery.com
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fresh perspective on the Civil War is offered through this selection of stories of 77 women who served as nurses, aid workers and vivandières. The latter were freelancers who were unofficial attachés to regiments during the bloody conflict. Each female appears in a likeness reproduced from a surviving tin type or carte des visite. While the majority of these women provided support for the Union cause, three Southerners are included in this collection. The first subject, Almira Fales, is shown holding two baskets of supplies used to tend Union soldiers. Like Fales, some of these little-known patriots came from New York State and the Finger Lakes area. She relocated to Washington, D.C., where boarders welcomed into her home included Clara Barton, the founder of the American Red Cross. The author does not dwell on well-known figures such as Barton or Dorothea Dix, the person charged with the administration of military hospitals. Instead, he features women with intriguing stories that have not yet been told. Author Ronald S. Coddington successfully humanizes the Civil War through these well-written biographies and accompanying images. He is the editor of The Chronicle of Higher Education and the editor and publisher of Military Images magazine. His previous books focus on Union, Confederate, and African American soldiers, along with sailors who served in the Union and Confederate navies.
~ LifeintheFingerLakes.com
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shopping & services | marketplace
Manchester Mission
Furniture
Call now for your Free 1st Meeting! New Kitchens, New Mudrooms, Home Offices, Bathroom Cabinetry, Laundry Rooms, Closets.
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The Red Bird Café and Gift Shop
You don’t need to cross the big pond for Afternoon Tea. By reservation only Saturday only 12-3pm. $30 pp. + tax & gratuity. For your outdoor events, entertain in style with our April Cornell beautiful linens. If we don’t have what you need we will gladly order it for you!
The Red Bird Café Bakery Gifts
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Pipeline - pumps - filters moorings & more
Call for hours and Fashion Show schedules
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Murder & Mayhem in the Finger Lakes R. Marcin The History Press historypress.com 2020
R
FINGERLAKESDIVER.COM
A518580
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eal-life homicides in the Finger Lakes Region from 1828 to 1911 are recounted in this engrossing book of high-profile crimes. A sometimeschilling read unfolds through the vivid descriptions detailing each murder and the circumstances leading up to the fatal attack. Background information explains the relationships between victims and their assailants. Trials and executions of the accused were then fully covered in the local press. The author has carefully researched newspaper accounts where the murders occurred – in Seneca, Cayuga, Wayne, Ontario, Tompkins, Schuyler, Livingston and Yates Counties. The accused murderers are male with the exception of Elizabeth Rogers and Elizabeth Brooks, tried for the death of a man who forcibly sought admittance to Rogers’ home on Pulteney Street in Geneva. Rogers reportedly defended herself by inflicting deadly blows with a large pottery milk pitcher. After learning the facts of each case, the reader may consider whether the accused was rightfully judged. Hangings, one punishment facing those found guilty, were often public events, attracting many spectators. Surviving illustrations of some of the accused persons and diagrams of crime scenes enhance these 10 tales. Author Rikki Marcin has a master’s degree in French literature. She has written for the Watkins Review and Express and the Observer in Yates County. This is her first book.
Mountains Can Move Paul Mitchell Bootstrap Publishing 2020
T
he deeply ingrained behaviors and attitudes of three generations of a family are tested in this novel when the eldest member struggles to remain independent. The aging Albert Martel supported his family as a plumber in Upstate New York, but his youthful involvement with the Abstract Expressionism art movement in New York City in the 1950s ignited his creative talents. After a lifetime of painting privately in his barn studio, Albert yearns to pursue it in an environment more conducive to artistic expression. The long-strained relationships between Albert and his two adult children – and a tragic family secret – cloud everyone’s ability to
~ LifeintheFingerLakes.com
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book look resolve the situation easily without conflict. The characters in this story are relatable and well-drawn. Toxic family dynamics are played out primarily around Albert’s Rochester home. His son Andy, a Wall Street lawyer whose own life is unraveling, insists on solutions that clash with the expectations of his sister Bonnie, their father’s primary caretaker. Only Albert’s 21-year old granddaughter Sophie understands her grandfather’s artistic passion and recognizes his ability. The family’s Christian faith, old friends, new acquaintances and even Albert’s old restored truck affect the outcome. Readers will enjoy numerous references to Rochester and the Finger Lakes area. Author Paul Mitchell is a retired nurse practitioner, a resident of Middlesex and an accomplished photographer. This is his first book.
Salt City Trivia III – The Erie Canal Dick Case Onondaga Historical Association cnyhistory.org 2019
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he history of the Erie Canal, the 19th century waterway that contributed to commerce in New York State, is replete with trivia. Which town is at the exact midpoint of the original Albany to Buffalo canal route? The answer is Camillus, where today the Camillus Erie Canal Park preserves a seven-mile stretch of the Erie Canal. Like many communities, nearby Syracuse, or “Salt City,” grew and prospered after the canal allowed its products to be shipped more easily. The compact book was drawn from the author’s love of “little facts that sometime are lost in the broader sweep of history.” Full-color archival illustrations accompany brief accounts and happenings related to canal history across the state. Some are familiar, like the image of Governor Dewitt Clinton pouring Lake Erie water into New York Harbor in 1825. Less well known is the newspaper account of the first female pathmaster. In 1904, Mary Porter of Baldwinsville daily patrolled a 10-mile section of the towpath and berm to seal leaks. This is the third “Salt City Trivia” book written by Dick Case, who passed away shortly after the book’s release. The Central New Yorker was a native of Marcellus and graduate of Syracuse University. He was active with the Onondaga Historical Association after retiring from a long and successful career in journalism.
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Quiet Country Estates
A 55and Older Manufactured Housing Community located in the Heart of the Finger Lakes. Single story homes with public utilities, attached carports or garages, on large spacious lots. Models available. 1021 Waterloo-Geneva Rd. Waterloo www.quietcountryestates.net 315-729-1905
Wildflower Hills
A 55 and older Manufactured Housing Community located between Hammondsport and Bath. Single story homes with attached garages, with lawn moving and snow removal, plus community clubhouse. 7404 Wildflower Way, Bath, NY www.wildflowerhills.com 315-729-1905
4/5/21 1:56 PM
real estate | marketplace DON’T BUY A WATERFRONT PROPERTY WITHOUT TALKING TO
MARK MALCOLM II
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Don’t buy a Waterfront Property or Lake View Property without talking to Mark Malcolm. Lake View options starting at $45,000!
The Landscape Company Inc. & The Stonemasons Inc. www.thestonemasons.com
Residential services rendered: • Design concept sketching & computer modeling • Permitting construction documents • Construction phase services
Kitchen casework by Terino Cabinet Makers / Marietta, NY • (315) 418-6550 Marble counters & travertine tile floors by Vallars Tile & Marble, Syracuse vallarsny.com Marble floor installation by C & D Laface Syracuse • cdlaface.com
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(800) 344-0559 FingerLakesMagazine.com
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Get to the Point Breathtaking vistas. Award-winning wines. Experience one of the premier locations on the Cayuga Wine Trail. Enjoy our premium selections and stay for lunch at our on-site eatery, Amelia’s. Business Hours: 20 miles Winery Sun-Thurs: 10 am-5 pm south of Auburn Fri and Sat: 10 am-6 pm on scenic Route 90 Deli Fri, Sat and Sun: 11 am-4 pm Order Online: longpointwinery.com
1485 Lake Road • Aurora, NY 13026 (315) 364-6990 • mail@longpointwinery.com
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Reinvention Brewing Co. ReinventionBrewing.com (585) 289-7309 Find us on Facebook and Instagram 9 N. Main St. (Rt. 21), Manchester, NY 1/2 mile from NYS Thruway exit 43 - Manchester
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Watkins Glen Eleanor Lerman Mayapple Press mayapplepress.com 2021
T
his fictional tale of aging siblings Mark and Susan Kleinzinger takes the reader on a roller coaster ride as they deal with myriad difficulties following Mark’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis. The pair grew up in the Bronx, where their father labored in the family’s upholstery business except in the summer when he raced cars in Watkins Glen. After years of moving around, Susan has settled near the worldfamous racecar center and cares for her brother by bringing him to live with her. Together they must face Mark’s deteriorating mental state, Susan’s precarious lifestyle, their youthful memories and a changing relationship. The complicated situation unfolds through Susan’s first-person narration. Mark has become obsessed with painting, a rare symptom of dementia called Acquired Artist Syndrome. A retired math teacher, he was never interested in art, but while painting Seneca Lake he becomes fixated on his imagined sighting of a Loch Nesslike lake monster. The seriousness of the situation is lightened by the hope offered through characters like Susan’s friend and employer, a freespirited gift shop owner. Well-crafted descriptions contrast the natural scenery around Watkins Glen with the
~ LifeintheFingerL akes.com
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wine, spirits & brews | marketplace
downstate environment where the siblings were raised. Eleanor Lerman, a National Book Award finalist, has written numerous award-winning collections of poetry and short stories, as well as four previous novels.
Now Welcoming Guests Looking Ahead The Bear Tree and Other Stories from Cazenovia’s History
Dr. Konstantin Frank Winery
9749 Middle Road, Hammondsport, NY | 800-320-0735 www.drfrankwines.com
Erica Barnes and Jason Emerson Syracuse University Press press.syr.edu 2021
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pcoming in the November/ December 2021 issue of Life in the Finger Lakes are reviews of more books about life, real and imaginary in the Finger Lakes Region. These will include The Bear Tree and Other Stories from Cazenovia’s History. The book chronicles the fascinating people, places and history of the 225-year-old community. The publisher’s description says it “explores the unheralded, inaccurately told, and long-forgotten tales of the town.” This title is co-authored by teacher and historian Erica Barnes and independent historian and journalist Jason Emerson, former editor of the Cazenovia Republican newspaper. Readers can pre-order a copy from your favorite independent bookstore, press.syr.edu, Amazon.com and elsewhere.
VISIT US ON T H E E AST SI DE OF SEN ECA L A K E
9224 State Rte 414
607.582.6011
Lodi, NY 14860
l a mor e au x w i n e.com
T A S T I N G S B Y R E S E R VA T I O N
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culture & attractions | marketplace
EAST HILL GALLERY TOUR OUR FARM & BROWSE OUR GIFT SHOP Our alpaca farm is the largest in the Finger Lakes area. You will have the opportunity to meet our herd of 60+ alpacas. Learn alpaca history & care while touring the vintage barns. Individual and group tours.
Fine Finger Lakes Crafts
A Hidden Gem in Central New York Come Walk through History with Us! Brockway Trucks Local History Trains Military Memorabilia Agricultural History Vintage Tractors and More!
Three Unique Museums ~ One Price!
We offer a Spacious and Clean Family Friendly Facility!
Planning a Function? Ask about our Rental Spaces & Rates Groups Welcome Anytime with Prior Arrangements
SCHEDULE YOUR VISIT: (585) 455-1203 www.lazyacrealpacas.com
SaSaturday turday 1111-5, - 5, aand nd Sunday Sunday 1-5 1-5 OOpen pen M emorial D ay tthrough hrough October October Memorial Day
1445 Upper Hill Rd., Middlesex 585-554-3539 • www.folkartguild.org
8830 Baker Road Bloomfield, NY 14469
Colonial Belle Cruising The Historic Erie Canal Ask Us About Our Theme Cruises
Grace Gardens 2300 Daylilies - Online Color Catalog Nationally recognized daylily display garden - Free Admission 315.694.0123
www.gracegardens.com • tom@gracegardens.com
Private Charters Available
OPEN: Thursday - Saturday 10:00 - 5:00 Tuesday & Wednesday by Appointment Days and Hours Subject to Change
4386 US Route 11 Cortland, NY 607-299-4185 www.cnylivinghistory.org Halfway between Syracuse & Binghamton 1/2 mile off I-81, exit 12 - Route 11 South
ANTIQUE WIRELESS MUSEUM
Experience Two Centuries of Communication Technology Voice of America Station, Titanic Radio Room, 1925 Radio Store, First Transistor Radio, Working Transmitters, First Cell Phone and Much, Much More!
Fun for the Entire Family
Call for Reservations 585-223-9470 • colonialbelle.com 400 Packett’s Landing • Fairport, NY
Open: Tuesday 10am-3pm & Saturday 1-5pm
6925 State Route 5, Bloomfield, New York 14469 585-257-5119 • www.antiquewireless.org
FLFoodTours.com • 888-302-1880
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 10AM - 5PM
8231 Pleasant Valley Rd. Hammondsport, NY 14840 INFO@FLBM.ORG
84
(607) 569-2222
Come Eat With Us! ADVANCE TICKET PURCHASE REQUIRED
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CORTLAND COUNTY HISTORICAL SOCIETY Telling Your Stories Since 1925
New Tour! Cayuga Crossing
James Suggett House Museum and Kellogg Memorial Research Center Your hometown source for genealogy and local history!
kayaktimetours.com • 315-670-7134
Rose Hill Mansion
Please call ahead to schedule an appointment. 25 Homer Ave. Cortland, NY 13045 – (607) 756-6071 cortlandhistory.org – info@cortlandhistory.org
Geneva History Museum
Telling Geneva’s Stories outdoor tours ∗ shop ∗ exhibits
call 315-789-5151 or visit genevahistoricalsociety.com for 2021 schedule
Dr. Joseph F. Karpinski Sr. Educational Center 6880 East Lake Road Rt. 34 A Auburn, New York 13021 Across from Beautiful Emerson Park
Museum Hours May 1 till Memorial Day
Monday, Tuesday, Friday Saturday 10 A.M. till 4 P.M. Sunday 11 A.M. till 4 P.M. Closed Wednesday and Thursday Memorial Day Till October 31, 2021 Monday Thru Saturday 10 A.M. till 4 P.M. Sunday 11 A.M. till 4 P.M.
Open 7 Days a Week April through Dec 10am-4pm (Sunday 1-4pm) 23 East Main St, LeRoy, NY 585-768-7433 • www.jellogallery.org
See Website or Facebook For More Information Special Tours and Viewing By Appointment Call Museum Director for Details 315-252-7644
New Exhibits For 2021
Phone: 315-252-7644 Email: tquill@cayugacounty.us wardwoharaagriculturalmuseum.org M ay/J u n e 2 02 1 ~
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advertisers May/June 2021
The Best of the Finger Lakes!
ACCOMMODATIONS
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
Apple Country Retreat..............................http://www.applecountryretreat.com.........................69
Barry Hamel Architect PLLC....................https://hamel-architects-pllc.business.site................. 81
Best Western Vineyard Inn......................http://www.vineyardinnandsuites.com......................69
Century 21 Sbarra-Wells..........................http://www.markmalcolm.com.................................... 81
Colonial Motel............................................https://colonialmotelkeuka.com..................................69
Lakeview Court LLC.............................................................................................................................. 81
Finger Lakes Premier Properties............http://www.flpplake.com...............................................69
MJ Peterson................................................http://www.mjprental.com............................................26
Miami Motel...............................................http://www.motelmiami.com.......................................68
Quiet Country Estates..............................https://www.quietcountryestates.net/........................80 Wildflower Hills..........................................https://www.wildflowerhills.com.................................80
CAMPING Cherry Grove Campground....................http://www.cherrygrovecampground.com................87
SENIOR LIVING
Clute Memorial Park/Campground.......http://www.watkinsglen.us............................................87
Ferris Hills at West Lake...........................http://www.thompsonhealth.org................................... 4
Hartleys Auto & RV....................................http://www.cortlandrv.com...........................................87
Horizons A DePaul 00 Community.......http://www.depaul.org...................................................70
Hejamada Campground & RV Park.......http://www.hejamadacampground.com...................87
Kendal at Ithaca.........................................http://www.kai.kendal.org/......................................Cvr 3
Holiday Hill Campground.......................http://www.holidayhillcampground.com...................87
Rochester Fairways Owner dba Legacy at Fairways.................................................................................................................... 3
Junius Ponds Campground.................... http://www.juniuspondscabinsandcampground.com/..........................................................87
The Highlands at Pittsford.......................http://www.highlandsatpittsford.org............................. 5
CULTURE & ATTRACTIONS
SHOPPING & SERVICES
Antique Wireless Museum......................http://www.antiquewireless.org...................................84
Ahwaga Paints & Coverings....................http://www.ahwagapaintandfloorcovering.com.......78
Bristol Valley Theater................................http://www.bvtnaples.org..............................................63
Antique Revival..........................................http://www.antiquerevival.com....................................73
CNY Living History Center.......................http://www.cnylivinghistory.org...................................84
Artizanns.....................................................http://new.artizanns.com/.............................................75
Colonial Belle.............................................http://www.colonialbelle.com......................................84
CabAve Kitchens........................................http://www.cavesmillwork.com....................................77
Corning Museum of Glass......................http://www.cmog.org.....................................................33
Canandaigua BID......................................https://www.downtowncanandaigua.com/...............77
Cortland County Historical Society........http://www.cortlandhistory.com..................................85
Cayuga Landscape Company.................http://www.cayugalandscape.com.............................. 31
Finger Lakes Boating Museum...............http://www.flbm.org.......................................................84
Cinderella Glassworks..............................https://www.cinderellaglassworks.com/..................... 71
Finger Lakes Food Tours..........................http://www.flfoodtours.com.........................................84
Consort Display Group............................http://www.consortdisplaygroup.com........................76
Finger Lakes Museum..............................http://www.fingerlakesmuseum.org............................. 6
Corning Building Company....................http://www.corningbldg.com.......................................60
Geneva Historical Society........................http://www.genevahistoricalsociety.com...................85
Cricket on the Hearth...............................http://www.cricketonthehearth.com...........................68
Geneva Music Festival..............................https://genevamusicfestival.com/............................... 18
Crown Jewelry...........................................http://www.mycrowndowntown.com........................79
Grace Gardens...........................................http://www.gracegardens.com.....................................84
Daydream Sailing......................................http://www.daydreamsailing.com...............................73
Granger Homestead & Museum...........http://www.grangerhomestead.org........................ 9, 84
Downtown Ithaca Alliance......................http://www.downtownithaca.com............................... 51
Historic Palmyra.........................................http://www.historicpalmyrany.com.............................85
Dudley Poultry...........................................https://www.dudleypoultry.com/................................75
Kayak Time - Guided Tours....................http://www.kayaktimetours.com.................................85
Early Owego Antique Center..................http://www.pickowego.com..........................................75
Lazy Acre Alpacas/ Alpaca Country Clothing & Gifts......http://www.lazyacrealpacas.com.................................84
Eastview Mall..............................................http://www.eastviewmall.com......................................24
LeRoy Historical Society...........................http://www.jellomuseum.com.....................................85
F. Oliver’s Oils and Vinegars...................http://www.folivers.com................................................ 71
Evolved Home Furnishings LLC........................................................................................................... 7
National Women’s Hall of fame............http://www.womenofthehall.org.................................85
Finger Lakes Coffee Roasters..................http://www.fingerlakescoffee.com..............................76
North Star Art Gallery...............................http://www.northstarartgallery.com.............................. 9
Finger Lakes Diver.....................................http://www.fingerlakesdiver.com.................................78
Pat Rini Rohrer Gallery.............................http://www.prrgallery.com............................................ 71
Finger Lakes Tram.....................................http://www.ankomdevelopment.com........................63
Phelps Historical Society..........................http://www.phelpsny.com............................................. 31
Finger Lakes Wax Studio.........................http://www.fingerlakeswaxstudio.com.......................73
Rochester Folk Art Guild..........................http://www.rfag.org........................................................84
FingerLakes Bell Co..................................http://www.flxbells.com.................................................66
Rockwell Museum.....................................http://www.rockwellmuseum.org...........................Cvr 2
Fireplace Fashions.....................................http://www.fireplacefashions.com...............................65
The P. Tribastone Fine Art Gallery.........https://p-tribastone-fine-art-gallery.business.site.....70 The Windmill Farm & Craft Market.......http://www.thewindmill.com........................................85
Fitch Construction / Rochester Skylights.............................http://www.fitchconstruction.com............................... 13
Ward O’Hara Agricultural Museum.......http://www.cayuganet.org/agmuseum......................85
FLX Goods..................................................http://www.flxgoods.com..............................................73 FoodlinkNY.................................................http://www.foodlinkny.org............................................ 12
DINING
German Brothers Marina Inc..................http://www.germanbrothers.com................................68
Belhurst.......................................................http://www.belhurst.com/winery-at-belhurst.html....60
Gold Silver and Diamond Store.............http://www.goldsilverdiamondstore.com..................65
Lynnie Lou’s...............................................http://www.lynnielous.com........................................... 74
Hartleys Auto & RV....................................http://www.cortlandrv.com...........................................77
Nolan’s on Canandaigua Lake...............http://www.nolansonthelake.com...............................70
Horning Woodworking........................................................................................................................79
NY Kitchen..................................................http://www.nykitchen.com............................................35
Jane Morgan’s Little House.....................http://www.janemorganslittlehouse.com..................78
Pat’s Pizzeria...............................................http://www.patspizzas.com...........................................29
Johnson Furniture Restoration...............http://www.jfrestoration.com.......................................79
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Joseph’s Wayside Market........................http://www.josephswaysidemarket.com.................... 74
The Red Bird Cafe & Gift Shop..............http://www.redbirdcafeandgiftshop.com...................77
Lakeside Building Products.....................http://www.lakesideroofingandsiding.com...............27
Timber Frames Inc....................................http://www.timberframesinc.com............................... 41
Lukacs Studios Pottery.............................http://www.lukacspottery.com.....................................76
Trailbuddi Smart Trail Network...............https://trailbuddi.com/...................................................75
Manchester Mission Furniture................http://www.manchestermissionfurniture.com..........77
Wegmans....................................................http://www.wegmans.com............................................25
Mayflowers Garden..................................http://www.mayflowersnurserygarden.com.............73
Woodmansee Woodwrights - Custom Cabinetry & Furn...............http://www.woodmanseellamas.com.........................75
Mr. Twistee’s...............................................http://www.mrtwistees.com.........................................75 Naglee Fine Arts........................................http://www.nagleegroup.com......................................79 New Energy Works TimberFramers......http://www.newenergyworks.com.........................Cvr 4
TOURISM
Pettis Pools & Patio...................................http://www.pettispools.com.........................................35
Cayuga County Tourism..........................http://www.tourcayuga.com......................................... 10
Rasa Spa......................................................http://www.rasaspa.com.................................................. 8
Clifton Springs Chamber of Commerce.....................http://www.cliftonspringschamber.com.....................33
Recollections Antiques.........................................................................................................................78 RJ Cars Inc..................................................http://www.rjcars.com....................................................73 Route 96 Power & Paddle.......................http://www.powerandpaddle.com.............................. 41
WINE, SPIRITS & BREWS
Roy’s Marina Inc........................................http://www.roysmarina.net...........................................73
Billsboro Winery........................................http://www.billsborowinery.com.................................82
Seager Marine............................................http://www.seagermarine.com.................................... 11
Cayuga Lake Wine Trail............................http://www.cayugawinetrail.com.................................43
Seneca Movers / Lake Country Moving Storage..........http://www.lakecountryvg-senecamovers.com........ 10
Dr. Konstantin Frank Wines....................http://www.drfrankwines.com......................................83
Signlanguage Inc.......................................http://www.signlanguageinc.com.................................. 8
Long Point Winery....................................http://www.longpointwinery.com................................82
Silver Lake Marine, Inc.............................http://www.silverlakemarine.com................................42
Reinvention Brewing Co..........................http://www.reinventionbrewing.com/........................82
Skaneateles Marina...................................https://www.skanmarina.com/.....................................79
Sheldrake Point Winery...........................https://sheldrakepoint.com/......................................... 51
Smith Boys Marine - Rochester..............http://www.smithboys.com..........................................49
Ventosa Vineyards.....................................http://www.ventosavineyards.com..............................83
Sutter’s Marina...........................................http://suttersmarina.com..............................................77
Wagner Vineyards.....................................http://www.wagnervineyards.com.............................. 11
Sweet Expressions.....................................http://www.sweetexpressionsonline.com..................79
Zugibe Vineyards.......................................http://www.zugibevineyards.com................................82
Lamoreaux Landing Wine Cellars..........https://lamoreauxwine.com/........................................83
camping | marketplace Family Fun for Everyone!
315-781-5120 Playgrounds • Pool • Kids Crafts Outdoor Games and Game Room • Themed Weekends Large 50 Amp Sites • Dog Friendly
RV Sites and Rental Cabins Available 315-781-5120 • juniuspondscabinsandcampground.com campjpcc@gmail.com
Clute Memorial Park & Campground • Full Hook Ups Including Cable & Wi/Fi
• Across From Beautiful Seneca Lake
• Walking Distance to Downtown
• Community Center & Pavilion Rentals
• Boat Launch
155 S. Clute Park Drive (Boat Launch Road) Watkins Glen, NY 14891 607-535-4438 www.watkinsglen.us
Hejamada Campground & RV Park
Family Camping at its best! Located in the Finger Lakes Region
Come see why we’re the ideal campground for caravans, jamborees, group functions, families and individual campers.
(315)776-5887 • 877-678-0647
www.hejamadacampground.com
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607-423-0973 Sales Rt. 13
From Tenting to Large RVs Located near Lake Ontario. Family oriented park with seasonal and overnight accommodations. 12669 Ridge Road, Wolcott, NY 14590
•
Cabins Group Discount 30/50 Full Hook-up Pull-through sites
www.cherrygrovecampground.com 315-594-8320
315-289-7910 Sales Rt. 11
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finger lakes regional map
Areas of Interest in the May/June 2021 issue 1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8
Addison (p.23) Avoca (p.54) Bath (p.54) Canandaigua (p.48)
9 Farmington (p.50) 10 Freeville (p.46) 11 Geneva (p.17, 45) 12 Hammondsport (p.49)
Corning (p.47, 53) Dundee (p.23) Elmira (p.48) Erwin (p.53)
13 Ithaca (p.28) 14 Montour Falls (p.23) 15 Naples (p.46) 16 Phelps (p.23)
17 Pulteney (p.53) 18 Richford (p.25) 19 Skaneateles (p.48) 20 Trumansburg (p.54)
21 Waterloo (p.46) 22 Watkins Glen (p.50)
From Oswego
Lake Ontario
Hilton
104
Sodus Bay
Sodus Point
MONROE Webster Brockport
104
Sodus
Baldwinsville
Rochester
490
E. Rochester Macedon
490
From Buffalo
Caledonia
Honeoye Falls
390
5
Avon
Geneseo
LIVINGSTON
9
20
5
4
16 Clifton Springs Phelps
ONTARIO 20
5
5
90
Seneca Falls
Waterloo
Geneva
20
Cayuga
7
20
5
Auburn
81
19
20
Union Springs
ONONDAGA
11
11
9
8 Moravia
17
2
Avoca
Canisteo
Lamoka Lake
Hammondsport
12 3
Hornell
13
Marathon
18
Watkins Glen 22 Montour Cayuta Lake Falls TOMPKINS Odessa SCHUYLER
Bath
Dryden
Cayuga Heights
Ithaca
Burdett
McGraw 81
10
Lansing
Waneta Lake
6
86 17
20
6
CORTLAND
11
Trumansburg
Dundee
390
Cortland Groton
Wayland Cohocton
Homer
Interlaken
Branchport
15
CAYUGA
Ovid
Penn Yan
YATES
Prattsburgh
From Binghamton
14
N
STEUBEN
1 Rexville
Candor
Spencer 86
17
8
Addison
Painted Post
5
Elmira C H E M U N G Heights
7
Elmira
TIOGA
Waverly
The Finger Lakes Region of New York State
Finger Lakes 1 Conesus 2 Hemlock 3 Canadice
Newark Valley
Van Etten
Horseheads
Corning
Owego
15
88
20
Aurora
Naples
From Jamestown
Fayetteville Manlius
Skaneateles
10
SENECA
Honeoye
5
Dansville
690
Syracuse 481
21
11
20A
390
Nunda
Manchester Shortsville Canandaigua
4
2
Solvay
Weedsport
3
1
90
90
Jordan
Newark
From Utica
481
Marcellus
Victor
Bloomfield
Livonia Hemlock
20A
Mt. Morris
Lima
Clyde
Lyons
Palmyra
90
90
North 11 Syracuse
WAYNE
Fairport
490
Oneida Lake
81
104
104
Spencerport
From Watertown
Wolcott
4 5 6 7
Honeoye Canandaigua Keuka Seneca
86
17
From Binghamton
8 Cayuga 9 Owasco 10 Skaneateles 11 Otisco
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83488 Kendal DogAD for LIF T: 8.125” x 10.875”
B: .125” all sides L: 7.625” x 10.375”
4c process
Exploring Ithaca’s spectacular landscape with her trusty pal, Tasha, gives Loretta great scenery and even better company. Whether she’s hiking to the heart of the gorge or just taking in the falls, she always enjoys the natural beauty of the area. Living on the 105-acre campus of Kendal at Ithaca not only keeps Loretta connected to the places and companions she loves, but the care she may need someday. And, from here, the story just keeps getting better. Come for a visit and tell us your story. Call 1-800-253-6325 or go to kai.kendal.org to learn more.
2230 N. Triphammer Rd., Ithaca, NY 14850
A not-for-profit continuing care retirement community serving older adults in the Quaker tradition. ©2014 KENDAL
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