Mohawk Valley Living #29 February 2016

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free magazine! FEBRUARY 2016

on the farm in the autumn with suzie in herkimer

adirondacks sharing our home and more stories from the valley! and much more inside!

29



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contents 6 8 9 13 15 21 27 30 34 38 41 50 57 60 63 69 72 73 74 75

Oneida County Historical Society MV Astronomy Club ADK Journal Middleville Free Library MV Scrap Book Artist Trish Craig February Woods On the Farm with Suzie MV Gardens & Recipes MV Restaurant Spotlight One Year/Beaver Colony Restaurant Guide Antiques Shopping Guide Herkimer Co. Historical Society Tales from Shawangunk, Part 17 Gallery Guide MV Music MV Comics Live & Local Advertiser Directory

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A New Perspective by Sharry L. Whitney My dad used to tell me that one of his favorite things about flying was sharing the experience with others. He said when he took people up for their first flight he was able to experience the unbridled joy of flight again through his passengers’ exuberant reactions. In this issue, Suzie Jones writes about her family’s experience of sharing their home with an exchange student from India. This offered them the opportunity to see their farm and the Mohawk Valley from a very different perspective. They saw the lush greens of their valley and experienced the thrill of someone’s first-ever snow. And as much as the visit surely left a lasting impression on their guest, Suzie and Peter seemed equally richer for the experience. Sometimes we take what we have for granted and it takes a new viewpoint to see things more objectively. I believe that is why our writers write and why we produce Mohawk Valley Living. It’s a way to share what we love and experience the joy of it through sharing it. Artist Trish Craig is sharing her love of collage this month by offering workshops to help people “get out of a rut,” as she calls it. Her enthusiasm for creativity will surely affect those attending her workshop. When you’re passionate about something, it’s hard for it not to be contagious. We hope when you read our magazine, you might see some things from a different perspective. And if you’re inspired, perhaps try something new. Our writers often have events, books, or presentations you can experience. Maybe you’ll even be inspired to host an exchange student. Suzie says they are always in need of host families. The Mohawk Valley’s snow will never look whiter and more beautiful than when you see it through the eyes of someone who has never seen, smelled, or heard the crunch of snow under their feet on that first snow day. •

MOHAWK VALLEY LIVING MAGAZINE FEBRUARY 2016

PUBLISHERS Lance and Sharry Whitney EDITOR Sharry L. Whitney DESIGN & LAYOUT Lance David Whitney ASSISTANT EDITORS Shelley Delosh Jorge L. Hernández ADVERTISING EXECUTIVES Susan Collea Bill Gruby CONTRIBUTORS Peggy Spencer Behrendt, Carol Higgins, Jorge L. Hernández, Brian Howard, Suzie Jones, John Keller, Melinda Karastury, Frank Page, Susan Perkins, Matt Perry, Cynthia Quackenbush, Denise Szarek, Gary VanRiper CONTACT US (315) 853-7133 30 Kellogg Street Clinton, NY 13323 www.MohawkValleyLiving.com mohawkvalleyliving@hotmail.com Mohawk Valley Living is a monthly magazine & television show exploring the area’s arts, culture, and heritage. Copyright © 2016. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced without the consent of Mohawk Valley Living, Inc.

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Make Way for the Horseless Carriage:

the Mohawk Valley Welcomes the Automobile from the Oneida County Historical Society by brian howard, executive director The Miller-Mundy Motor Carriage Company existed on Oneida Street in Utica in the early 20th century.

Without a doubt, America was transformed by the invention of the automobile. More than any other country, ours embraced this late 19th century technology that came to define American life in the 20th. Retail dealerships popped up in many Mohawk Valley towns and were especially numerous in Utica and Rome. During the early 1900s, the auto industry was wide open and dealers peddled brands from dozens of startup companies. The vast majority of these early firms ceased operation as car manufacturing became concentrated in Detroit with the “Big Three” automakers: Ford, Chrysler, and General Motors.* Digging through the OCHS archives has produced a document that details some of the earliest Ford dealerships in Utica: “The earliest one (Ford dealership) was the Fort Sales Company, Frank E. Henabray, president and manager, 337-339 Catherine St.; it first appeared in the directory for 1909. It changed locations a few times and by 1914 the city directory contained the reference, ‘See Otis Motor Car Co.’ This firm, whose president was Edward J. Otis, was located at 333 Bleecker St. By 1916, it had moved to 511 Kent Street. This firm was in business as late as 1925.” The Otis firm was taken over in 1927 by a former Gloversville resident named Harry Heiman. Heiman was a fixture in local car sales for decades, operating for a time at 319-324 Lafayette St. in Utica. His stock was with Chrysler and Plym-

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outh brands; after weathering the hard years of the Great Depression and a virtual freeze on sales during World War II, Heiman’s business grew in the postwar years. In 1953, he opened a new showroom and service center at Oriskany Street West in the city. This dealership was located across from the site that would see the Utica Memorial Auditorium rise just a few years later. Meanwhile, about 1921, the Jones Motor Car Company, at 318 Elizabeth St., appeared on the scene. This firm continued in business for many years, and its building was later occupied by Don’s Ford. The Elizabeth Street site—the original Jones Motor Car Company--was a Ford franchise known as Dahl Motors when Don Carbone purchased it in 1968. Today, the Carbone Auto Group is one of the most recognizable auto dealers in the Mohawk Valley. Their start came in 1929, when 19-year-old Joe Carbone partnered with Phil Sacco to run an auto shop on Wetmore Street in Utica. Sacco left in 1931 and by 1933 Carbone was selling cars out of a new dealership on Bleecker Street. Space precludes a comprehensive account of all of the early dealerships in the Utica-Rome region, but suffice it to say that our area readily embraced the “horseless carriage.” The sheer volume of retailers spoke to the progressive nature of the region; for other forms of transportation like the railroads and canals, the writing was on the wall. The 1900s were to be the century of the automobile. •

This shot of the Utica Motor Car Company is believed to date between 1910 and 1915; several early ‘Brass Era’ auto makers are advertised including Stevens-Duryea, Pope-Toledo, Winton and Baker.

Used car dealership at Elizabeth & Burnet St. in Utica, just across from the county courthouse. Now Alee’s Restaurant.

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*The original U.S. partner in what became General Motors was former Mohawk Valley resident Charles Mott. President of a bicycle wheel manufacturer (Weston-Mott), he moved his company to Flint, MI, in 1907.

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Mohawk valley astronomical society

The Heart Nebula and Cassiopeia the Queen by carol higgins

Valentine’s Day is February 14, and stores throughout the Mohawk Valley are ablaze with red decorations and a large selection of gifts. Well, the night sky offers a tribute to Valentine’s Day too—it’s the Heart Nebula. The Heart Nebula, technically known as IC 1805, was discovered in the late 1890s by American astronomer Edward Emerson Barnard. It is almost 20 times further away from Earth than the Pleiades star cluster discussed last month, and is huge – about 1.2 quadrillion miles across, that’s 1.2 followed by 14 zeros! Nebula is a Latin word meaning “cloud,” a term used generically for thousands of years to describe a fuzzy patch in the sky because observing equipment was non-existent or primitive. Since then, astronomers learned there are four types of nebula: emission, reflection, planetary, and dark. Although the classification might not seem important, it’s a statement about the composition of the nebula and a clue into its past. The Heart Nebula is an emission nebula. Looking at the picture of the Heart Nebula, you may be reminded of a calm and foggy cloud bank, but it’s just the opposite. It is a violent place, and some of the hottest stars known in the universe are inside. The nebula is filled with a variety of elements, primarily hydrogen, along with dust and other materials continually blasted off of the stars. The materials condense and get hotter and hotter and form new stars. At the center of the picture is a bright region. That’s a relatively young open star cluster (only about 1.5 million years old) named

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Melotte 15. Among its many stars are three bright and rare O-type stars, extremely hot blue-white supergiants. The stars are responsible for stellar winds and ultraviolet radiation that create the outer shell, wispy columns, cloudy areas, and dark lanes, and illuminate the hydrogen causing the nebula to glow like a red neon light. Where can you find the Heart Nebula? Well, despite our dark skies you’ll need a telescope to observe it, but it is in a familiar neighborhood – constellation Cassiopeia the Queen, that big “W” that appears high in the northwest during February. The heart is to the left of the “W.” Constellations were first documented by Greek astronomer Ptolemy in the 2nd century. He created a catalog of 48 constellations, and Cassiopeia was one of them. In mythology, Cassiopeia was the vain Queen of Ethiopia who liked to brag about her beauty. Eventually, she was sent to the sky by Poseidon as a punishment for her persistent boasting. Her constellation husband, King Cepheus, appears next to her. The “W” that represents Cassiopeia forms her throne of five stars, and is one of the few constellations that stays in the night sky all night long during the entire year. The left most star is named Segin, followed by Ruchbah, Gamma Cassiopeiae, Schedar, and Caph. The brightest is Schedar, a multi-star system containing an orange giant more than 40 times larger than our Sun. Next is Gamma

Cassiopeiae, and there is an interesting side story about it. Gamma Cassiopeiae is a variable star, meaning its brightness regularly changes as it rapidly spins and ejects material. The star was nicknamed “Navi” by astronaut Gus Grissom, and Navi was a prominent star on a star chart used by Apollo 11 astronauts for navigation purposes during their trip to the Moon. Turns out that Grissom’s middle name was Ivan, and “Navi” is Ivan spelled backward. Queen Cassiopeia’s kingdom is home to many notable objects, including 5 galaxies, 89 open star clusters, and a total of 13 nebulae. Hope you take some time to explore this rich area of the night sky. Wishing you clear skies! •

Join MVAS members at Barton-Brown Observatory Waterville Public Library Saturday, February 13 at 7pm for our free stargazing event. Visit mvas-ny.org for information.


The St. Regis tower is one Jack Freeman warned might only be seen in photos in the future.

2015 Was a Good Year for Fire Towers

Warning sign on the St. Regis fire tower is now a sign of the past.

Story and Photos by Gary VanRiper

The natural landscape is in constant flux in the Adirondack Park. So is the man-made infrastructure, including the status of the fire towers that have outlived their practical usefulness but still stand tall atop the region’s highest vantage points. A number of the towers have completely disappeared, having been dismantled over the years since many had fallen into serious disrepair or were identified as nonconforming structures and so were destined for a similar fate. In the Adirondack Mountain Club’s yet-to-be-updated guide Views from on High: Fire Tower Trails in the Adirondacks and Catskills by John P. Freeman, the towers on Mount Adams, Hurricane, Lyon, Spruce, and St. Regis were listed as among those not likely to last. That was in 2001. I still own my dog-eared copy of that book that I carried on many hikes with me during my quest to finish the Fire Tower Challenge.* I rushed to ascend four of those five mountains listed for possible removal, especially motivated by the caption for a picture of the St. Regis tower that offered the gloomy prediction, “soon to be found only

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in photos.� Perhaps also inspired by Freeman’s book, many who loved the history behind the fire towers and those who recognized that the magnificent views to the public could also disappear forever wanted to do something about it, and did. Now 15 years after the first printing of Views from on High, the trend toward tower extinction has not only stopped, but totally reversed, as those towers previously destined for removal have not only been saved, but are in the final states of being completely restored. The Friends of Hurricane Mountain was one successful group and in October of last year, the public once again had access to the superior view of the Hurricane Mountain wilderness.** Another resurrected tower benefiting from the work of private individuals and organizations with a passion to preserve these historic lookouts is the one on Mount Adams in the high peaks wilderness area that boasts one of the greatest views in the Adirondacks. The tower there is on my own list to revisit when autumn colors are once again dominating the grand landscape. The Adirondack High Peaks Forum was instrumental in fundraising and coordinating the efforts for that

2015 was a great year for fire towers in the Adirondacks, including this one on Lyon Mountain.

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As fire towers have disappeared, so have magnificent views for the public to enjoy. This view from Lyon Mountain – no longer threatened.

project. Not only has the tower on Spruce Mountain in the southern Adirondacks been spruced up, but so has the short approach to the summit with the establishment of a new trail.*** The tower on Lyon Mountain on the Chazy Highlands Wild Forest was restored in the summer of 2015 by the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) with help from the Student Conservation Association Adirondack Program, and the St. Regis tower located just a few miles form Paul Smiths College lives on thanks to the dedication of the Friends of St. Regis.**** 2015 was a good year for fire towers in the Adirondacks. Many towers that were destined to be dismantled will now be seen by generations to come, not only in photos, but – for those willing to make the ascent – on the mountain summits where they have stood for decades and several for over a century. • *The Fire Tower Challenge (description & brochure): www.adk-gfs.org/firetower.challenge.php For the background and status on the Fire Tower restoration projects, visit the sites below: **www.hurricanefiretower.org ***www.dec.ny.gov/press/103635.html **** www.friendsofstregis.org Gary VanRiper is an author, photographer, and pastor at the Camden Wesleyan Church. He has written 15 children’s books with his son, Justin. Find out more at: www.adirondackkids.com

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The Everyday Adventures of Mohawk Valley Girl

the Middleville Free Library I decided to feed my inner library geek recently with a trip to the Middleville Free Library. Middleville, NY, is a small village a few miles outside of Herkimer on Route 28. Route 28 is a nice country road with twists and hills. I drove by Herkimer Diamond Mines and Ace of Diamonds Mine. Those are a few places I’d like to visit again in the spring. Middleville Free Library is in the back of Corey Hall which also houses the town court and offices. It’s on the corner of Route 28 and Main Street, but the address is Main, so I foolishly turned right and kept driving. On the brighter side, it’s a scenic drive, into mountainous farmland. I enjoyed some terrific views before I found a place to turn around. On entering the library, I was immediately greeted by Sandra Zaffara, the library manager. She was happy to talk to me for a while, answer questions, and show me anything I wanted to see. The library is contained in one room, with shelves making areas for the children’s section, computers, and a small reading nook. There are two comfy-looking chairs in the reading nook. I’ll have to stop back and have a real reading break sometime. I admired the hardwood floors. I later learned that the room had originally housed a gymnasium. I suppose the floor used to have those lines and circles painted on it that gyms usually do, but I did not see any traces of them. When the library first moved into the Corey building, it was in the front where the judge’s quarters are now. A grant enabled the library board to remodel the gym. In 2015, the library celebrated its 100th birthday. Various honors and citations were on display. I was happy to look at a table commemorating the library’s 100 years. I sat down and read a few sheets telling the library’s history. There was also an article published in The Telegram in January 2015 (I’m a little embarrassed that I missed it) at the table. Sandra pointed out two birthday boards, which Joan Dibble donated to the library in memory of her father, George. These were two round wooden boards with holes around the perimeters. The cake went in the middle and the candles went in the holes. Names of people whose birth-

The Middleville Free Library is located in the back of the Corey Memorial Hall in MIddleville

Colorful comfy chairs beckon people to sit and read

Library manager Sandra Zaffara is ready to answer questions or assist patrons

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days were celebrated are etched into the boards. I was particularly fascinated by a display of scrapbooks in Universal Data Binders. A sign reads, “Historical Scrapbooks. A collection from Helen Smith Harrad. Donated by her family, for the enjoyment of the people of Middleville.” The oldest scrapbook began in 1934; the most recent ended in 1999. I picked up the one dated 1967 to 1971 and took a look. Apparently, Mrs. Harrad clipped out of the newspaper anything that interested her. Some of the clippings have dates handwritten on them, some not. I randomly opened to a clipping about the murder of Mrs. Donna Karla Hart. The clip was undated, but I believe it was in 1968. I turned the page and read that the killer was still at large Aug. 10. I was left hanging, as I could not find any more clips on the story. Sorry to leave you hanging, too! A few pages further on, I saw a picture of the Hot Box Dancers from a high school production of Guys and Dolls. I was a Hot Box Dancer when my high school did Guys and Dolls many years ago. I don’t think we got our picture in the paper. On a nearby shelf of local history books, I noted a couple of titles I own myself, such as Murder in the Adirondacks by Craig Brandon. I made a note of one called Saints and Sinners by George E. Walter that I’d like to read one day soon. However, I had to grab my library card and immediately check out Stable in the Sticks by Elwyn E. Swarthout. It’s about my beloved Ilion Little Theatre! Another bit of local history I may check out one day is a set of DVDs called The New Bridge series. Produced in the 1990s, the set features local residents telling their own stories. I was delighted with my trip to the Middleville Free Library. And I’m not done with my library odyssey yet. As Sandra pointed out, there are 43 libraries in the Mid-York system. •

Middleville Free Library

Open: Mon & Sat: 4-8pm; Tues, Thurs, Fri: 10am-12pm, 2-6pm, Sat: 10am-12pm, Closed Sun 1 S. Main St., Middleville, NY (315) 891-3655 www.midyorklib.org/middleville Cynthia M. Quackenbush, a.k.a. “Mohawk Valley Girl,” writes a daily blog about her everyday adventures in the Mohawk Valley. Follow her frugal fun at: mohawkvalleygirl.wordpress.com

The library has a pair of antique birthday boards that used to hold candles around a cake

There are a collection of historical scrapbooks at the Middleville Library, some dating back to 1934


MV scrapbook

day trip

Caleb Palmer, Joshua Karastury, and Alana Karastury stand next to the Shako:wi Cultural Center symbolic sign ready to learn about the heritage of the Oneida people. The Shako:wi Cultural Center was established in 1994 by the Oneida Nation. It is named Shako:wi (Oneida word meaning, “he gives”) for the late Nation Representative Richard Chrisjohn.

Story and photos by Melida Karastury

The beautiful white pine log building was erected by Oneida Nation members without a single nail. The Oneida Nation was the first Revolutionary War allies of the Americans. The exhibits at the center tell the story of that alliance. Director of Education & Cultural Outreach, Kandice Watson (Wolf Clan), describes the different headdresses the Haudenosaunee men wore and the significance of the configurations of feathers to identify each nation; Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Oneida, Mohawk, Tuscarora. Kandice describes the Oneida Nation flag in detail; The seal is red to recall the blood spilled before the union of the five original nations. The trunk of the white pine is white representing purity and its four roots spread to the four directions of Mother Earth. The green of the tree symbolizes the Oneida’s way of life, their government, and prosperity. Below the eagle (the symbol of the Iroquois nation) is “Hiawatha’s Belt,” the wampum, symbol of the creation of the Iroquois League around 1570. The color purple represents peace. The cultural center has an interactive Onyota’a:ka language board. Alana, Josh, and Caleb enjoy pressing the buttons. They listen to the phrase repeatedly and then try to pronounce it correctly. They are all determined to learn a phrase before we leave today. The Shakowi Cultural Center has a large collection of artwork and artifacts on display throughout the center such as Iroquois moccasins.

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Kandice Watson (Wolf Clan) describes various items children are invited to pick up, hold, and manipulate. The traditional items were used in day-to-day life, ceremony, and battle. Alana, Caleb, and Joshua venture up the beautiful white pine staircase to the second story to the Oneida Art of Basketry exhibit where they can also view displays of Iroquois people in traditional clothing, environments, and trades such as wood carving, basketmaking, weaving, etc.

There is a figure on display of an Iroquois basketmaker with her baby on a cradleboard. In the distance is Caleb Palmer sitting on a bench admiring some artwork. The Shako:wi Cultural Center provides free lectures, workshops, and tours tailored to meet the educational needs of local schools or community groups. If a visit to Shako:wi is not possible, arrangement can be made for the staff to come to your location. After our tour we are each given a very special gift of a “No Face Doll” to remind us of the Iroquois legend about vanity.

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Alana Karastury, Isaiah Palmer, and Melinda Karastury stand in front of the new Rockin’ Jump in New Hartford. Rockin’ Jump is a clean and fun environment where kids of all ages can jump, dive into pools of soft foam cubes, play trampoline dodge-ball, do flips and somersaults, or even indoor rock climb. Tip: Parents can fill out waiver forms beforehand online at: nht.rockinjump.com Alana and Isaiah are having tons of fun expending energy and exercising on a cold, wintry afternoon. Rockin’ Jump offers many special daily events for all ages.

We reserved a private room for a Rockin’ Birthday Party for Alana for her 11th birthday with friends. Alana says, “Rockin’ Jump is the best birthday party place ever!” There is also a cafe where you can order food, drinks, healthy snacks and coffee. Rockin’ Jump the Ultimate Trampoline Park 4515 Commercial Drive, New Hartford, NY (315) 377-2297 http://nht.rockinjump.com

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The Rockin’ Jump staff from left to right: (Front row) Nicole Gray, Mikaela Scalise, Krista Maury, Bachngoc Nguyen, Tianna Janicke (Back row) Jarrett Wojtowycz, Richard Gibbs, Kyle Brown, Manager, Evan Morris

We hop across the street to Tony’s Pizzeria and Deli, the perfect stop after an afternoon of jumping. Tony’s has a spacious dining area with booths or tables and chairs. Owner’s BJ and Cathy Evans established the business in November 2005. They use quality ingredients and have been voted #1 Best of the Best for Pizza & Wings, Tomato Pie, and Chicken Riggies! They offer pizza, wings, subs, appetizers, and many Italian specialties. Tony’s has a loyalty club and a birthday club (you receive a free pizza during your birthday month) as well as many daily specials! Alana, Isaiah, and Melinda order a pepperoni pizza and garlic knots and we enjoy the delicious food together. Tony’s Pizzeria and Deli Open daily: 10am-10pm 4462 Commercial Drive, New Hartford (315) 736-4549 www.tonyspizzeriaanddeli.com

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Artist Trish Craig of Clinton takes creativity seriously. She practices it, reads about it, researches it, and this month she will be teaching a creativity workshop at the Kirkland Art Center. Her home workspace is colorful and filled with assorted objects of inspiration as well a variety of books on creativity. A wall hanging—made up of crocheted doilies stretched on embroidery hoops she found at garage sales—accents the chartreuse-colored wall over her work table. She likes to rearrange her workspace ever other month or so. When her doily sculpture comes down, replaced by something new, it will end up for sale in the window of the Signature 81 shop in Clinton. Creativity has always been a part of Trish’s life and her motivation to create is intrinsic. She didn’t grow up in a particularly artistic family, but when it came time to go to college she knew she wanted to study art education. “Even if I didn’t become an art teacher,” she says, “I knew I would have to learn all the various mediums.” After graduating from Stockton State College, she worked as a teacher’s aide and tutor. She was a freelance artist on the side, creating architectural renderings of people’s homes around the Long Beach Island, NJ, area where she lived. “This customer wanted a

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Trish’s architectural renderings are very different from the dynamic collage art she now creates

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painting of both the front and back of their beach house,” she says, stopping to admire one of the beautiful homes as she flips through the pages of her extensive portfolio. In 1978, she began working summers in the art department of a weekly newspaper in Pomona, NJ. The creative energy of the publishing business was an exciting environment for Trish and she was soon involved in graphic design, creating ads, and eventually editorial work. Trish, her husband, Louis, and their two young children moved to Upstate New York in 1993 because of a job opportunity for her husband. They chose to settle in Clinton, but it wasn’t the village’s reputation as an art community that drew Trish to it. It was the sidewalks. “All I wanted was to live in a village with sidewalks,” she says of her simple demand, “so I could walk everywhere to get what I needed. She became a substitute teacher at the Clinton Elementary School when her kids attended there, and eventually worked at the Middle School and High School as her kids grew up. “I enjoyed having the same schedule as they did.” Although art continued to be a part of her life while raising her children, it wasn’t until after her son and daughter graduated high school that she discovered her love of collage. In 2012, she created a collage greeting card to celebrate the graduation of a friend’s daughter. “It started with a picture in a magazine that kind of looked like her and it grew from there,” she says. Even before she began collage, whenever Trish saw an image in a magazine that she liked, she would tear it out and keep it. “I just wanted to have it,” she admits. “I’ve always been ripping magazines.” Now she has files with hundreds of clippings sorted by color, theme, patterns, etc. The pieces have become her palette. Her work typically revolves around the female form, often without a face, “so it represents every woman,” she says. Trish says collage is very different from her early artwork painting houses. With architectural rendering, she says, “you generally know what the end product is going to look like. With collage, you don’t know what it’s going to be . . . the cutout pieces speak to you.” But it’s her years of art education and artistic sensibilities that guide her compositions. “It’s all about the edges and marrying them up to create a push and pull, dark against light, warm colors against cool colors.” What started out as a hobby making gifts for a couple of

Trish Craig’s collages often revolve around the holidays, like these pieces inspired by Valentine’s Day

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friends has turned into a creative passion. She now makes reproductions of her collages to mail to multiple people for different holidays. She also sells printed cards of her collages at Signature 81. “Sharing the art has been motivating to me,” she says. It has also been the catalyst for “Creative U,” a new workshop she developed for the Kirkland Art Center. She was looking for a way to help encourage people to become members of the KAC or renew their membership, so she is offering the class free to members. “I tried to think of a class I would like to take myself,” she says. The workshop involves creating visual journals. Participants will start by splashing color on blank pages of their journals and building on it. “There will be a little bit of collage, writing, painting . . . there is no wrong. It’s only for you and not for anyone else to see. It’s very freeing,” she says of the process. “I think everyone is creative,” Trish says. She hopes people will choose to join the KAC and take the “Creative U” workshop to try something fun and new in 2016. For her, she has no choice but to create art. She says asking her why is like asking a runner why they run. “If I don’t do it, I don’t feel right. It’s just something I need to do.” •

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Wednesdays: 3-5pm Session 1: February 3 – March 2 Session 2: March 9, March 23, March 30, April 6 Session 3: April 13, April 20, May 4, May 11 FREE for members / $65 non-members, $5 material fee due to instructor per project The Kirkland Art Center, 9 1/2 East Park Row, Clinton (315) 853-8871 www.kacny.org

Trish Craig finds the act of cutting out images from magazines therapeutic, an almost zen-like form of relaxation

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Iceman in the February Woods story and photos by Matt Perry A walk in the woods in February can be challenging, especially if we are talking about last February. Friends and relatives thought I was mad for venturing into the deep woods when the daytime temperatures were bottoming out at -10° F. and perhaps they were correct. My answer to them was that since the wildlife had no choice but to stay out in those conditions, the least I could do was take a few hours and see how they were coping. In this day and age, one might expect a person to put on scads of high-tech insulated gear in order to confront such arctic conditions. Yes, I should be donning the latest sporty garb, all alive with bright colors and slick designs that resemble nothing in nature; the sort of stuff you

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would expect a team of extreme mountaineers to wear. I don’t own many things that fall into that category, and so I simply dressed in layers. It was a “three pairs of pants” kind of day and nothing less than 10 shirts were called for, I’d say. The key is to leave no skin exposed to the elements. I had my best gloves on – meaning, the pair with the fewest holes. I wore another pair of cotton work gloves underneath them for added protection. I had my amorphous tan overcoat, a floppy hat, and I wrapped a black babushka-like thing over my neck and face. I also wore my mountaineering glasses, which look a little like welder’s goggles. I imagine that I resembled a Siberian peasant woman that does welding work in her spare time. Actually, the closest things I had to modern high-tech gear were my ski boots. They are sleek and have the appearance of something engineered to keep the feet of astronauts warm when they’re taking spacewalks in absolute zero but, ironically, they turned

out to be the Achilles heel (and toes) of my whole ensemble. My fingers were definitely having issues, but my toes were screaming at least for the first hour of being outside. Choosing to cross-country ski was the smartest move I could’ve made, since this kind of vigorous aerobic exercise couldn’t help but warm me up. It worked like a charm, too. Soon -10 degrees felt only like -2, and I couldn’t have been more pleased. My toes were still an issue, but at least they weren’t getting worse and I could still wiggle them. I started twitching them as rapidly as I could within the confined space of my futuristic boots. So, between toe-twitching and vigorous skiing, my feet veered out of the danger zone. My face wasn’t cold. But the ice buildup on my head scarf was of growing significance. The condensation from my breath had created some novel ice formations around my mouth and nose. My beard and mustache had chunks of white ice glomming onto them – effectively fusing them to my face scarf. It looked like my head had been in the freezer too long! I was freezer burned.

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Extremely low temperatures had little effect on crow behavior

the north as they do every morning just after dawn, regardless of weather conditions. To those people that dream of flying, imagine for one moment flying in harsh conditions like these and facing wind chills of -25°. It’s a credit to the amazing insulating property of feathers that birds are able tolerate temperatures so low. That day each wing beat from every bird was especially audible and was as crisp as the highest quality digital recording. I was convinced that I could hear each indiDespite the cold, Cardinals vidual flight feather began singing as it swept through the air. The sound of their wings highlighted for me the great effort it takes for birds to fly even in normal circumstances. Crows, unlike raptors, seldom stop flapping as they fly. In other words, they rarely glide or soar. Their flight is more like a marathon

Even my eye lashes had balls of ice clinging to them. On top of all that, for some reason I was experiencing an ice cream headache off and on. The iceman cometh, and it was me. The severe cold apparently had little effect on the behavior of the birds I encountered. None of them seemed to suffer from a buildup of ice similar to what I was experiencing and certainly none had to wiggle their toes to keep them from breaking off. I watched as a line of crows flew in from

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swim through the air. Soon more birds began to make their presence known. I heard a Blue Jay’s characteristic calls and without seeing them, I knew they were heading for the nature preserve’s feeding stations as they do every morning. They announced their arrival with shrill “keeer” calls and inter-

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Steve Falvo’s Easy Money Big Band ‘The Sweetheart Swing & Buffet Dinner Presented by The Stanley Saturday, February 6th - 7pm Dinner Buffet - 5:30pm

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42nd Street Presented by Broadway Utica Tuesday, February 9th - 7:30pm Wednesday, February 10th - 7:30pm

Feb. 26

I Love The 90’s Featuring Coolio, Salt ‘N’ Pepa,Tone Loc & Rob Base Presented by 97.9 &105.5 KISS-FM Friday, February 26th - 7pm

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United States Navy Band Concert Free & open to the public! Get your free tickets at The Stanley Box Office! Thursday, March 3rd - 7pm

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active click noises. One in the group mimicked the whistled shriek of a Red-tailed Hawk. The high fidelity sound waves made the call even more nuanced than usual and more like the real thing. Jays often give their “hawk” calls when first arriving at bird feeders. This seems to be their method of clearing the decks of other birds and squirrels so they can have the choice feeding areas all to them-

selves. This time it was the call of a Redtailed Hawk they were using, but other days they choose to give the mad cackling call of a Cooper’s Hawk. The jay’s hawk impressions served to chase some Mourning Doves away from the feeding stations. I could hear their wing beats’ characteristic twitter. It sounded like a rapid serious of a high-pitch squeaks. Five of them flew over me like guided projectiles through the sky. They were The Blue Jay mimicked the a blur of buff and call of a hawk brown. Again, I could only imagine what flying at 45 mph could be like when the temperature is -10°. The doves circled around and alighted one after the other on the high branches of a dead American Elm tree. There

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the morning sun hit them and extenuated the pink wash on their otherwise buff breasts. And then, amazingly, I started hearing bird song. A male Cardinal had begun singing his breeding song – long whistled “chew” notes ending with two-syllable “bir-dy…bir-dy…bir-dy” notes. Granted, we were well into February and the days were getting longer, but it was still -10°out there! The Cardinal wasn’t alone in his revelry; other birds began to chime in. A White-breasted Nuthatch gave its repetitive “yank, yank” calls and a Downy Woodpecker provided percussion with a quick rattle-like drumming. The great clarity of each sound was remarkable. It was a high fidelity morning for sure. Having stopped skiing to listen to the bird music was working against me. I was starting to lose feeling in my toes and fingers again. It was time to head back. At least I ended my journey with a little taste of spring amidst the repast of a most bitter February. •

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On the farm with Suzie The ladies of Jones Family Farm strike a pose with Khushi, their exchange student from India

Our Life, Through a Very Different Lens by Suzie Jones

Our family has been hosting an exchange student from India for about five months. A friend and member of a local Rotary club asked if we would be interested in opening our home to an exchange student and we really couldn’t say no. (Beware of taking phone calls from Rotarians—they are very persuasive, haha!) Khushi arrived in mid-August, during our version of a heat wave. She was bundled up in a sweater and jeans, apparently freezing in 92° weather. She was given a tour of the house and introduced to our cadre of cats. She was shown her room and then brought outside to meet the goats. Moving from a city of almost 5 million people to a goat farm outside of Herkimer, NY, had to be an enormous culture shock. Khushi was wide-eyed, excited and a little bit emotional, but took

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Peter enjoyed seeing their world from the perspective of their exchange student

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it all in stride. Thus began our adventure with a very sweet, very enthusiastic visitor from a very different part of the world. Both my husband and I had studied abroad when we were young, so hosting an exchange student seemed a nice way to “pay forward” that wonderful gesture of opening your home to a complete stranger. As farmers, we never seem to travel farther than Verona, so the opportunity was Upgraded PowerStar™ bring farming and efficiency to a NEW Boomer™ 46Dcomfort and 54D tractors feature the industry-leading EasyDrive™ a great way to open our own daughters’ eyestractors to a big,completely wide world. We also wanted them toBoth under- the 64-hp Series II T4.65 transmission. You’ll work with comfort and control than ever new level. PowerStar™ andgreater 75-hp T4.75 are stand that no matter where you are from, we are before in a compact tractor. EasyDrive™: The name says it all. built New Holland SMART all much more alike than you can ever imagine. with: What I hadn’t counted on was seeing our • Control your speed with one pedal and world through Khushi’s eyes, VisionView™ and how it would cab provides EasyDrive™ automatically adjusts to • XL COMFORT: provide me and my family a much-needed rematch load conditions industry-leading comfort, visibility and minder of how amazing the Mohawk Valley truly • Change direction convenience two wide-opening doors, a with the convenient is. Where she comes from,with the landscape is flat shuttle lever to and notflat-deck very green. Her reactions driving down climate system,left of steering wheel platform, a 10-vent • Standard cruise control and speeds up Vickerman Hill, walking the trail at Trenton Falls, CommandArc™ console, left-hand power to 18.6 mph to get jobs done fast or riding the scenic chairlift on McCauley Mounshuttle lever and more. NEW Boomer™ 46D and 54D tractors feature the industry-leading EasyDrive™ tain were absolutely heartwarming. Before mov• Choose 46- or 54-hp models with open Seriesplatform II transmission. work with greater comfort and control than ever ing • here, had never seenCOSTS: snow or leaves XSKhushi OPERATING Tier 4B engines withor the You’ll ROPS Best in Class before in a TM tractor. EasyDrive™: The name says it all. change color in fall. As the hillsides surrounding SuperSuite factory-installed cab advanced common rail technology delivercompact our farm went from lush green to gorgeous golds, precise fueling optimal andyour fuel • Control speed with one pedal and oranges, and reds, her innocent for reaction to seeing response EasyDrive™ automatically adjusts to efficiency with industry-leading, 600-hour these things for the very first time—things we all match load conditions take completely granted—was something I serviceforinterval. • Change direction with the convenient want everyone in the Mohawk Valley to hear: We shuttle lever to left of steering wheel New Holland to save you money, live •in Choose an amazing place. Clinton Tractor & Impl Co • Standard cruise control and speeds up Thedowntime same climate that weprotect all grumble the aboutenvironment. and to 18.6 mph to get jobs done fast 31 Meadow Street has had Khushi in rapt awe since she got off the • Choose 46- or 54-hp models with open plane. Crunching snow beneath her feet, seeing State Route 12B ROPS platform or the Best in Class vehicles drive on lake ice, “steam” rising from the TM SuperSuite factory-installed cab Clinton, NY 13323 West Canada Creek on a frigid morning and painting the surrounding trees a glistening white…it (315) 853-6151 is all new to her. The very first time she saw her www.clintontractor.net breath in cold air—like a puff of smoke from a cigarette—she quite literally jumped back at the sight. “What in the world was that?!?” was her imClinton Tractor & Impl Co mediate reaction. You’d think she had never seen © 2015 CNH Industrial America LLC. All rights reserved. New Holland Agriculture is a trademark registered in the United States and many other cou owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates. New Holland Construction is a trademark in the United States and man anything cooler in her life. And you know what? It countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates. 31 Meadow Street State Route 12B is! We just forget that sometimes. Of course, hosting a guest in one’s home for Clinton, NY 13323 an extended period isn’t always perfect sailing. (315) 853-6151 One of my greatest hurdles as host mom has been www.clintontractor.net Khushi’s vegetarian diet—no meat, no chicken, no fish. I had truly no clue how hard it would be, in essence, to convert my family and myself to a © 2015 CNH Industrial America LLC. All rights reserved. New Holland Agriculture is a trademark registered in the United States and many other countries, vegetarian diet. First, I had not anticipated how owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates. New Holland Construction is a trademark in the United States and many other © 2015 CNH Industrial America LLC. All rights reserved. New Holland Agriculture is a trademark registered in the United States and many other countries,

GREATER COMFORT.

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Clinton Tractor & Impl Co 31 Meadow Street State Route 12B Clinton, NY 13323 (315) 853-6151 www.clintontractor.net

countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates.

owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates. New Holland Construction is a trademark in the United States and many other countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates.


much I depend on meat as the “star protein.” When I normally think of what to have for supper, I always start with the meat (pork chops or chicken thighs, for example), then throw in a vegetable and maybe a starch. To think of a wholly vegetarian meal was nearly impossible: I did not know where to start. Second, I had not realized how much I was upsetting our family’s nutritional apple cart by simply “subtracting meat” from our diet. A vegetarian diet, to be properly balanced, is a heck of a lot more than just “missing meat.” My family and I began fantasizing about glistening hams, juicy burgers, and gnawing meat off of rib bones. Ads for all-you-can-eat prime rib began to sound downright cruel. I had clearly underestimated the nutritional value of meat and its importance in our diets…an invaluable reminder for a farmer that raises meat for a living. I also learned that it is supremely difficult for an exchange student in today’s world to truly immerse themselves in another culture. Given the ease with which we can all text, Facebook and Skype family and friends anywhere in the world, there’s precious little time to live in the moment or even have the opportunity to miss home. It’s what teenagers do, no matter what language they speak or religion they practice. When I studied abroad 25+ years ago, all I had was the post office and a very expensive calling plan. Talking on the phone was almost painful: the delay between speaking and being heard seemed an eternity. Talk about cutting the cord! But the sink-or-swim approach worked. Spending hours every day on Facebook and Instagram… well, you don’t need to buy a plane ticket or leave home to do that. The Rotary exchange program seeks to place their students with several host families over their year-long stay in the US, so Khushi has moved on to live with another family. It was a bittersweet day in our lives. My youngest, Margaret, fought back tears as she hugged Khushi in a death-like grip. My husband, Peter, was sad to see her go, but he is a practical man and is equally happy to not have to close the bathroom door anymore. As for me, I believe change is good. Moving ever forward and challenging ourselves to grow is, after all, what life is all about. Sometimes it takes seeing our world through someone else’s eyes to wake us up a bit and appreciate all that we have. •

Suzie Jones and her husband, Peter, own Jones Family Farm in Herkimer. Together, with their children, they produce specialty goat cheeses and gelato. Find them at local farmers’ markets and at: www.anotherjonesfamilyfarm.com

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Let’s Celebrate 2016:

the U.N. International Year of the Pulse By Denise A. Szarek

What is a pulse and why focus on them in 2016? Pulses are a specific food group that includes lentils, beans, peas, and chickpeas. Pulse crops are a critical part of the general food basket. Pulses are a vital source of plant-based proteins and amino acids for people around the globe and should be eaten as a part of a healthy diet to address obesity, as well as to prevent and help manage coronary conditions and cancer. In addition, pulses are leguminous plants that have nitrogen-fixing properties which can contribute to increasing soil fertility and have a positive impact on

the environment. In making this the International Year of the Pulse, the United Nations hopes to raise awareness about the protein power and healthy benefits of all kinds of dried beans and peas, boost their production, and trade and encourage newer and smarter uses throughout the food chain. You know when you have those “a-ha moments?” As I was pondering what to write about gardening this month in the Mohawk Valley—I had been thinking about all the dried beans I love to grow in my garden, when I Googled dried heirloom beans to start my research, up popped

“U.N. International Year of the Pulse.” A-ha! That’s when I knew what I wanted to share with you this month. Here in the Mohawk Valley, we have been growing shell beans (beans meant for drying) for hundreds of years as part of the “Three Sisters.” Many of the dried beans in the New England and Appalachian regions were grown by Native Americans in this manner.

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So let’s talk about the one pulse I love the most: heirloom dry beans. Every seed or, in this case bean, has a story—its agricultural history and its uses in the field but also at the table—its flavor, and the way it tastes differently from most other things that are available today. Sometimes they tell the story of a family. We’re letting these things die that actually have flavor, character, and stories. I believe that when people stop growing food, they stop telling stories. Each seed has a story--the story of its origin. How to dry beans: But when are beans ready to be harvested for dry use? Johnny’s Selected Seed Catalog says, “When at least 90 percent of leaves have fallen and pods are dry.” “Allow beans to dry on the vine,” says Fedco Seeds, “until pressing them with your fingernail leaves no indentation.” Everyone agrees: If wet or frosty weather threatens, pull the plants by firmly grasping the roots, and hang them to dry under cover. For me this is the best way to harvest beans—no one has time to do it a pod at a time. When they are fully dry, drag out a large tarp and “thresh” the seeds loose by beating the plants against the tarp. Not needing to get your aggression out? You can always sit on the tarp, and shell the beans into a bowl and leave the debris on the tarp. But remember to stash some seeds in your freezer for next year’s crop. Cooking with Dried Beans Beans are a mainstay in my diet since my diagnosis of diabetes in 2007, but it gets pretty boring eating the limited variety of beans available in the grocery store. So I’m thrilled to be able to find more and more heirloom varieties available for growing in my garden. Whatever kind I cook, I follow the same basic practice: Soak overnight (changing the water at least once) and then simmer in fresh water (covering the beans by about an inch), to which I add a small onion or two cut in half, a bay leaf, a couple of whole garlic cloves, and a carrot cut in big chunks. Each variety takes a different cooking time; some can take 40 minutes, while others could take hours. If I’m incorporating them into another dish that is going to cook longer—like chili—I undercook them and finish in the sauce. Cooked beans freeze well; I portion them into jars so I always have a nice selection. This is an item where a day of bulk cooking really pays off. •

comics!

Good Mother Stallard Soup By Denise Szarek

This is my basic go-to bean soup recipe. Good Mother Stallard beans have a wonderful nutty flavor and work well in this dish with the pancetta, but I use this recipe with any dried bean I have on hand. 4 slices pancetta, diced (or use bacon) 2 small potatoes, peeled and quartered 1 large onion, peeled and quartered 2 stalks celery, cut into chunks 2 cloves of garlic 6 cups cooked* Good Mother Stallard beans (any dried bean will work) 29 oz. chicken broth 1 can diced tomatoes C. chopped parsley Salt and pepper to taste In a large soup pot, cook pancetta over medium heat until browned. Meanwhile, in a food processor or blender, coarsely chop potatoes. Add onion, celery, and garlic; pulse until finely chopped. Add chopped vegetables to browned pancetta. Cook about 5 minutes, stirring frequently. Purée half the beans and ½ cup of water until smooth. Add puréed beans, diced tomatoes, remaining whole beans, and chicken broth to the vegetable pancetta mixture in the soup pot. Bring it to a boil; cover and simmer 30 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add parsley, salt, and pepper to taste. Serves 6-8.

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It’s Our Nature


mv food

the dessert booth By Jorge L. Hernández

Karen Booth sums up a community anecdote with the thought that it’s kind of nice when someone knows what they’re doing. When reminded that the same could be said of her and her cozy shop, The Dessert Booth in Clinton, she stops and blushes: “I hope so.” The specialty bakery and eat-in café features fresh homemade whole wheat and focaccia bread for its three sandwich choices, along with daily changing soup, quiche and salad offerings, and desserts. Its select menu on a chalkboard curries favor with a fan base that’s followed Karen from her original site on College Street to the booth’s current location at 3 Kirkland Avenue. After 13 years on the village’s main street, Karen says she needed a change. “I came back to the first location in Clinton I looked at when I wanted to start my business.” She says she didn’t set up business on Kirkland Avenue the first time because she was starting out without any equipment. This year, Karen says she was ready for a new challenge; she closed her original shop and re-opened the Dessert Booth at the new site last summer. “I wanted a smaller space.” The more intimate shop seats up to 15 people, and the owner-baker-cook says she can meet and greet customers more, and work the café with just one other employee. Karen’s goal is to offer mostly vegetarian, vegan and gluten-free food with no animal products, but she says that people won’t let go of her chicken salad sandwich. It’s still a best-seller, and that’s because Karen smokes her own chicken and serves the generous scoops on her renowned home-made bread that, as they say, can eat itself. The Dessert Booth’s other sandwiches include a hefty warm slab of a sharp grilled cheese and tomato sandwich Don’t be afraid, Karen’s torch served on homemade is for caramelizing the sugar focaccia, and a Reucrust on the dessert ben sandwich with tempeh instead of meat for the vegetarian crowd. The soups can range from puréed carrot ginger to curry sweet potato to a green pepper chili. “I don’t like to have the same thing all the time,” Karen says. “I research soup recipes all over the place and sometimes I combine two kinds to come up with

38

A customer at The Dessert Booth in Clinton remarks that Karen’s cinnistix should not be missed

The Dessert Booth’s chicken salad sandwich is a menu staple


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something different.” The breads and pastries also are made from scratch, she says, and her menu includes locally purchased produce and products. Karen, of New Hartford, says that cooking became a passion when she was 10 or 11 in her grandmother’s kitchen. “I was shy as a child and cookbooks became my friends. Cooking was something I could do on my own.” The budding cook and business owner spent 15 years working at Price Chopper, 13 of those as a cake decorator, before opening The Dessert Booth. The business also provides take-out, catering, and special orders for desserts. The shop supplies baked goods to area eateries as well, such as pastries for Utica’s Café Domenico and cookies—chocolate chip, peanut butter, ginger snaps—for the Fresh 8 in Clinton. Constantly experimenting with new vegan desserts, Karen exits the kitchen area brandishing a torch. “I came up with a vegan pumpkin brûlée. It’s got almond milk instead of cream,” she says. “And I want to see if you like it.” The torch, of course, was for caramelizing the sugar crust on the dessert. It needed nothing else. Someone at the Dessert Booth obviously knows what she’s doing. •

The Dessert Booth Open: Tues-Sat: 9am-5pm

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MV nature

One Year in the Life of the Beaver Colony by matt perry

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The more I study beavers, the more interesting they become. Beavers may not look like great movers and shakers with their gentle expressions and plump body shape, but they are consummate problem solvers and they perform on a grand scale. Certainly, no other creature in the animal kingdom is capable of engineering feats that compare with the works of the humble beaver. In the course of their lives, they face daunting challenges and when not interfered with by people, they are usually able to persevere. I’ve seen beavers confront raging flood waters that can wash away or erode human-built structures; I’ve seen them take down, dismantle, and transport gigantic trees. I’ve watched them create vast ponds and wetlands and build structures that would take a person with a bulldozer a week to accomplish. I can assure you that the phrases “eager beaver” and “busy as a beaver” are taken from reality, for beavers are always keen and very often busy with a project of consequence. By reshaping their environment to suit their own needs, they create a valuable habitat for myriad other species. In this article, I’m going to take you through a year in the life of our beaver colony. All of the observations were my own or came via remote camera setups. I don’t pretend to be a detached chronicler of wildlife behavior. I’ve known this colony

A beaver emerges from the ice hole

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for many years and in that time I’ve come to know and appreciate them as individuals endowed with their own unique personalities. In a way, the Spring Farm beavers are emissaries for their species – providing us with a splendid example of their handiwork and showing us the many benefits of coexisting with beavers. Early last JanuBeaver pond and dam in February ary, looking at the frozen beaver pond, you would think that nothing could possibly be living in such a desolate scene. A solid sheet of thick ice over stretched from bank to bank and from the meals erupt with dam to the pond’s inlet. No moving water some frequency. But somehow this arrangewas visible and there were no discernible ment works for them. signs of life. Beavers don’t hibernate, and The beavers’ range of mobility beneath beneath what looked like a snow drift at the ice is great, but it often doesn’t include a pond’s east bank was the beaver lodge. In- place to take a breath. If there is no air-filled side the lodge there is a main chamber where gap between the pond’s surface ice and the the colony’s nine beavers stayed holed up in water, then the only place to refill their lungs absolute darkness. Of course, I had no way would be inside the lodge. Still, beavers can of seeing them in there, but it wasn’t hard hold their breath for more than minutes when to imagine them nonchalantly grooming they need to, and given their food cache’s themselves and each other, conversing close proximity to the lodge, that’s more in muted whines and nibbling on bark. than enough time to get an errand done and The beavers weren’t just limited to return. Surprisingly, the air inside a beaver their space inside the lodge, they also lodge isn’t stale. The construction of the enjoyed full access to the water be- lodge allows for air exchange to take place neath the pond ice. A beaver will leave through relatively loose knit branches at the the lodge via an underwater exit (or top. A weatherizing coat of mud (now froplunge hole), swim to a nearby pile of zen) had been plastered up the sides of the stored branches (called a food cache), structure, but was not spread all the way to select a piece, and haul it back to the the top. This means that the top of the lodge lodge, all while remaining below stayed permeable. Even with deep snow the pond’s frozen surface. Back in- cover, the pyramidal design usually limits side the lodge, trying to keep one’s the snow buildup on the lodge’s peak. branch from hungry siblings is a The winter of 2014-15 was a frigid one in challenge and no doubt squabbles the Mohawk Valley, and for beaver colonies,

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hole in the ice. I recall Tippy, a 3-year old female, emerging from the ice one afternoon and gently taking a carrot from my hand. I occasionally hand-fed her back when she was a kit and she never forgot it. She knew that I was safe to approach. Even if she didn’t see me for months, she was still able to distinguish me from other people. Typically, beavers are more wary about emerging from an iced-over pond. This makes good sense since a quick escape from a predator might not be possible in deep snow. Also, the prosit meant remaining iced-in for the better part pect of becoming stranded and unable to get of three months. However, I didn’t have to go back under the ice and into the lodge is a poso long without seeing some of our colony tentially life-threatening situation. members. By breaking a hole in the ice near Last February was outrageously cold. In fact, it was the coldest month that I had expethe dam each day, I could be sure that at least one of them rienced in the 16 years I’ve been at the nature would take the opportunity to poke his head preserve. Of course, beavers are built for this up, take a breath and have a look at the out- weather. They have thick fur coats, layers of side world. I always brought a few aspen body fat and a nice insulated lodge that enboughs and apples with me and I placed them sures their comfort. Even when the outside in the rapidly refreezing water. If the beavers ambient temperature is below zero, the temdidn’t come to get them quickly, the food perature inside the lodge rarely, if ever, dips would freeze in the ice and become inacces- below freezing. I’m sure they stay nice and sible. This is why beavers make submerged cozy inside the lodge. However, as the beafood caches. As long as their food branches vers’ chronicler and one-man support team, I remain deep underwater, they will not freeze had a more difficult time of it. The surface ice that formed at the beaand the beavers can ver pond became incontinue drawing creasing thick and diffrom them. A beaver brings back willow ficult to cut holes into. Throughout the cuttings to the lodge Still, somehow I manmonths of January aged it and not a day and February, perwent by that I couldn’t sistent ice cover put something out for made gauging the them. Knowing that size of the beavers’ the pond ice was quite food cache imposthick, I didn’t think sible. Back in the anything of stepping fall they had aconto it when I needed cumulated a large to cut a hole. One aftercache, but with such a sizable colony it could be quickly depleted. noon, though, despite the low temperature, An unknown number of resident muskrats the ice gave way and one of my legs became were also helping to draw it down. I did my briefly submerged. Upon withdrawing it part and continued to bring apples and tree from the water, my boot and pant leg instantbranches that I would leave by a freshly-cut ly froze--interesting topics of discussion!

Julia strips the bark off a log

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Canada Geese often nest at the beaver ponds

After the first week of March, the ice at the beaver ponds finally began to break up. First, the ice melted around the dam and lodge and next above the stream channel. Throughout the winter, I had been seeing a few beaver heads poke up through the ice hole, but I had no idea if all nine family members had survived the winter. Finally with the breakup, all of them began to check in. Julia, the colony’s 8-year old matriarch, looked fine and healthy. The 3-year olds, Tippy and GenLo, also looked good, as did all six yearlings. The winter had been tough, but the beavers are built for this climate. They are not infallible, though. One of Tippy’s litter mates didn’t survive the previous winter. In late March, the main pond continued to ice over each day. However, the relatively thin ice was no impediment and the beavers reveled in their ability to bust it up. They broke it down by crawling on top of it; they whittled away at it with their teeth; they used their heads as torpedoes to bust up through it (which is a hilarious thing to see) and they battered it to pieces by heaving their backs into it like whales. They really make it look like fun. They continued taking the food I brought

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Muskrats share the habitat with beavers

down, but at this point they were also free to travel over land and forage for themselves. As far as I could tell, all of the edibles in the food cache had been consumed during the winter. It’s not always an easy thing to judge since previously peeled wood and branches from trees that are not preferred menu items are kept in the food cache in order to keep the whole mass anchored down. In May, the amount of work being done around the pond system noticeably increased. At this point, there were four full-sized bea-

ver ponds and about six small ponds and canals. GenLo, at the age of 3, was the new patriarch of the colony and was already a seasoned master builder. Along with his crew of apprentices, he began renovating the old dams as well as some of the dilapidated lodges located at the lower ponds. During this period, the original pond (named Morton’s Pond, for the colony’s co-founder) reached historic high levels. This resulted in a couple of small islands becoming submerged. It was a good thing the geese had not returned to nest on the islands since their nests would surely have been destroyed. The second pond, called Sarah’s Pond (named for the colony’s original matriarch), was also kept at high levels through the late spring period. GenLo, like the patriarchs that came before him, is a workaholic. He compulsively moves from task to task – from dam repair, to working on the lodge, and from tree cutting

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to collecting bedding for the lodge chambers. On June 4th, I finally saw one of the season’s new kits. On June 11th, a rainstorm brought major flooding to the nature preserve. Some of our trails, access roads, and bridges sustained damage. The beaver dams were inundated by the deluge, but all managed to remain intact and were a testament to GenLo’s workmanship. That’s no mean feat. For a structure built of branches and mud to withstand the force of a raging torrent is nothing less than remarkable. Beaver dams and even beaver lives can be lost during events like this. It’s happened before to this colony. Several years ago, Julia’s mate and three kits were lost in a catastrophic dam collapse. At that time, a 15-foot section of the dam gave

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A Maple Tree is cut through by the beavers

way and drained the entire pond in minutes. In the aftermath, the pond basin looked like a muddy meteor crater. The colony, minus its master builder, lacked the skills to tackle such a large repair job and they were compelled to move to another pond and lodge. By the final week of July, it was clear that the beavers were shifting their attention to May Pond and to Secret Pond. Water levels continued to grow at these ponds and their associated lodges were being repaired. The dam at Secret Pond looked very freshly built up. The beavers had used mud dredged up from the bottom of the pond. The mud was dark and it glistened in the afternoon sun. The dam, with its ragged edged rim, resem-

bled the maw of a volcano. but their number stayed at three. On July 28th, I saw one of the new kits By mid-August all the ponds were stayoutside of the lodge at Morton’s Pond. Ju- ing high except for Sarah’s Pond, which had lia had just come out and the kit decided begun a long slow drop. The exposure of to make a tentative exploration of the area a muddy rim around the inside edge of the right around the lodge. It dove for safety at pond proved fortuitous timing for shorebirds the slightest provocation. Anything from a that were on the first leg of their southward chipmunk trotting by on shore to the sight of migration. Mainly it was Solitary Sandpipers a muskrat scurrying over the dam would be and Spotted Sandpipers that were drawn in, enough to send it under water. After a minute but at least one Greater Yellowlegs stopped or so, when the kit noticed that none of the by to probe the mud for invertebrates with other family members were acting alarmed, its long bill. By mid-summer the beavers had it came back to the surface and resumed ex- stepped up their foraging activities and their ploring. By August 2nd, I had counted three new logging trails radiated out in many dinew beaver kits and they were getting braver rections from the ponds. The search for food by the day, especially when in the company trees was leading them far and wide. They of Julia or one of went into the meadow the yearlings. just east of Morton’s Two even samPond and started takJulia carries one of the new kits pled the apple ing Eastern Hemlock pieces floating saplings. They were in the water. In also heading up into the a few more days older woods around the they were eating small headwater ponds the fresh green and cutting young Sugleaves from popar Maples. A lot of their lar branches. We attention was directed kept watching at the grove of Pussy and waiting to Willows, where they find more kits, began “mining” sub-

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Eastern Kingbirds nest over the beaver pond

stantial numbers of saplings. It wasn’t food caching time quite yet, though. By late August, the beavers had become a bit more mysterious. They were coming out later in the day again and so I often missed them completely or only saw one or two. Also, I still wasn’t sure which lodge they were using. Was the whole colony using the same lodge or had it split up to use two or

more lodges? Come September 10th, I still wasn’t sure what was happening. Food trees and even bedding material were seen being carried in both directions over the ramp that leads between the first two ponds, but no food cache had been started yet – at least none that I could find. However, the very next week I could see a cache starting to take shape near the west bank of Secret Pond, and very close to that pond’s lodge. It was now clear where the beavers intended to spend the winter. Despite the great affinity they continued to show for Morton’s Pond, it would be Secret Pond that ultimately won the colony’s endorsement, but I soon began to wonder how unanimous this decision was. Many of the beavers were still spending much of their time at Morton’s Pond. What would happen when the ice locked it up? Would they all move to Secret Pond at the last minute? Only time would tell. At the end of September, the beavers were concentrating on their downstream provinces. By this point, GenLo had constructed his Panama Canal and a brand new Fifth Pond was added to their territorial map. The valley located downstream from Secret Pond is by no means rich in the beavers’ preferred food trees, but there are a few things marginally

palatable for them to harvest. Sure enough, they wasted little time in cutting saplings from the slopes of the small valley. They also stepped up the harvesting of young Eastern Hemlock trees from the field just east of the original ponds. The beavers had started taking hemlocks the previous year. At that time it surprised me since that tree species is not generally considered a good beaver food (although porcupines love them). Last year, I

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GenLo figures out how to hold two prizes speculated that they were only taking them as emergency food and/or as anchors to hold down the bulk of the food cache. However, the discovery of numerous peeled hemlock twigs told me they were in fact eating them. Right before Christmas, the beavers cut down a large hemlock sapling and just left it in the field. I dragged it over to the pond and put it against the dam. It was soon dubbed the beavers’ Christmas tree. Over the next

Sealing the dam with mud

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week they systematically dismantled that hemlock, eating some, and storing some. Now we know how beavers deal with their old Christmas trees. In mid-October, the beavers were taking some fairly sizable young trees. For the most part they were taking Sugar Maples, but they also felled an American Beech – or I should say, almost felled. The tree’s top branches got hung up in the branches of the neighboring trees. We dragged it down for them and left it at the water’s edge. I wasn’t sure if they’d take it since beech isn’t a great favorite, but they did. And later on, beech boughs were seen in the food cache. However, beavers are known to chew through trees just enough to destabilize them, and then when a strong wind storm comes through those “prepared” trees are poised to fall like manna from heaven. Beavers reap several advantages from this kind of windfall logging. It’s obviously an energy saver since they need not put in the many days of effort necessary to completely chew through the trunk of a large tree. At the same time they lower their own risk level, since they need not spend as much time working on land where they may be vulnerable to predators (primarily humans and domestic dogs). As winter continued to make its slow approach in December, I became concerned about how the colony was spread across several ponds. Though the continually growing food cache was at Secret Pond, it seemed that the beavers were inhabiting three different lodges at three differ-

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Beaver kit and adult

ent ponds. This isn’t really a problem until there’s a profound cold spell and the ponds become iced over. In that case beavers could find themselves stranded in a pond that has no food cache. Fortunately, the new kits seemed to mostly stay at Secret Pond, which is good news since they are the most vulnerable members of the colony. We headed into 2016 with a colony of 12 beavers. This is the largest it has been since 2007. The beaver’s food cache seems adequate to sustain them through the coming ice-over period. The beaver work force is in good shape and ready to take on the winter challenge. This coming spring the colony’s six yearlings will be eligible to leave in search of their own territories. Dispersal is often delayed within our colony, so we will see what happens. Please stay tuned. •

Matt Perry is Conservation Director and resident naturalist at Spring Farm CARES in Clinton. He manages a 260 acre nature preserve which is open for tours by appointment. Matt is also regional editor of “The Kingbird”, which is a quarterly publication put out by the New York State Ornithological Association. Matt writes a weekly blog about the nature preserve, which can be found at: talesfromthewilds.blogspot.com

Hundreds of Different Herbs & Spices!

Tom’s Natural Foods A big store in a small space. M-F 10-6, Sat 10-5 16 College St., Clinton (315) 853-6360

49


the mvl

Bouckville

restaurant

guide

More than your average bakery!

Fresh baked every day! Full dessert line: pies, cakes, breads, cheesecakes, cupcakes & more. Also serving breakfast sandwiches, lunch and dinner options including homemade soup, pizza, sandwiches, paninis, salads, and calzones. Free bakery samples every day!

barneveld

Customer appreciation cards with brownie points

6731 Rte. 20, Bouckville • (315) 893-8017 • Tues-Sun: 8am-8pm MVL Ad_Layout 1 7/8/15 3:05 PM Page 1

Cold Brook HOME STYLE COOKING

•Daily breakfast & luncheon specials •Ask about our family bowling special! 8125 Rt.12, Barneveld, NY (315) 896-2871 Open early everyday!

clinton

Life is Good at The Ohio Tavern!

1

Primo Pizza #

at the Kettle

315-381-3231

The Most Unique Upside Down Pizza You Ever Tasted!

20 Years of Pizza Making!

Try our Gourmet Pizzas!

Gluten-Free Pizza!

Try the Homemade Desserts at Ohio Tavern like Salted Carame Snickerdoodle Bundt Cake w/Caramel Sauce!

Weekday Specials Tues- 20” X-Large Cheese Pizza . . . . $9.95 (Toppings 2.25 ea, X-Cheese 2.95)

Wed-Small Cheese Pizza & 20 Wings . . . $14.95 Thurs- 2 Large Cheese Pizzas . . . . . $16.00 +Tax / Toppings Extra

Chicken Wing, Pizza and Wing Specials Primo Margarita, Sm. Cheese & 20 - 17.95 Philly Cheese Steak, Lg. Cheese & 25 - 22.95 Chicken Bacon Ranch, Lg. Cheese & 50 - 32.95 (plus tax. celery, blue cheese, toppings extra) Our Unique Upside Down Pizza! Clinton & local delivery 4:30-9pm

Tues-Thurs: 11am-9pm, Fri & Sat: 11am-10pm, Sun: 1pm-8pm

7756 State Route 5, Clinton Located inside Spaghetti Kettle www.primopizza1.com 50

2755 State Rt 8, Cold Brook, NY 13324 • 826-5050 Mon. 4 - 9pm • Tues. Closed • Wed. - Sun. 12 Noon - 9pm Great Food • Great Spirits • Great Times

Where good friends Meet to Eat! Enjoy breakfast or a quick lunch!

8170 Seneca Tpke., Clinton (315) 732-3631 Mon-Fri 6am-2pm, Sat & Sun 6am-1pm


forestport

NOW OPEN!

WIGWAM TAVERN NY 28, Forestport 315-392-4811

The Historic

RESTAURANT

Find/Friend us on Facebook and check out our daily specials and upcoming events!

Frankfort

The Grill Kitlas Restaurant

at

Accommodating Parties up to 65 Owned & Operated by the Call for selections same family since 1939 and pricing: New American Pub Dinner Menu including 16 oz. NY Strip Steak, Salad, & Side: Only $16.95! House Desserts Reasonable Prices

Lunch: Mon-Fri: 11:30-2, Dinner: Mon-Sat: 4:30-9, Party accommodations up to 65 Rte 5S, Turner St. Exit (1/4 mi. east of Pitcher St. Post Office) (315) 732-9616

Prime Rib • Hand Cut Steaks • Seafood • Poultry • Pasta • Roast Dinners

Entrée’ Salad • Specialty Burgers Petite Dinners • Great Sandwiches Homemade Soups and Desserts

Now Open Tues, Wed, Thurs: 4-9pm, Fri & Sat 11am-10pm, Sun 12-8pm, Closed Mon

10626 North Lake Rd., Forestport (315) 392-6607 www.buffaloheadrestaurant.com

Herkimer

Celebrating 30 Years! Serving Breakfast and Lunch M-F: 7am-2:30pm FREE WI-FI

Let me create a culinary experience for you! “At home” dinners our specialty!

by Chef Dominick Scalise

(315) 866-7669 122 W. Albany St., Herkimer

Serving healthy and delicious salads, grilled sandwiches, and homemade soups.

Heidelberg Bread & Café

3056 Rte 28 N., Herkimer (315) 866-0999

Mon-Sat: 7am-6pm, Sun: 7am-5pm Find us on Facebook!

Baking all natural breads – available throughout New York State


little falls

Mon-Fri 7am-3pm, Sat & Sun 7-4

Known throughout The Valley for hearty homemade soups, traditional Italian and zesty Mexican dishes!

piccolo cafe 823-3290

Breakfast, Lunch, Homemade Soups & Sandwiches and our delicious Desserts Including our Famous Cream Puffs!

Check out our tempting specials on facebook every week!

Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner Wednesday-Sunday 365 Canal Place, Little Falls www.piccolo-cafe.com

S. Ann St., Canal Place, Little Falls

Great food served in a relaxing atmosphere.

marcy

9663 River Rd., Marcy

Breakfast Served All Day!

27 draft beers on tap featuring many NY state craft beers.

518 East Main Street, Little Falls (315) 508-5156

Open Mon-Sat: 4pm-10pm facebook.com/CopperMooseAleHouse

new hartford

Fresh Haddock • Giambotta Mushroom Stew • Chicken & Biscuits Meatloaf Goulash & More!

Hard Ice Cream Available All Year! Take Out & Delivery!

797-7709

Mon.-Fri. 6am-8pm, Sat. 6am-1pm, Sun. 7am-7pm, Ice Cream 11-9 Daily

Homemade comfort foods Full menu available til 2am!

21 beers on tap, specializing in NY State craft beers!

Voted “Best of the Best” for fish frys & wings!

10 Clinton Rd., New Hartford

Mon-Sat: 10am-2am, Sun: 12pm-2am www.killabrewsaloon.com

Looking for a fast and healthy lunch? The Phoenician has a fresh buffet every weekday!

PR Eh So Te AnUi Rc Ai aN nT

Enjoy authentic Lebanese Cuisine

Full Buffet & Salad Bar served Mon-Fri 11:30-2:30 Wednesday Night Buffet 4:30-8:30 Serving Lunch & Dinner Mon-Sat Full Menu Available Mon-Thurs 11:30-9pm, Fri & Sat 11:30-10pm

623 French Road New Hartford (315) 733-2709 52 52


new hartford

Elegant Catering

“We are your home town pizzeria!”

past 5 years! Voted #1 pizza for

Call us for “Big Game” specials!

Served throughout the Upstate region!

Parties, picnics, high tea, or an intimate dinner for two at home!

Daily lunch and dinner take-out Mon-Fri Call 768-7037 8411 Seneca Turnpike, New Hartford

And visit our NEW cafe at 116 Business Park Dr., Utica!

(315) 736-4549 • Open 7 days a week • 4462 Commercial Dr., New Hartford www.tonyspizzeriaanddeli.com

Take out M-F: 8am-3pm Visit us on facebook for daily specials

Locally Owned & Operated

1700 North James St., Rome (315) 336-1111 Breakfast & Lunch daily 7am-3pm

Catering Available • Homemade Desserts Every Day

2634 Genesee St., South Utica (315) 724-6795 Breakfast & Lunch daily 7am-3pm Dinner Wed - Sat 5pm-10pm

4784 Commercial Dr., New Hartford (315) 736-1363 Breakfast & Lunch daily 7am-3pm

www.raspberriescafeutica.com • Facebook: Raspberries Rome / Raspberries Utica • Kids Menu Available


newport

Oneida/ROME

Main Street Gift Shoppe

Newport’s Best Kept Secret for Primitive Gifts!

Specializing in the area’s only coal-fired pizza oven!

Barn Stars, Candles, Folk Art, Textiles, Olde Century Colors Paint, Lighting, Signs, Furniture and more! Proudly offering many gifts made in the USA! 7431 Main St Rt. 28 Newport, NY

OPEN: Wed thru Sat 11:30am til 8pm • 315 845-8835

www.mainstreetristorante.com Check out our popular Ristorante on site!

Boyz Italy from

Customizable catering for any size event!

Perfect atmosphere for a romantic dinner or family event.

Chesterfield’s

Tuscan Oven

Italian-American Cuisine Restaurant & Pizzeria Family-owned and operated for 24 years!

315-334-4832

Dinners: Mon-Sat 3:30PM-9PM, Sun 1-7PM Lunch: Wed, Thurs, Fri Open at 11:30AM

Open 7 Days a Week 11-9 www.TheBoyzfromItaly.com

212 Main St., Oneida • 315-363-6510

262 W. Dominick St., Rome

2184 Glenwood Plaza, Oneida • (315) 361-9900

Mon-Thurs: 11:30am-9pm, Fri: 11:30am-10pm, Sat: 12-10pm, Sun: 12-8pm

Daily lunch specials Mon-Sat

A Friendly, Fun, Family Establishment! Enjoy great food & entertainment! MVL Ad Color_Layout 1 1/11/16 2:34 PM Page 1

8752 Turin Rd., Rome • 339-GOLF (4653) • Open 7 Days a Week

FRESH • HEALTHY • FAST BALLISTER’S

Lakeview Restaurant and Bar

Dine-In or Take Out

GOURMET SANDWICHES

SOUPS • SIDE SALADS • BREAKFAST SANDWICHES COOKIES • DESSERTS • COFFEE

Winter Hours • Monday - Saturday 10-4

Open to the Public! ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED

www.ballistersbistro.com 307 N. James St., Rome • 315-281-8889 PH 54

Open Year Round

1017 Golf Course Lane, Oneida • Only 4 miles off Rte 5 in Sherrill • 315-361-6113

Tues: 11:30am-2:30pm, Wed-Fri: 11:30am-9pm, Sat: 4-9pm • www.lakeviewrestaurantandbar.com

45


Try our wood fired brick oven pizzas! Weekend ck H Haddcoials Spe

Weekend Specials Prime Rib Every Saturday Night!

Homemade Pasta and Sauce H

Enjoy a pre-dinner drink at our new full bar addition-

We specialize in classic homemade Italian, fresh Italian-American and gluten free. All of our recipes and cooking techniques stem from gener-

Black Dog Saloon!

t& Take Oeury! Deliv

A Family Tradition

DiCastro’s

ations of family memories in the kitchen, where the love of food begins. After all, “life is too short not to enjoy good wine and great food!”

the

BRICK OVEN

229 E. Dominick St., Rome 315-533-5447

Call 336-0671

Open Tuesday - Saturday 11am - 10pm Sunday 12pm - 9pm

615 Erie Blvd. W., Rome

www.thevignetorome.com Facebook: The Vigneto Restaurant

Open M-Thurs 11-9, Fri & Sat 11-10, Sun 4-9

sauquoit Valley/Cassville

sharon springs

Put on your fat pants and head to Wendy’s Diner!

Innovative food made with local & organic ingredients whenever possible, and exceptional service and warm atmosphere.

Wendy’s Diner

Mon-Thurs 11-3, Fri-Sun 8-3 195 Main St., Sharon Springs (518) 284-2575 www.blackcat-ny.com

1717 Route 8, Cassville (315) 839-5000

M-Thurs 6am-2pm, Fri 6am-8pm, Sat 6am-1pm, Sun 6am-12(breakfast only)

salisbury

The Country Store with More!

www.countrystoreny.com

‘tis the season!

Snacks, Beer, Pizza, Wings, Subs, Gas, Diesel, Non-Ethanol Gas, Gifts and much, much more!

2114 Rte 29, Salisbury 315-429-3224 Open 7 Days a Week 55


utica

westmoreland

Shop Our Ready To Cook Meals!

www.knucklheadsbrewhouse.com

Knuckleheads BREW HOUSE

Also try Our Starters, Sauces, Pasta & other local products!

Plus Our Handmade Cookies & “Pusties” Always Fresh, Never Frozen! Greens

Homestyle American Fare From Wings to Prime Rib!

Eggplant “Parm”

Check out our daily specials including Friday fish fry and Saturday wood smoked prime rib! Happy hour every day 4-7pm featuring craft beers and a full bar.

Contact us for all of your catering needs!

(315) 896-2173 • Open M-F 8am-4pm • www.sammyandanniefoods.com

NEW Breakfast, Lunch, Deliveries, Take- “Grab-and-Go!” 1st Floor

Out & Catering!

8am-2pm

Check out our weekly specials on facebook and at www.rososcafe.com

Creaciones del Caribe

Serving lunch and dinner 7 days a week. Open til 2am 7362 East Main Street, Westmoreland (315) 853-1351

(Creations of the Caribbean)

Fresh & all natural ingredients Luisa Martinez - chef

1315 Genesee Street, Utica

(315) 864-3057 Open 7 days a week: 9am-11pm

Yorkville

KARAM’S Middle Eastern Bakery & Restaurant

Specializing in Weddings & Banquets

EXCEPTIONAL CUISINE • COMPETITIVE PRICING PROFESSIONAL WAIT STAFF ACCOMMODATIONS UP TO 200 GUESTS

Traditional Lebanese fare for breakfast & lunch! Open: Mon-Fri 9-2 185 Genesee St 2nd Floor, Utica

(315) 735-7676

WEDDING RECEPTIONS • REHEARSAL DINNERS • BRIDAL & BABY SHOWERS FAMILY REUNIONS • BUSINESS MEETINGS • ALL OCCASION PARTIES

Friday night dinners featuring our famous fresh haddock fish fry!

Middle Eastern Specials and Groceries Pita and Flat Bread • Spinach & Meat Pies • Baklawa

Full menu available - Serving every Friday 4-8:30

16 Erie St. Yorkville, NY 13495 (315) 736-9359

Tues - Fri: 9am -5pm, Sat: 9am - 3pm

www.clubmonarch.net

(315) 736-1728 137 Campbell Ave, Yorkville www.karamsbakery.com

56


mv living

antique shopping guide Businesses Est. 1998 - Mary T. Gearhart, sole proprietor

BlackCat

Attic Addicts The Queen’s Closet

Pristine, Practical, and Priced Right!

Specializing in estate sales, large and small.

ANTIQUES

We’re letting the cat out of the bag!

Consignment at its Finest!

Conducted with respect and dignity. We take the pressure out of estate liquidation, moving, or downsizing.

Mon-Fri: 10am-5pm Sat: 10:30am-3pm

Call for a consultation:

New consignment by appointment only

(315) 736-9160

Black Cat Antiques is the destination for Antique Furnishings, Vintage Clothing, Jewelry, Accessories, and Primitive Handmade Gifts!

Clothing Jewelry Household Items Furniture

22 Oriskany Blvd., Yorkville (315) 736-9160 www.thequeenclosetatticaddicts.com

Closed Jan. 19th- March 31st

10242 Route 12N, Remsen, NY 13438

(315) 831-8644 • Open Daily 10-5 www.backofthebarnantiques.com

14 East Main St. Earlville (315) 691-5721

Open Tues-Fri: 9-4, Sat: 9-2, Closed Sun & Mon

Foothills

Mercantile Winter: Open by Request

The BIG RED BARN filled with antiques & vintage pieces, collectibles, glassware, furniture, accessories. New items arriving daily. Visit our gift shop!

Over 30 Vendors!

Open Every Day 10am-5:30pm • Closed Tuesdays • 8124 Route 12, Barneveld (315) 896-2681

Little Falls

Antique Center More than 50 vendors on 2 floors! Canal Place, Little Falls Open Every Day 10-5 315-823-4309 www.littlefallsantiquecenter.com 48

59 57


JOIN US FOR MAM’s

Over 160 Vendor booths and display cases!

VALENTINE’S DAY PARTY SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 13TH!

Expect Vendor Sales discounts from 10 to 25%! DJ and FREE Refreshments!

100 E. Main St., Mohawk (Thruway Exit 30)

(315) 219-5044 www.mohawkantiquesmall.com

MOHAWK ANTIQUES MALL

NEWPORT MARKETPLACE Top Notch Garden Center 7583 Main St., Newport, NY (315) 845-8822

OVER 50 VENDORS! NEW ITEMS ARRIVING DAILY! Antiques • Vintage • Re-Purposed Handcrafted Items • Unique Gifts • Honey • Cheese • Muck Boots • Garden Accessories Holistic & Local Food Store • Grass Fed Beef, Lamb & Pork

Mon, Wed-Sat: 10-5, Sun: 11:30-4:30 Closed Tuesdays

Blanket Chest at the Newport Marketplace. Do you know the difference between a blanket chest and a hope chest?

FOR THOSE WHO CRAVE THE UNIQUE! Open 7 Days • Visit us on Facebook!

ESTATE & HOUSE SALES APPRAISALS ALWAYS BUYING

The Online Exchange

Tired of Winter? Come Join Us for our CABIN FEVER SALE!

We Can Help You Buy, Sell, and Trade Globally! Now an FFL dealer! 6338 St. Rt. 167, Dolgeville

(315) 429-5111

www.TheOnlineExchange.Net Registered user of ebay

Utica’s Bagg’s Hotel, early 1900s souvenir at The Potting Shed

Fri & Sat • February 26 & 27 • 10-5

40% OFF EVERYTHING (Except Coins and Gold)

THE POTTING SHED Outlet Center

Vintage collectibles, antiques, and new items! Tarps, Adirondack bears, wolves, and furniture. Signs, vinyl records, musical instruments, NASCAR items, costume jewelry, Man Cave items and so much more!

8587 Turin Road, Rome • (315) 886-9978 • OPEN 10-4 58

Now on facebook!

ANTIQUES

ALL U.S. COINS WANTED

ALSO BUYING YOUR UNWANTED OR BROKEN JEWELRY Inventory and our Estate Sale Schedule online: www.thepottingshedantiques.com

315-794-1094

Don & Nancy Hartman, 52 Oriskany Blvd., Whitesboro (Next to Kinney’s)


! d n SHOWCASE u o F Antiques of CNY A great new location!

uuuuuuuuuuu u u u u u u u u u u u 375 Canal Place, Little falls u u u u (315) 823-1177 u u 75 Dealers in: u u u u Quality Antiques, u u Primitives, Furniture, u u u u Art and Jewelry u u u u Open 7 days 10-5 u u www.showcaseantiquesofcny.com u uuuuuuuuuuu

214 Oriskany Blvd, Suite 4 Whitesboro, NY

TREASURES

LOST & FOUND CONSIGNMENT/RESALE SHOP

Village Basement CONSIGNMENT SHOP Large selection of preloved clothing, furniture and accessories at fantastic prices! (315) 733-4784

Open Wed - Fri: 11-5; Sat: 10-3

70 Genesee Street, New Hartford

337 Genesee St., Utica (315) 738-1333

Call for consignment terms.

www.vintagefurn.com

A Multi Dealer Shop

Featuring 60 Dealers displaying a diverse array of antiques and collectibles.

315-337-3509 Open Daily 10-5, Closed Tuesdays

Scratch off a heart from our “VALENTINE GAME BOARD” to reveal a DISCOUNT % OFF your GIFT purchase over $20 thru Frebruary 14th!

Come Spend the Day With Us! Vintage items, consignment & décor Daina: 272-7700, Danielle: 941-0965

Route 233 Westmoreland, NY 1/4 mile North of NYS Thruway Exit 32 www.westmorelandantiquecenter.com

Open Tues-Fri: 10-6, Sat: 10-4

This PYREX “Stems” pattern at Showcase Antiques was produced by Corning Glass Works, Corning, NY, as a promo in 1961 and sold for approximatley $1.99. Today this rare pattern is sought after by collectors and is valued at $225!

The White House

ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES

The Window King and Eleanor welcome you to The White House featuring rare and unusual antiques from our years of collecting!

9200 Rt. 365, Holland Patent, NY 1 mile west of Holland Patent

ernon Variety Shoppes

Antique & Variety Shoppes

5349 Route 5, Vernon (315) 829-2105 Open 10-5 every day

Located 4 miles North of Sylvan Beach

Weeden’ s Mini Mall

100 Shops Located under One Roof

You’ll find curious farm tools at Vernon Variety Shops.

8056 Route 13, Blossvale (315) 245-0458 Open 10-5 every day 59


Herkimer county historical society

the jordanville library

By Susan Perkins, Town of Manheim Historian

The Jordanville Library was first located in the District 5 School Building in the Town of Warren. Mrs. Freeman (Elizabeth) Bell had distributed a collection of books from her home. In 1894, the then School Commissioner, Ellis Elwood, was able to obtain educational funds amounting to $200 to purchase books. These were cataloged and later taken to the school. It was “Bess,” as she was known to Jordanville folks, and Elwood who organized efforts that resulted in a library at the school and the granting of the charter in 1899. Bess Bell held reading in high esteem and actively demonstrated that everyone else should view it in the same light. Considering such devotion, it is not surprising that when Bess Bell learned that the Robinsons of Henderson House were planning to give the community a memorial to Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Robinson that she was ready with a plan. According to records on file in the Town of Warren Historical Room at the library, Dr. James Henderson, a Scotsman, arrived in New York about 1708. In 1739 the good doctor received a grant of 16,000 acres for services rendered at Greenwich Hospital in England. That land grant comprised much of what is now Herkimer County. Dr. Henderson named his New York country estate Greenwich for his former hospital. The area that estate occupied is now known as Greenwich Village. Dr. Henderson had one son and six daughters. The son died suddenly at the age of 20. One of the six daughters married Captain Peter Corne. From the Corne marriage came three daughters. One named Margaret married George Douglas. It is said that Margaret Douglas was the first of the Henderson heirs to take a real interest in the Henderson lands in the Mohawk Valley. She saw fit to build a 24-room wooden structure referred to as the Cottage. It still stands on the property. Born to Margaret and George Douglas were five children: Margaret in 1787, Harriet 1790, George 1793, William 1795, and Elizabeth Mary 1799. It was Harriet, the red-haired social lioness of the 1800s who in 1833 fulfilled her dream – the building of a “Castle” on the Henderson property. After her death, Aunt Harriet became a renowned poltergeist of the Mohawk Valley. Historical accounts indicate that she may have been the strongest willed of her family. She made plans that she forced, by one means or another, to be carried out. It is thought that the “frustration of her spir-

Above: President Theodore Roosevelt on the steps of the Jordanville Library dedication in 1908 Douglas Robinson, husband of Corinne Roosevelt

Corinne Roosevelt Robinson, sister of President Theodore Roosevelt

Aerial view of Gelston Castle

Modular, Doublewide and Singlewide Homes! Whether you prefer a simple private gathering, full traditional funeral, Veteran’s service, cremation, or a non-traditional service, we provide the very best in personal and professional services and have pricing for everyone’s budget.

“The Future of Flooring”

Carpet • Vinyl • Ceramic Hardwood • Laminate FREE ESTIMATES!

Tues.- Fri. 9-4:30, Sat. 9-1

709 E. Dominick St. Rome (315) 337-2430 www.DDCarpetsofRome.com

60

Leisure Village Homes

4225 State Route 69 • Phone: 337-0666 Fax: 337-2400 • www.lvihomes.com Business Hours: M-F 9am-5pm, Sat. 9am-12pm, Other Times by Appt.

(315) 866-1500 or (518) 568-7040 www.vincenteneafuneralservice.com vincentenea@yahoo.com

527 East Albany St., Herkimer 20 Bridge St., St. Johnsville


A primitive mix of new and old purposeful clutter, handmades including wreaths, dolls, ornies, grubby prims, cabinets, framed prints, bird houses, finds, signs, seasonal wares & one of a kinds! 6170 Valley Mills St., Munnsville (315) 495-2470 Tue - Sat: 10-5, Sun: 11-4

Open Mon.-Fri. 8-5pm Saturday 8-2pm Closed Sunday

Quality Work at Reasonable Prices Tour our outdoor display anytime and explore our large selection of monuments, vases, benches, mausoleums, portraits and pet markers. We also offer cemetery lettering services, restoration, cleaning, maintenance, and veteran marker attachments. Call for a free at home consultation available at-need or pre-need. Multiple marker design options available. Markers are produced in our Clinton facility by local workers.

Burdick & Enea

M E M O R I A L S 56 Utica St. Clinton (315) 853-5444 4693 State Route 5, Herkimer Mon. - Fri., 9-5pm, Sat., 9-2pm www.dwmonuments.com

61


it” may have been caused by the change in her plan for burial. She had built very near the Henderson House an enormous ornate stone sarcophagus and there she planned to remain, at least in body. Her plans were foiled. She was buried in New York City. The sarcophagus became a watering trough for horses, and so the restlessness of her spirit. While Harriet’s generation seemed to do everything with a vengeance, one thing they generally failed to do was marry and have children. Harriet’s marriage to Count Cruger lasted only long enough to result in Henderson House being called Cruger Mansion for a brief period its history. Margaret and William died unmarried and George left no children. It was Elizabeth Mary who married James Monroe, nephew to President Monroe, and it was their daughter Frances who married Douglas Robinson and inherited Henderson House. It is Fannie Monroe Robinson, referred to by local folks as the “Old Madam,” whose picture hangs to the left of the library fireplace. Her husband’s picture is to the right. It was her son Douglas and his wife, Corrine Roosevelt Robinson, who were urged by Bess Bell to build a library in memory of his parents. They, along with his sister did just that. The Hyde family had purchased the land from the Henderson Patent. A small parcel was given to Freeman Hyde Bell. The Robinsons paid for the building of the library on that land. Folks came from miles around to its dedication on Aug. 26, 1908. Notables present included then Secretary of State Elihu Root and the Honorable James E. Sherman. The then highest ranking man in the United States gave the dedication address, President Theodore Roosevelt, brother of Corinne Robinson. He came by train with his wife, Edith, daughter Ethel and son Kermit. They were met in South Columbia by the Henderson “Tally-Ho,” a high wagon, and brought to the library. As one reviews the words spoken by the president it is evident that a “quality of life” was high on “Teddy’s” priority list. He spent time eluding

to the role all women, mothers, wives, and sisters played in the lives of families. He cautioned against expecting them to carry more than their share of work and responsibility. Douglas Robinson in his address to the crowd present spoke about the need for better roads and more and better advertising for Herkimer County farm products. Most significant for the future of the library were these, his words, directly quoted: “Mr. Crim, I herewith hand you as president of the Board of Trustees, the deed to the library and all its contents, from my sister, Mrs. Whitmore, Mrs. Robinson and myself conveying to you, representing the board, all the interest we have in the property. From this time we have no further financial interest in it except as subscribers, as others do, to the expenses year by year. From this time it becomes a public library supported by public subscription and helped by the public interest in its work.” The library building has remained essentially unchanged since its dedication. The once wooden porch is now concrete with the original wooden Doric columns. The large main room once provided a place for Election Day lunches and suppers, dances, box socials, card parties, sewing classes, and meetings of various groups and organizations. Many of these events were fundraisers to help with upkeep and support of the library. For years, the Central School Band played an annual concert, while library Friends served strawberries and ice cream. • Source: History of the Jordanville Library’s Web site.

Sue Perkins is the Executive Director of the Herkimer County Historical Society and historian for the town of Manheim.

Mills Electrical Supply Over 50 Years in Business Your Headquarters for All Your Electrical & Lighting Needs! • Electrical Supplies • Indoor/Outdoor Lighting • Commerical and Residential • New Contractors Welcome

315-337-5760 Open M-F 7-5 739 Erie Blvd West, Rome www.millselectricalsupply.net 62


Peg’s Mom and Dad, Betty and Roland Spencer in 1943

CHAPTER 17

Our garden gate in winter through my wild woven archway

TALES FROM

SHAWANGUNK Shawangunk nature preserve, cold brook by Peggy Spencer Behrendt In 1974, Tim and Peggy Spencer Behrendt set off on an adventure. They began a new life in the woods of Cold Brook, NY, without modern conveniences like electricity or indoor plumbing. These are excerpts and reflections from Peggy’s journal chronicling their adventures. See issues 1-12 for her diaries from their first year.

1983 I dreamt that it was spring. New green came to the tops of the trees and I could walk again on warm, brown soil. How I miss the earth, now sleeping, buried deep below heavy layers of frozen snow and ice. It was a wonderful dream and it must be because we had heat all night for the first time in nine years due to the new wood stove. We could afford it because the kids are out of school and we aren’t buying any land just now. I was able to stretch and turn throughout the night instead of clinging so close to Tim for body heat that I wish I could remove an arm to get it out of the way and get closer. Perhaps now we can have a house plant. It will remind me of the garden. I am washing carrots from the root cellar. They’re not quite as good as when they are fresh from the garden, but they are ours, and they are organic. They still look stained, so I scrape off the top layer. I am jealous of the water that carries away any garden soil. I hate to let it be washed away. Every bit is precious,

because we’ve put so much effort into creating it by carrying in buckets of soil and sand, adding humus by gathering mulch from the forest, adding lime and vegetable scraps. Winter is exquisitely beautiful, but so confining. After doing chores, splitting wood, bringing it in, chopping a hole in the ice, and bringing in water, and shoveling out our paths, we’re too tired to go snowshoeing or skiing on the new skis we bought for ourselves. Sometimes I get cranky, bored, and frustrated. We have a professional disagreement. As minister, Tim says he should pick the hymns because he’s responsible for the Sunday service and interested in the meaning of the words. As musician, I say I should pick the hymns after I understand his topic, but considering other things like sing-ability, familiarity, and beauty of sound. We are both quite adamant. I get pretty mad and threaten to quit. (I suspect that this is sometimes an issue in other churches, too.) We have a meeting and long debate about it. Tim is finally convinced and agrees that I take charge of the music selections. Yay! On Valentine’s Day, our ninth anniversary, we spend much of it relaxing in the loft, luxuriating in the sultry heat from the new wood stove below and lambent light from the winter sun reflected off snow-cloaked evergreens through

the south windows. A tiny branch of balsam on the stove fills the air with its ambrosia. “Do you think that looks like a bear or a buffalo?” I ask Tim, pointing out a pattern in the grain of the old cedar boards on the loft ceiling. But Tim is remembering old loves and first kisses. With a faraway look and sweet smile, he reminisces: “My first love was in kindergarten. After one of our nap times, Katie Beckwith was sent to the cloak room to wake me up and I pulled her under my little blanket and kissed her. She got really mad and complained to the teacher, so I had to sit in the corner for a while.” “What a rascal you were!” I say. “She told me at the last class reunion that she only weighed nineteen pounds in kindergarten.” “I know, and I thought she was beautiful!” he replies. “But Vicky Kinninen was my girlfriend all through elementary school. During recess, I’d have my little gang of buddies chase and capture her on the playground and bring her to me under the fire escape.”

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Drawing by our daughter, Jenny, of us sleeping in our loft with curved chimney coming up through the ladder opening, sun and trees shining through windows “How did she like it?” I ask. “Oh, she would shriek and chew me out, but that was part of the game.” “Ah-ha! And what would you do with her when you got her there?” “Oh, . . . nothing. It was just fun to catch her,” he adds with a grin. “I thought she told you at the last class reunion that she never went with you!” Now Tim really laughs. “Well, I thought that walking and chasing her home from school and passing notes in class meant we were going together!” The teakettle is sounding like a busy steam engine pretending it’s the Little Engine that Could, so I crawl behind Tim who automatically sits up for me, then down the ladder to make some tea with dried mint from our garden. It’s nice to get rid of that noise. Now I can hear that the wind has picked up and is blowing snow against our windows with a soft rattle. Somehow it’s comforting. I pass him two full cups of tea and when I climb back, he hints, with his richly full, russet eyebrows arching suggestively up and down, “You know, some cultures consider mint an aphrodisiac.” I ignore this. “Maybe Vicky was jealous when you and Katie were elected king and

queen of the Elementary School Carnival in sixth grade.” “You know, Peg,” he says, putting an arm around me in a snuggle, “In sixth grade, 1948, I distinctly remember thinking to myself, ‘My future wife must have been born by now.’” “Yep, that’s the year I was born. We’re so lucky to be even born. My mom’s best friend, Bev, said that one Sunday, while sitting in the balcony section of church, she saw an engagement ring flying through the air, landing quietly on the carpet near her. She picked it up and discretely returned it to my mom and her beau in the back row, but Mom didn’t look happy to get it back. Pretty soon, it was flying through the air again and Bev didn’t dare return it this time. So it was, fortunately for me and my siblings that soon after my mom was still unattached when she met my father.” “I’m so grateful,” Tim says. “We truly are soul mates. Who else would come live with me in a little scrap-wood cottage in a swamp, cook for me, and be a peasant?” “Especially considering that you were once a king,” I laugh. “And who else would feel the same way I do about other life forms, that they are just as important as we humans, and deserve the same consideration and respect for their well being?” I add, tugging on his amber-hued beard and contemplating the depths of his blue eyes. “Oh, will you rub my head?” he sighs, then continues, “I know. And it’s so disappointing to me when I hear people say, ‘Humans are the only species who can stand up, or make tools, think, or feel, or problem solve, or contemplate death, or have tears...etc.’ Why do we have to feel we’re superior to other species? I think even trees and plants have a consciousness of some sort, very different from ours, of course, but a consciousness of their environment, to light, temperature, water, competition, and reaction to pain … I always apologize if I have to cut a tree.

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Peg has her first conversation with a kitty “But when we have conflicts, of course, we try to resolve them as humanely as possible. That’s why we use Hav-a-Hart traps for mice in the house and put fencing around the garden.” I add, “We were taught that other species don’t have feelings like we do, that they just do things by instinct, but it never made sense to me. I think we’re very much alike in consciousness with all living things, but we have different priorities and abilities because we have different bodies, and . . .” “Different bodies . . . , he interrupts with impatience. “Speaking of which . . .” Later, I tell Tim about my first kiss from a boy.

Tim is installing a new wood stove next to the ladder to our loft

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“In fifth grade, they had a bus that took students to the record hops at Westmoreland High, which were really fun. Lots of time it was square dancing, so there were few wallflowers and everyone got to participate. One time, they even had a Hula-Hoop contest and I won $5 by twirling the most Hula-Hoops for the longest time. I think it’s because I was built like a rail. (Some of my friends called me ‘Stringbean.’) “An older boy, who must have been in seventh grade at least, evidently saw me at one of these dances, because he knocked on my fifth-grade classroom door in the ‘Chicken Coop’ one day and asked for me. (That was the nick-name for the fifth-grade building attached to the bus garage.) “I was so embarrassed! Why was this tough looking older boy I didn’t ever remember seeing before asking for me? As I nervously left the room, my teacher (who’d also had my dad as a student) was admonishing the class for the umpteenth time, ‘Why do you children have to act like sheep! Peg wearing the stylish horn rim glasses One of you does something and the rest of you seem to think you have to she got in fifth grade follow!’ “Outside, in the quiet and questionable privacy of the hallway, I received a gift. It was his school picture, and it was one of the larger, more expensive ones! Tim and Katie were elected King and Queen of the Carnival “‘Uh, thanks,’ I politely replied and turned to leave, wondering why he thought I would want his picture, and what I was supposed to do with it. at the Washington Elementary School, Ohio, in sixth grade “‘Don’t I get a kiss for it?’ he asked, with an air of pleased expectancy. “I’m thinking; ‘Why should I kiss him for something I don’t even want?’ but decide that maybe it’s the fastest way to get out of this encounter. So I give him a quick kiss on the cheek and hurry back to my class in time to hear the teacher say: ‘Now students, it’s time to line up to go to lunch; girls on the right, boys on the left. Straight lines, now! I don’t want any stragglers, either!’” “The big high school kids finally objected to grade school kids coming to their dances, so I didn’t see him again.” “Good thing!” Tim concludes, pretending to be concerned, but I can hear his breath lengthening and see his eyes blinking in prelude to a nap. “I almost flunked that grade, you know! I couldn’t see the blackboard, and did a

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Look for more from Peggy’s memoirs next month. The Shawangunk Nature Preserve is a deep ecology, forever wild, 501©(3), learning and cultural center. Tim and Peggy still live there and can be contacted through their website.

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lot of daydreaming,” I continue. “Even after I was moved to the front row, I couldn’t see it clearly, but was too embarrassed to say so. I was more interested in jumping rope, playing jacks, and perfecting my favorite game of Seven-Up on the school wall during recess. “But I wasn’t held back because Dad took me to see an optometrist in the village. I needed glasses, they concluded, and would have to wear them all the time. “The whole week before I got them, I worried; ‘All the time? Do I even have to wear them when I sleep? What if my cat doesn’t recognize me? All Superman has to do is put on glasses and different clothes and no one recognizes him!’ “I was given a stylish pair of horn-rimmed glasses a week later, and on the way home, I stared out the station wagon window in amazement. “‘This is how other people see things?’ I thought in bewildered wonderment. ‘This is how things really look? This is amazing, incredible!’ I saw a whole new world! “I could tell that my siblings desperately wanted to tease me about my new glasses but for some reason didn’t dare, and settled for unsubtle snorts of amusement. “I eagerly called our calico, The Mother Cat, singing in falsetto: ‘Here kitty, kitty, kitty!’ She came. I picked her up. She purred. Yes! She knew me, even with glasses on! And I was doubly happy when Dad said, with an amused smile, ‘Well, of course, you can take them off when you go to bed.’ “I’m glad you can take them off when you go to bed, too,” Tim concurs, in a sleepy voice. Twilight slowly veils our cottage in the mystery of Cimmerian shades, except for the flickering, warm glow of firelight at its core, and the steady, cool brilliance of stars illuminating our hearts with beauty. •

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Peg playing the 1895 Morey & Barnes pipe organ (built in Utica) at the Old Cobblestone Universalist Church in Cortland

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Lead paint poisoning affects over one million children today. Learning disabilities, hearing loss, speech delays, violent behavior and, in rare cases, seizures and even death: these are just some of the effects lead paint poisoning has on young children. If your home was built before 1978, lead paint on your walls, doors, windows and sills may be dangerous. And it’s not just large paint chips that can cause damage. In fact, three granules of lead dust are enough to poison your child. Let’s make all kids lead-free kids. To learn more about the simple steps you can take to safeguard your family, log on to LEADFREEKIDS.org or call 800-424-LEAD.

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Oneida County Health Department under leadership of Oneida County Executive, Anthony J. Picente, Jr.


GAllery Guide

Capture the Wind by Leigh Yardley, one of eight artists featured in the exhibit Elemental: The 64th Exhibition of Central New York Artists at Munson Williams Proctor Arts Institute

Brenda Giegerich: External Conditions, paintings & monotypes

Justin Como and Andrew McPherson’s “Proprioceptive”

Through March 4, 2016 Meet the Artist: Wed., Feb. 3, 12-6pm

Through Friday, February 26, 2016

Edith Langley Barrett Art Gallery

McLaughlin College Center Herkimer College, 100 Reservoir Road Herkimer, NY (315) 792-7819 www.herkimer.edu/cogar

Cogar Gallery

Utica College 1600 Burrstone Road, Utica, NY (315) 792-5289 www.utica.edu/gallery

Fenimore Quilt Club Show

I Coulda Been a Contender: Boxing History and American Life

February 6 - 21, 2016 This show is one of the largest and longest running quilt shows in the region displaying approximately 100 quilts and quilted items of all types from antique to modern

Through February 26, 2016

Gannett Art Gallery

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Walking Around Clinton, Photography of Zach Lewis

Blended Threads February 17 - March 30, 2016 Opening: Sunday, March 6 , 4- 6pm

February 1-28, 2016 Reception: Friday, February 5, 4-6pm

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Annual Figurative Exhibit February 11 - March 30, 2016 Artwork submission: Feb. 4-6 Opening: Thursday, Feb. 11th, 6-7:30pm

Elemental: The 64th Exhibition of CNY Artists

Rome Art & Community Center 308 West Bloomfield Street, Rome, NY (315) 336-1040 www.romeart.org

February 27 - May 1, 2016 Through Sunday, Oct. 25, 2015

Munson Williams Proctor Arts Institute 310 Genesee Street, Utica, NY (315) 797-0000 www.mwpai.org

Two exhibits: Yun-Fei Ji: The Intimate Universe

A Frolic in Darkness, Whimsy and Dream: the Fantasy Etchings of Doug Jamieson

February 6 - July 2, 2016

Pure Pulp: Contemporary Artists Working in Paper at Dieu Donné

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Wellin Museum of Art Yun-Fei Ji. Man with a Large Mouth, 2009. Ink on Xuan Paper 15 ¼ x 14 in. The René Balcer and Carolyn Hsu-Balcer Collection.

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open mics in the valley by john keller Two months in and how are those New Year’s resolutions coming along? If you’re a musician and yours included getting better and practicing more, performing out a bit more often, or trying to find like-minded folks to begin a musical project, then I have two words for you — open mics! The local open mic scene is an amazing, vibrant, and diverse atmosphere where you can work out new songs, be creative, and find other musicians to collaborate with and expand your ideas. Open mic venues can bring the most unconventional musicians together to make the most wonderful sounds. I recently attended an open mic where a saxophone player and a drummer had a “battle” that was humorous, engaging, and inspired. (I think the drummer won.) Full, permanent bands have formed via this format. The Taryn Jessen Band members met at an open mic. Invisible Rendezvous was another band pulled together through seeing each performer individually and the decision to put their combination to work. Or, sometimes, a fun odd project can arise. I was involved in a great alliance with various musicians in which we performed classic albums in full, live, including The Beatles’ White Album, Pink Floyd’s Dark Side of the Moon, and The Stones’ Let It Bleed, among others. Open mics are a fantastic resource for all levels of musicianship. Beginners can test the waters and overcome stage fright, receive tips and advice from others, and develop stage presence. More experienced performers can “stage work” new material, find collaborators and fans, and take the opportunity to offer advice to those newbies. Professionals can use the open mics to present their latest album, promote local concerts, and develop a larger fan base. The open mic format is a boon for venues, as well. By providing a platform they show community spirit in their support of local music, they allow musicians to “audition” for possible shows, and give their customers an added attraction for their place of business. For the audience, the open mic allows an inexpensive night out. One gets to hear a variety of musicians and styles, find new favorites, and support the venue and performer. I know there is an argument against open mics. Venues get free entertainment; working musicians find it harder to get paid work; and the plethora of unaccomplished performers “flooding the stages.” There are very few musicians that have not performed at an open mic at some point in their career. Whether it was starting out or even hosting one, they must realize the need and necessity for this

format. I agree that more paid opportunities need to be available. I also agree that open mics are a free platform, but where can one strengthen one’s skills, if not in this situation? I personally started in open mics, hosted them, attend them, and have seen a great many participants go on to the professional or semi-professional levels. I remember seeing the national act Gym Class Heroes play open mics before going on to success. I believe that this is a great way for all involved to grow in musicianship, add business, and hear new sounds. Most venues that host open mics do provide regular weekly performances. • John Keller is a local musician and owns Off Center Records in Utica.

Below is a list of some of the local open mics. I apologize if I omitted any. Please contact the venue to assure the open mic is on that evening, as weather and other factors may prohibit the event. Some venues provide drums. Please check to see if it’s okay to bring yours.

Wednesdays Nicole’s, Camden ** (315) 820-4149 Thursdays The Snubbing Post, Rome (315) 337-1021 315 Bar BQ & Brew, Utica (315) 982-9263 Kellish Hill Farm, Manlius ** (315) 682-1578 The Tramontane Café hosts a spoken word/poetry open mic on Thursdays. Fridays The Tramontane Café, Utica ** (315) 732-8257 Utica Brews, Utica ** (315) 737-0533 Sunset Grill, Sylvan Beach (315) 761-0855 Saturdays: Haskell’s Inn, Town of Ohio (1st & 3rd Saturdays) (315) 826-5533 Sundays The Tramontane Café, Utica ** (315) 732-8257 The Good Life, Camden (315) 245-9984 Kellish Hill Farm hosts an open jam on Sunday afternoons.

** denotes an ALL AGES venue.

Winter Art Camp

4 days: Mon, Feb 15th - Thurs, Feb 18th Ages: 7-9: Morning Sessions (9:30am until Noon) Ages: 10-12: Afternoon Sessions (1pm until 3:30pm) Fee: $40 for 4 days, Snack included Come explore fun, creative, and educational art topics taught by certified art teachers. Please register early; space limited. A few scholarships are available.

Mohawk Valley Center for the Arts

www.mohawkvalleyarts.org 72

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GENESEE JOE’S

live & local February has arrived and the local music scene is heating up with a couple of bands re-forming. Remedy returns. This band originally started in 2005 but founding members Eric Strail and Kyle Giglio have recently joined up with ex-Radionix members to re-form the band. The band is now made up of Kyle G. on vocals, Mark C. on bass, Ricardo R. on guitar, Jeff T. on guitar, and Erik S. on drums, as their Facebook page lists them. Kyle and Erik also played together in Kissteria as a KISS tribute, and Kyle most recently fronted OTR. Expect this powerful vocalist to really bring it on material from Mötley Crüe, Van Halen, KISS, Quiet Riot, Queensryche, Dokken, Cinderella, AC-DC, Def Leppard, Bon Jovi, The Scorpions, and Ratt--all of your hard rock favorites. Remedy is a very solid line-up of players; look for their debut opening for Wicked on Saturday, Feb. 20, at Gordon’s Tap Room. Look them up on Facebook for more info. In other re-formation news, get ready for Love Bone, made up of Jeff Howell on bass guitar on vocals, Roy Coston on guitar and

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vocals, Chuck Heath on lead vocals, and Rob Vormwald on drums and vocals. I recently asked Roy Coston for some info. Here’s what he says: Love Bone’s origins came when Roy ran into Chuck while purchasing KISS tickets and they discussed putting something together. Roy hadn’t played since the split of Four Large Men about five years ago. Keith and Chuck hadn’t played since the split of Maddog, which was a little more than seven years ago. Roy ran into Chuck once again at a Jackyl concert, and a week later in August 2002, LoveBone was born. Going their separate ways and reuniting for some projects through the years, eventually Roy and Chuck ended up doing a few shows with Chuck singing. The band lost its drummer and Roy’s son Gunnar to Wicked. Chuck had some back surgery, which left him unable to hold his heavy bass. Jeff was available after stints with, among others, Foghat, and having unfinished songs with Roy got the Love Bone train in motion. Roy adds that since the band had the foundation already set, it was Jeff who suggested that they be called Love Bone and have Chuck sing. The next step for the band is to finish the material they wrote in 2010. The band also will be playing Love Bone originals and some from earlier projects. The first Love Bone gig will be March 18th at Rounding The Regale in Elmira. For more info on Love Bone check out https://www.facebook.com/lovebonerocks JeffHowell.org RoyCoston.com


Advertiser Directory please support Our sponsors, they make this magazine possible Antiques Back of the Barn, Remsen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Black Cat Antiques, Earlville . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Butternut Barn, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . . 57 Foothills Mercantile, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . 57 Little Falls Antique Center, Little Falls . . . . . . 57 Mohawk Antiques Mall, Mohawk . . . . . . . . . 58 Newport Marketplace, Newport . . . . . . . . . . 58 The Online Exchange, Dolgeville . . . . . . . . . 58 Outlet Center, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 The Potting Shed Antiques, Whitesboro . . . 58 Showcase Antiques, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . 59 Treasures Lost & Found, New Hartford . . . . . 59 Vernon Variety Shoppes, Vernon . . . . . . . . . 59 Vintage Furnishings & Collectibles, Utica . . . 59 Weeden’s Mini Mall, Blossvale . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Westmoreland Antique Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 The White House, Holland Patent . . . . . . . . . . 59 Art Classes & Supplies Full Moon Art Center, Camden . . . . . . . . . 70 Mohawk Valley Center for the Arts . . . . . . 72 Art Galleries Full Moon Art Center, Camden . . . . . . 70 Fusion Art Gallery, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Mohawk Valley Center for the Arts . . . . . . 72 View, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Art and Picture Framing Adirondack Art and Frame, Barneveld . . . . 20 Fusion Art Gallery, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Fynmore Studios, New Hartford/Boonville . . 30 Artists Local Clinton Pottery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37

Auto Dealerships Steet Ponte Auto Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79

Camping and Hiking Supply Plan B, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25

Automotive Accessories Custom Creations, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Automotive Repair Clinton Collision, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Cushman’s Automotive, Stittville . . . . . . . . . 15 Precision Unlimited Car Care, Kirkland . . . . 76 Veteran’s Auto, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22

Catering A Moveable Feast, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . 53 Club Monarch, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 DiCastro’s Too, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Dominick’s Deli & Catering, Herkimer . . . . . 51 Knuckleheads Brewhouse, Westmoreland . . . 56 Maria’s Pasta Shop, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 RoSo’s Cafe & Catering, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 56

Awards & Engraving Speedy Awards, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . 43

Churches Lost Sheep Chapel, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . . . 53

Bakeries & Pastry Shop Buttercup Bakery Cafe, Bouckville . . . . . . . . 50 Caruso’s Pastry Shoppe, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Florentine Pastry Shop, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Friendly Bake Shop, Frankfort . . . . . . . . . . 12 Heidelberg Baking Company, Herkimer . . . 51 Karam’s Middle East Bakery, Yorkville . . . . 56 Star Bakery, Whitesboro and Utica . . . . . . 15

Cheese Cranberry Ride Farm, Williamstown . . . . . . 49 Jake’s Gouda Cheese, Deansboro . . . . . . . . . . 25 Jewett’s Cheese, Earlville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Jones Family Farm, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Three Village Cheese, Newport . . . . . . . . . . 11

Bike Shops Dick’s Wheel Shop, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . 73

Chiropractors Dr. Michael Tucciarone, Clinton . . . . . . . . . 19

Bowling Adirondack Diner and Lanes, Barneveld . . 50 State Bowl with Cosmic Bowling, Ilion . . . . . 36

Clothing Holland Patent Farmers Co-op . . . . . . . . . . 22 Mira’s Boutique, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . 69 The Village Crossing, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . 65 Walk-in Closet, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36

Books Berry Hill Book Shop, Deansboro . . . . . . . . . 20

Comics Ravenswood Comics, New Hartford . . . . . . 36

Cabinets and Kitchens Custom Woodcraft, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . . . 66 Knotty By Nature, Bridgewater . . . . . . . . . . . 66

Consignment The Online Exchange, Dolgeville . . . . . . . . . 58 The Queen’s Closet, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57

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Second Chances, Van Hornesville . . . . . . . . 24 Treasures Lost & Found, New Hartford . . . 59 The Village Basement, New Hartford . . . . . 48 Walk-in Closet, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Contractors/Builders Cedarville Carpetry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Delis Kountry Kupboard, Madison . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Olde Kountry Market, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . 37 Diners Adirondack Diner and Lanes, Barneveld . . 50 Charlie’s Place, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 Wendy’s Diner, Cassville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Dry Cleaners Dapper Dan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 M & M Cleaners, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Estate Sales Attic Addicts, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 The Potting Shed Antiques, Whitesboro . . . 58 Events, Entertainment, and Activities Children’s Museum, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Herkimer College Great Artists Series . . . . . 16 Mohawk Valley Center for the Arts . . . . . . 72 The Stanley, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 View, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Farm Equipment Clinton Tractor, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Hobby Hill Farm, Lee Center . . . . . . . . . . 11 Springfield Truck & Tractor . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 White’s Farm Supply, Waterville/Canastota . . 80 Farm Produce Jones Family Farm, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Oneida County Public Market, Utica . . . . . . 10

Szarek Farm & Greenhouses, Westmoreland . . 64 Stoltzfus Family Dairy, Vernon Center . . . . 3 Sunnybrook Farm, Deansboro . . . . . . . . . 48 Feed and Farm Needs Pohl’s Feed, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Financial Services Turnbull Insurance, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 7 Van Meter & Van Meter, Little Falls . . . . . . . 14 Fireplaces Hearth Shop, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Fitness & Gyms Curves, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 TeamFit, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Flooring Tru-Line Hardwood Flooring, Whitesboro . . 70 Lincoln Davies, Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Florists Clinton Florist, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Village Florals, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Funeral Services Enea Funeral Service, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . 60 Nunn & McGrath, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Prince-Boyd & Hyatt, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Furniture Ironwood Furniture, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Jeff ’s Amish Furniture, Jordanville . . . . . . . . 39 Furniture Makers Custom Woodcraft, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . 66 Garden Centers and Greenhouses Michael’s Greenhouse, Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . 33 Szarek Greenhouses, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . 64

Top Notch Garden Center, Newport . . . . . . 58

Gift Shops/Shopping Artisans Corner, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Between Us Sisters, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . . 61 Butternut Barn, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . . 57 Clinton Pottery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Cobbler and Company, Sharon Springs . . . . 55 Country Connections, Boonville . . . . . . . . . . 18 1890 Farmhouse Primitives, Sherburne . . . . 23 Fusion Art Gallery, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Hummingbird Kreations, Rome . . . . . . . . . 23 Little Falls Antique Center, Little Falls . . . . 57 Main Street Gift Shoppe, Newport . . . . . . . . 54 Newport Marketplace, Newport . . . . . . . . . 58 Outlet Center, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Pathway of Pearls, Schuyler . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Paca Gardens, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Remington Country Store, Ilion . . . . . . . . 15 Golf and Recreation Twin Ponds Golf & Country Club, NY Mills . . 16 Grocery/Convenience Stores B & F Milk Center, Whitesboro. . . . . . . . . . . 49 The Country Store, Dolgeville . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Deansboro Superette, Deansboro . . . . . . . . 13 Meelan’s Market, Clark Mills . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Mohawk Village Market, Mohawk . . . . . . . 12 Olde Kountry Market, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . 37 Reilly’s Dairy, Inc., Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Guitar and Music Stores The Country Store, Dolgeville . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Hardware/Farm & Home Lincoln Davies, Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Pohlig Enterprises, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Pohl’s Feed, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Morgan’s Hardware, Waterville . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Turner Lumber, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6

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Harley Davidson Speed/Service Center Hillside Motorcycle & Machine, Munnsville . . 9

Seneca Liquor, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Trenton Station Liquor & Wine, Barneveld . . . 71

HearingConsultants Hearing Health Hearing Aid Centers, Rome . . . 45

Manufactured and Modular Home Builders Leisure Village, Taberg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60

Heating Oil Ber-Mor Gas, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Little Falls Fuel, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35

Maple Syrup Ben & Judy’s Sugarhouse, West Edmeston . . . . 9 Shaw’s Maple Products, Clinton . . . . . . . . . 29 Tibbits Maple, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . 6

Hobby Shops Locomotion Hobby, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Home Goods Chapter Designs, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Insurance Gates-Cole Insurance, New Hartford . . . . . 47 Farm Family Insurance, Boonville . . . . . . . . . 6 M L Croad Insurance, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Turnbull Insurance, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 7 Iron Work - Architectural & Ornamental Raulli’s Iron Works, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Jewelry Clinton Jewelers, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 Fall Hill Bead & Gem, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . 22 Goldmine Jewelers, New Hartford . . . . . . . 34 Lawn Mowers J.B.’s Small Engine Works, Utica . . . . . . . . 66 SD Outdoor Power, New Hartford . . . . . . . 23 Springfield Truck & Tractor . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Learning in Retirement MVILR at SUNYIT, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 Lighting Mills Electrical Supply, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 Liquor Stores and Wine Bostwick Liquors, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Liquor Express, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 27

Massage, Therapeutic Effleurage Day Spa, New Hartford . . . . . . 70 Zensations, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Media 1420 The Fox . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 1450 WKAL, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 92.7 The Drive WXUR, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 Weekly Adirondack, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . 15 WCNY, Syracuse . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 FOX33/WUTR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 Monuments & Memorials Burdick & Enea Memorials, Clinton . . . . . . 61 Yorkville Memorials, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Museums Goodsell Museum, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Remington Arms Museum, Ilion . . . . . . . . 15 View, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Natural Food Stores Brenda’s Natural Foods, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Cooperstown Naturals, Cooperstown . . . . . 14 Peter’s Cornucopia, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 65 Sunflower Naturals, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . 48 Tom’s Natural Foods, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Olive Oils/Balsamic Vinegars Adirondack Olive Oil Co., New Hartford . . . 19 Optometrist Towpath Vision Care, Little Falls . . . . . . . 67

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Painting, Interior/Exterior Dennis Polanowicz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Production Painting Services of CNY . . . . 48 Pet Memorialization and Cremation Burdick & Enea Memorials, Clinton . . . . . . . 61 Pet Services Not Just Poodles Pet Salon, Whitesboro . . . . 13 One Paw at a Time, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . 18 Pet Shops Peterson’s Pets, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Pharmacies Garro Drugs, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Photography Fusion Art/The Photo Shoppe, Rome . . . . . 31 Physical Therapy Inertia PT, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 Pizzerias DiCastro’s Brick Oven, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Primo Pizzeria, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 Tony’s Pizza, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 Portable Toilets and Bathrooms Mohawk Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Primitives Between Us Sisters, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . 61 Butternut Barn, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . . 57 1890 Farmhouse Primitives, Sherburne . . . . 23 Main Street Gift Shop, Newport . . . . . . . . . 54 Public Service Oneida County Health Department . . . . . 68 Quilt and Yarn Shops Stash Away Quilt Shoppe, Rome . . . . . . . . 20 Tiger Lily Quilt Co, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64

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Real Estate Coldwell-Banker, Diane Lockwood . . . . . . 9 Scenic Byway Realty, Richfield Springs . . . . 43 Record Stores Off-Center Records, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 Restaurants and Cafés Ann St. Deli, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 The Back Nine Restaurant, Rome . . . . . . . . 54 Ballister’s Bistro, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Black Cat, Sharon Springs . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Boyz From Italy, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Buffalo Head Restaurant, Forestport . . . . . . 51 Buttercup Bakery Cafe, Bouckville . . . . . . . . 50 Candlelight Restaurant at Snow Ridge . . . . . 23 Chesterfield’s Tuscan Oven, Oneida . . . . . . 54 Club Monarch, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Copper Moose Ale House, Little Falls . . . . . 52 Delta Lake Inn, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 DiCastro’s Brick Oven, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Dominick’s Deli, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Georgio’s, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Heidelberg Baking Co., Herkimer . . . . . . . . 51 Karam’s Middle East Bakery, Yorkville . . . . 56 Killabrew Saloon, New Harttford . . . . . . . 52 Knuckleheads Brewhouse, Westmoreland . . 56 Lakeview Restaurant and Bar, Oneida . . . . 54 Main Street Ristorante, Newport . . . . . . . . 54 Mi Casa, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Ohio Tavern, Cold Brook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 Overlook Mansion, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . 31 Origlio’s Wagon Wheel Restaurant, Oneida . . 54 Phoenician Restaurant, New Hartford . . . . 52 Piccolo Cafe, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Raspberries Cafe, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 RoSo’s Cafe & Catering, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Sammy & Annie Foods, Utica . . . . . . . . . . 56 The Vigneto Restaurant, Rome . . . . . . . . . . 55 Wigwam Tavern, Forestport . . . . . . . . . . . . 51

Recreational Vehicles CJ Motor Sports, Boonville . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Hobby Hill Farms, Lee Center . . . . . . . . . . 11 Schoff Polaris, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Salons/Haircutters Heads R Turning Salon & Spa, Ilion . . . . . . 35 Nikki Fraccola at Schuyler Commons . . . . . 40

Towing Services Clinton Collision, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Travel Agencies The Cruise Wizards, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . 69

PAGE 10 DAILY SENTINEL, ROME, N.Y., romesentinel.com, ThuRSDAY, JANuARY 21

Scrapbooking/Photo Organizing Intentionegrity, Utica area . . . . . . . . . . . . 40

Veterinarians Adirondack Veterinary Service, Rome . . . . 29 CNY Veterinary Medical, Westmoreland . . 45 Marcy Veterinary Services, Marcy . . . . . . . 33

Las Vegas taxis take tourists to cleaners

Seamstress & Tailors Libbey’s Sew Blessed, Sherrill . . . . . . . . . . . 77

LAS VEGAS (AP) — If the visiting Las Vegas from Raleigh, Websites cash you doled out for a Las North Carolina, said a taxi ride Utica Remember . . . . .to. .the . . .Bellagio . . . 20 Sheet Metal Fabrication/Welding from When the airport Vegas cab ride hurt your wallet, it’s notMarcy all in .your head — audi- casino-hotel was $21 with tip on Custom-Fab Metal Fabrication, . . . 40 tors in Nevada also think taxi Wednesday. Banquets you’re in there and rates are outrageous. Weddings and “Once you’re driving, Las Vegas-area cabs Club are overMonarch, Yorkville . . .what . . . . else . . . .are . . .you 56 Shoes charging customers to the tune going to do but pay it?” she said, DiCastro’s Too, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Holland Patent Farmers Co-op . . . . . . . . . . 22 of $47 million a year, according adding that she will probably use Twin Ponds Country Club, NY Mills . . 16 Karaz Shoes, New Hartford . . .audit . . . . .released . . . . 46 Tuesday Uber&next time. to an of Golf Denver resident Dominick the Nevada AuthoriThe Village Crossing, Clinton . . . . . . . Taxicab . . . 65 ty, which regulates the rides in Lovely, 37, said he paid $9 for a Wellness and Alternative Health Therapy cab ride of 5 minutes or less from Clark County. the Spa, Sands convention to Auditors for the governor’s Small Engine Repair Effleurage Day New Hartford . center . . . . 70 finance office blamed a $3 credit the Bellagio, calling the cost a J.B.’s Small Engine Works, Utica . . . . . . . fee . 66thatHeads R Turning Salon & Spa, Ilion . . . . . 35 rip-off. card processing they say “Three dollars is much cit-of Pearls, Springfield Truck & Tractor . . . . higher . . . . . .than . 31 in other Pathway Schuyler . . .doesn’t . . . . . . sound . . 11 ies and probably shouldn’t exist. like a lot, but aggregated over They also criticized a decision to an entire population of people in increase a fuel surcharge even Las Vegas taking cabs, it’s not a Snowmobiles Windows as gas prices are tanking, say- fair deal,” he said, referring to the CJ Motorsports, Boonville . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 RA Dudrak, Holland Patent card fee. . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 ing having the surcharge at all credit Representatives of a union for the 12 major Schoff Polaris, Rome . . is . . .unique . . . . . .among . . . . . 29 Western cities that the taxi board many area taxi drivers said they Wine Bars and Ale Houses have long fought to end the fee, tracks. Soap Copper Ale House, Little the Fallscab . . .com. 52 it enriches “The board’s decision is Moose a arguing pany but drivers. windfall industry,” the Saloon, Cranberry Ridge Goat Milk Soap .for . . . the . . . 49 Killabrew Newhurts Hartford . . . For . . . .exam. . 52 audit says. “These are mostly ple, some passengers mistakenly tourist/visitor dollars that would believe it is a tip for the driver otherwise likely be spent else- and skip the gratuity. Specialty Wood Yogurt “It is absolutely, utterly ridicwhere in the local economy.” Wightman Specialty WoodsThe . . . .criticism . . . . . . . . comes 46 Stoltzfus Vernon Centercard . . . fee .3 ulousDairy, to have a credit a fewFamily months after ride-hailing compa- of $3. That’s absurd,” said Sam nies Uber and Lyft started oper- Moffitt, a union organizer repreTax Services ating in Nevada with promises senting drivers of the large taxi of cheaper Briggs Tax Service, Whitesboro . . . .and . . . .more . 27 convenient company Yellow-Checker-Star. rides. The taxi industry, which “The drivers do not get any pormakes big bucks taking tourists tion of that money.” The audit panned the fee, sayon a 5-mile trip from the airport Taxi Service the Strip, fought hard against ing it far exceeds the cost of cab Elite Taxi, Rome . . . . . .to . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 allowing the companies before companies accepting cards. State losing its battle in the Legislature agencies pay 8.5 cents to Wells Fargo per credit card transaclast spring. Cynthia Kulak, 43, who was tion, auditors said.

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Steet-Ponte Volkswagen

Steet Toyota Scion

5046 Commercial Drive Yorkville, NY 13495 (315) 736-8291

4991 Commercial Drive Yorkville, NY 13495 (315) 736-8241

Steet-Ponte auto group

www.steetponteautogroup.com


White’sFarm FarmSupply, Supply,Inc. Inc. White’s Farm Supply, Inc. White’s Celebrating 70 Years In Business CANASTOTA CANASTOTA CANASTOTA 4154 ROUTE 31 4154 ROUTE 4154 ROUTE 3131 315-697-2214 315-697-2214 315-697-2214

LOWVILLE LOWVILLE LOWVILLE 8207 ROUTE 26

8207 ROUTE2626 8207 ROUTE 315-376-0300 315-376-0300 315-376-0300

WATERVILLE WATERVILLE WATERVILLE 962 ROUTE 12 962ROUTE ROUTE1212 962 315-841-4181 315-841-4181 315-841-4181

WWW.WHITESFARMSUPPLY.COM WWW.WHITESFARMSUPPLY.COM WWW.WHITESFARMSUPPLY.COM

www.kubota.com www.kubota.com www.kubota.com

©©Kubota KubotaTractor TractorCorporation, Corporation,2015 2015

© Kubota Tractor Corporation, 2015


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