free magazine! AUGUST 2016
autumn in and the slowing down
adirondacks savoring summer and more stories from the valley!
plus our august fun guide and much more inside!
35
IBIT
EXH
HENRI DE TOULOUSE-LAUTREC
SEESR O L C EMB SEPT
IN BOHEMIAN PARIS
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec is most famous for his posters that depict the nightlife of Paris. His images captured the imagination of his contemporaries and generations to follow, as well as helped define the end of the 19th century period and what is known as “La Belle Epoque.” This exhibit, from the collection of Herakleidon Museum, Athens, Greece, uses examples of Lautrec’s sketches, drawings, books, albums, and original posters to examine his artistic process. The exhibit also incorporates costumes from many of the Metropolitan Opera’s productions of La bohème – Puccini’s unforgettable tale of love, youth, and tragic loss during “La Belle Epoque.” La Troupe de Mademoiselle Eglantine, 1896. Henri Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901), color lithograph. © Herakleidon Museum, Athens, Greece, courtesy PAN Art Connections, Inc. The exhibition is sponsored in part by Nellie and Robert Gipson, Lady Juliet Tadgell and Dr. Christopher Tadgell, and Fenimore Asset Management.
FenimoreArtMuseum.org
5
MORE THIS SUMMER AT
THE FENIMORE Ansel Adams: Early Works Through September 18
The Perfection of Harmony: The Art of James Abbott McNeill Whistler Through October 2
5798 ROUTE 80 COOPERSTOWN, NY OPEN DAILY, 10AM – 5PM
Cork.ALeather. buckle or two. Cork. Leather. buckle orAtwo. A simple idea that’s A simple idea that’s made feet happy made feet happy for over two hundred years.
UT-000536967
for over two hundred years.
Pulse LMR ad Rev 3.75x5_Layout 1 5/21/2014 1:36 PM Page 1
LUXURY
New Center• 797-0025 ~ 797-0025 NewHartford Hartford Shopping Shopping Center
TM
Auto, Home and Business Insurance...
MOBILE RESTROOMS A Division of Mohawk Ltd.
and just about everything else. PROOF O.K. BY:___________________________
O.K. WITH CORRECTIONS BY:_____________________
PLEASE READ CAREFULLY • SUBMIT CORRECTIONS ONLINE
UT-000536967 (100%) ADVERTISER: KARAZ SHOES
PROOF CREATED AT: 7/6/2015 8:09:29 AM
SALES PERSON: UT6003
NEXT RUN DATE: 07/31/15
SIZE: 3.765X5
PROOF DUE: 07/17/15 12:59:55
PUBLICATION: UT-ENTREE
You’ve worked hard to plan a beautiful outdoor event, the right Luxury Mobile Restroom can make it perfect. Our restrooms are outfitted with the following amenities... • Onboard water system • Air conditioned/heated environment • Standard size electric flushing toilets • Complete stereo system • Plus much more • China sinks with hands free faucets
Rental information and reservations call 315-570-6548 www.mohawkltd.com/lmr
CALL • LOG ON • STOP IN
Submit your events to our free online events calendar! www.mohawkvalleyliving.com
contents 6 9 13 14 16 18 21 24 26 29 33 35 36 40 42 51 57 60 64 71 74 75 76
Oneida County Historical Society ADK Journal MV Astronomy Club Downtown Utica Newport Marketplace Summer Fun Guide Family Road Trip MV Restaurant MV Nature in August On the Farm with Suzie MV Gardens & Recipes So Sweet Candy Cafe Gallery Guide Blueberries! Running with Killdeer Restaurant Guide Antiques Guide Herkimer Co. Historical Society Tales from Shawangunk, Part 23 MV Musicians Live & Local MV Comics Advertiser Directory
Next Issue:
September 1st
Available at our sponsors and your closest Stewart’s Shop. Visit our website for a complete list of pick-up locations.
Savoring Summer by Sharry L. Whitney
Keep calm and chew slowly. August is here and after gobbling up July, I’m trying to slow down and savor August. I’m not alone; many people tell me that these seemingly endless beautiful days have them going a mile a minute. But those days will soon end, so it’s time to savor summer. I’ve included a “Savoring Summer” guide in this issue that highlights some fun, mostly free, events. Also don’t forget to seek out those restaurants with outdoor dining. This month we also will be reflecting on our Mohawk Valley Living years. The August episode of the TV show will be our 500th. When Lance and I started this adventure in 2005, we never imagined the places it would take us or the people we’d meet. Maybe someday I’ll write a book about it. Peggy Spencer Behrendt’s soonTALES FROM to-be-released book, Tales from Shawangunk, Our Adventures Liv ing Off Grid in the Adirondacks has inspired The Memoirs of Peggy Spencer Behren me to considdt er it. Oh, the Places You’ll Go! would be a perfect title, but Dr. Seuss took that one. Maybe To See What We Can See: Our Adventures Traveling ’Round the Mohawk Valley? But my book will have to wait; I have to hurry up and get outside to savor summer. •
SHAWANGUNK From her popular series
in Mohawk Valley Livin g Magazine
MOHAWK VALLEY LIVING MAGAZINE AUGUST 2016
PUBLISHERS Lance and Sharry Whitney EDITOR Sharry L. Whitney DESIGN & LAYOUT Lance David Whitney ASSISTANT EDITORS Shelley Delosh Jorge L. Hernández ADVERTISING EXECUTIVE Susan Collea 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, Michelle Truett, 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.
Printed at Vicks in Yorkville, NY.
Mohawk Valley Living is brought to you by
Steet-Ponte auto group
Turnbull
Yorkville & Herkimer
New Hartford
watch mvl every sunday! 7:30am and 11pm on wfxv 11:30am on WUTR 20
INSURANCE SERVICE
ANSEL ADAMS: EARLY WORKS Ansel Adams: Early Works focuses on the masterful small-scale prints made by SEPTE MBER Adams from the 1920s into the 1950s. In this time period, Adams’ technique evolved from the soft-focus, warm-toned, painterly “Parmelian prints” of the 1920s; to the f/64 school of sharp-focused photography that he co-founded with Edward Weston and Imogen Cunningham in the 1930s; and, after World War II, toward a cooler, highercontrast printmaking approach.
EXHIB
CLOSEIT S
18
Several singular examples are featured in this exhibition, including an extraordinarily rare print of Moonrise, Hernandez.
MORE THIS SUMMER AT
THE FENIMORE Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec in Bohemian Paris Through September 5
(Image) Monolith, the Face of Half-Dome, Yosemite National Park, California 1927. Photograph by Ansel Adams. Vintage gelatin silver print. Collection Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona. © 2015 The Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust
The Perfection of Harmony: The Art of James Abbott McNeill Whistler Through October 2
The exhibition is sponsored in part by The Morgan McReynolds Group at Morgan Stanley, NYCM Insurance and The Clark Foundation. Support also provided by a Market NY grant through I LOVE NY/New York State’s Division of Tourism as a part of the Regional Economic Development Council awards. Photographs from the collection of Michael Mattis and Judith Hochberg. Exhibition organized by art2art Circulating Exhibitions.
FenimoreArtMuseum.org
5798 ROUTE 80 COOPERSTOWN, NY OPEN DAILY 10 AM - 5 PM
the Oneida County Historical Society
Thomas R. Proctor: Utica’s Greatest Benefactor By Lou Parrotta Thomas Redfield Proctor was born in Proctorville, VT, on May 25, 1844, to Moody S. and Betsy Nancy Redfield Proctor. Proctor’s ancestors were truly American in every sense of the word. One of his ancestors, Robert Proctor, settled in Concord, MA, in 1645 and founded Thomas’ birthplace of Proctorville. Some Proctors took an active role in the Boston Tea Party. His paternal great-grandfather, Leonard Proctor, Thomas Redfield Proctor was a soldier in the Revolutionary War. During the Civil War, Proctor served in the U.S. Navy as a paymaster’s clerk aboard the USS Brandywine in 1862 at just 18 years old and not even out of high school. Shortly thereafter, he was selected to be the secretary to Admiral Pearson on the USS Lancaster. He took part in the capture of a ship full of Confederates and received a commendation from the Secretary of the Navy for meritorious service. When the Civil War concluded, Proctor moved first to Nyack, NY, where he would own and operate the Tappan Zee House. On Dec. 1, 1869, he would move to Utica where he would become the owner/operator of Bagg’s Hotel. He would remain the proprietor there until 1890. On April 9, 1891, Proctor was united in marriage to Maria Watson Williams. They had one son who unfortunately did not survive infancy. Proctor participated in numerous ventures and served on many boards. During his life in Utica, Proctor served as president of the Oneida County Trust Company and the American Hard Wall Plaster Company. He took a turn as vice president of the Utica Daily Press Company. He was a trustee of the Savings Bank of Utica and the Soldier’s Monument Association, and he was on the board of directors
The handyman’s choice since 1948
Lumber • Doors • Windows • Mason’s Supplies Roofing • Insulation • Treated Lumber
7347 NY State Route 28 Schuyler Lake, NY 13457 6
315.858.7081
(315) 896-2631 Vanderkemp Ave., Barneveld
Mon-Fri: 7:30am-5pm, Sat: 7:30am-Noon
Fountain Elms was the childhood home of Thomas R. Proctor’s wife, Maria Watson Williams
Thomas R. Proctor was the owner/ operator of Bagg’s Hotel
T he Colors of Summer... Forever! 4662 Commercial Dr., New Hartford • 736-0662 Gold • Diamonds • Gems • Custom Designs • Repairs
of the Utica Trust & Deposit Company, the Utica Steam & Mohawk Valley Cotton Mills, and the Utica Cemetery Association. In a 1925 book, The History of the Mohawk Valley, it was said of Proctor: “Having early learned to assume responsibility, Mr. Proctor developed a business discernment which bore the test of years and the various interests with which he was identified prospered accordingly, a number of them being now among the leading institutions in this part of the state.” Politics was also a passion of Proctor’s. A member of the Republican Party, he was active in the Utica, Oneida County and New York State parties. He served as a delegate to the 1908, 1912, and 1920 Republican National Conventions. (In 1908 and 1912, he was able to cast a vote for the vice presidential candidate James Schoolcraft Sherman, a friend and fellow Utican). While President, William Howard Taft appointed Proctor to the board of visitors at the United States Naval Academy. Another role Proctor took an active part in was as a trustee of the New York Roads Improvement Association that was organized Thomas R. Proctor on holiday at Bagg’s Hotel on March 15, 1890. The three main goals of the with his wife, Maria Association were to improve the country’s roads; to get the farmers out of the mud; and to make it easier for farmers to bring their produce to market. Proctor also was heavily involved in the community. At one time he served as the president of the House of the Good Shepherd and was a life member of the New York Agricultural Association. He was a Mason, a member of the New England Society of New York, and a member of the Sons of the Revolution, the Society of Colonial Wars, the Society of the Founders & Patriots of America, the Mayflower Society, the Grand Army of the Republic, the Military Order of the Loyal Legion, and the Fort Schuyler Club (where he served as the club’s president for more than 10 years). Proctor’s reputation as Utica’s largest benefactor could be best realized by the 500-plus acres of land he donated for what would become Roscoe Conkling Park in the Steele Hill woods, Addison C. Miller Park on the Southern end of York Street, J. Thomas Spriggs Park on the corner of Whitesboro and Erie Streets, Horatio Seymour Park opposite of Faxton Hospital and behind the House of the Good Shepherd, Watson Williams Park, Thomas R. Proctor Park at the Bagg’s Hotel farm on Welshbush Road, and Frederick T. Proctor Park. According to famed local historian T. Wood Clarke’s book, Upper Mohawk Country, Proctor secretly bought up the land and had Frederick Law Olmstead of Boston, MA, the nation’s most noted landscape architect, to convert the land into the well-known parks they are today. In 1905, Proctor announced he would be giving all of the land/parks
They’ll grow on you!
The Utica Public Library was built on land donated by Thomas R. Proctor
Personal, Business & Life Insurance Planning From a local company established in 1866
June 18-19, July 16-17 & 23-24, & Aug 20-21, 10am-3pm
Turnbull
Open by appointment June 15-Aug 16 705 Newport-Gray Rd., Newport • 315-845-8945
600 French Road, New Hartford • 315.735.9201
2016 Open House Weekends
www.sheeprundaylily.com
INSURANCE SERVICE www.turnbull-insurance.com
7
to the city for public use. On Feb. 3, 1908, the deeds for the parks were officially filed in City Hall. Proctor’s brother, Frederick T., also filed the deed of the land on which St. Luke’s Hospital had stood between Columbia and Whitesboro Streets that became Truman K. Butler Park. Noted historian Malio Cardarelli wrote of Thomas and Frederick Proctor: “And when naming Utica’s dignitaries, one must also include Thomas R. and Frederick T. Proctor, who were wealthy men of commerce committed to community betterment, imparting not only their business savvy but also their finances, both of which they gave generously to a city they dearly loved.” Proctor also donated the land and/or buildings for today’s Fountain Elms, Utica Public Library, St. Luke’s Hospital, and the House of the Good Shepherd. He also donated a great deal of money to what is today’s Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute. Former Secretary of State and Clinton native Elihu Root said of Proctor: “(He was) simply a civic-minded private citizen. It was his natural intent to do something for the community first. In other words, he possessed that rare gem in civic quality of pride in his community. No girl was ever prouder of her ribbons or no boy of a new toy than was Thomas R. Proctor of the community in which he lived…. He always exhibited the kindness and affection of the true citizen of greatness and helped to build up Utica to the great municipality it now is.” • Lou Parrotta teaches social studies at Thomas R. Proctor High School in Utica. He is the City of Utica historian and also chairman of the Oneida County Historical Society Board of Trustees.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas R. Proctor donated their property at 1700 Genesee Street to The House of the Good Shepherd.
Oneida County Historical Society
1608 Genesee Street, Utica (315) 735-3642 Open Tues.-Fri. 10-4, Sat 10-2 www.oneidacountyhistory.org
urbanik’s paint co. PAINT SALE!
Nursery & Garden Center
Annuals, Perennials, Trees & Shrubs!
Best Paint! Best Prices! Best Service! 506 State Street, Utica • (315) 724-5129
Mon-Fri: 8am-5:30pm, Sat: 8am-1pm • www.urbanikspaint.com
Book by Local Artist! A third generation family business with an expert staff offering you service and advice on plant selection, care, maintenance, and problem-solving.
Gift Cards available! 160 Kirkland Ave., Clinton, NY (315) 853-5547
Facebook: George’s Farm Products
8
www.georgesfarmproducts.com
In a garden, amongst the beans and carrots, lives a young tomato who just doesn’t fit in. Follow his adventures as he wanders into the depths of the garden and learns about jealousy, appreciation, and fate from the other garden dwellers. Available at: Amazon Your purchase of this book helps www.barnesandnoble.com local author and artist Autumn Kuhn and www.rosedogbookstore.com pay off her student loans. (Rose Dog offers free shipping!)
adirondack journal
Try the Tupper Lake Triad Story and Photos by Gary VanRiper
The Tupper Lake Triad is one of the growing number of quests created by clubs or chambers or municipalities in the Adirondack Park designed to draw people to specific regions or purely encourage people to explore the great outdoors. The TLT consists of three mountains, none of which are technically in Tupper Lake but in the immediate area. All three have trails that are maintained by the DEC and are modest in their ascents – entire elementary school classes have conquered them together – and they can be completed over a period of time or, for many, in one day. My hiking buddy Mark Lowell and I thought it would be a good warm-up hike. And it was. We began with Mount Arab on a recent Monday morning at 10:40 a.m., the highest of the Triad at 2,539 feet and with the most elevation gain at 764 feet. Arab is a fire tower mountain that also counts for the Fire Tower Challenge, and while we had both hiked it in the past, somehow it felt like cheating to count it for the Triad without doing it again. According to a brochure picked up at the trailhead, no one knows for sure how the mountain received its name. Speculation is that it was “from a mispronunciation of the French word for maple, arable.” The mile-long trail led to the summit that was socked in with fog, so there was zero view from the tower’s cab, but we still had two mountains to go with a promise of clearing skies later in the day. For those who reside in the Mohawk Valley region and are familiar with Bald (Rondaxe) Mountain near Old Forge, NY, both Arab and Bald are similar in height with Bald at 2,350 feet. And both have trails that are 1 similar in length at one mile. The main difference includes more than double the actual elevation gain hiking up Arab.
103 Main St., Whitesboro, NY 768-1462
Jewett’s Cheese House
A family business since 1970 NY State aged cheddar 1-20 years old! Over 400 items of cheese & gourmet foods.
(800) 638-3836 934 Earlville Road, Earlville (between Poolville and Earlville) Open Mon-Fri: 9:30-5, Most Sundays 10:30-3, closed Sat. www.jewettscheese.com
According to the TLT website, the trail on all three mountains of the quest are maintained by the DEC.
Tues-Fri 6-2 Sat & Sun 6-1
1212 Catherine St., Utica, NY 733-6603 Local wine, gifts, and more! 400 Academy Street Prospect, NY 13435 Wed-Sat 10-6, Sun 12-6
315-205-4045
ProspectFallsWinery@gmail.com Facebook.com/ProspectFallsWinery @WineB4Wildrness “Wine Before Wilderness”
MUSEUM
Tues-Sun 6-2
& COUNTRY STORE
See Remington firearms and artifacts from the 1800s to today. Shop for clothing, hats, and souvenirs in the Country Store. 14 Hoefler Avenue, Ilion (315) 895-3200 FREE! Mon-Fri. 8am-5pm (store closes 4:30pm)
The News Source of Old Forge, Inlet and Surrounding Communities FREE Newspaper Available in the Greater Old Forge Area! www.weeklyadk.com
9
There are also less technical areas to navigate on the ascent and descent. The elevation gain is only about 390 feet heading up Bald, but there are a few steeper spots with tangles of roots that require your complete attention. It was hard to drive back through Tupper Lake without stopping for a pastry, so we did, opting for dense, home-made, blueberry muffins. Goodman Mountain was next, and refueled by the muffins the ascent was not made easier, just a bit happier. This is the shortest of the three Triad Mountains at 2178 feet and with the least amount of elevation gain at 581 feet. And while it has the longest trail at 1.6 miles, the first quarter mile through the woods before beginning the ascent is actually wheelchair accessible. I don’t always pay attention to how different mountains receive their names, but this one I found particularly noteworthy. There is a commemorative plaque near the trailhead that carries the story. Goodman Mountain is named “in memory of Charles Goodman and his grandson, Andrew Goodman. Andrew Goodman, age 20, was registering African-American citizens to vote during Freedom Summer of 1964 when the Ku Klux Klan murdered him on June 21, in Neshoba County, Mississippi. The Goodman family has lived on Tupper Lake during the summers since 1933.” The 1988 film Mississippi Burning starring Gene Hackman, and a 2014 documentary, Freedom Summer, recalls the incident and the history surrounding it. Well, by now the fog had dissipated and upon arriving at the summit and involuntarily displacing several unhappy crows who
A survey marker on the summit of Coney Mountain. This is about as close to a “selfie” photograph as you will get from me.
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
Marshall Agency 2769 State Route 51 Ilion, NY 13357 www.marshallagency.net
ayt ’t rp e n c n o D to insu a e y
315-895-4609
au your
Marshall Agency may be able to save you up to 30%*
All your summer BBQ needs!
*Discount eligibility, rates and coverages vary by state. Life insurance not available in N.Y. S1041 Not all companies are licensed or operate in all states. Not all products are offered in all states. Go to erieinsurance.com for company licensure and territory information.
Family Owned, Family Grown Happiness Grows Here!
A family oriented U-Pick apple orchard where you and your family can create memories year after year. Our cider is produced on the premises using only our own homegrown apples. You can taste the full flavor of the fruit! Once you have picked your apples be sure to stop in and browse the country market. Enjoy farm fresh fudge, old fashion candy, homemade jam, country crafts & florals, fresh organic eggs, mums, aged NY cheese, maple syrup, local honey, fresh made cider donuts and of course our refreshing apple cider. We also have sample tastings of our jar goods on the weekends. We invite you to start a family tradition at Windy Hill Orchard. The Seeberger Family
Get a $100 Gift Card for $85!
Mohawk Village Market
Be Grill st Stea ing ks!
Save on Val-U Paks!
Mention this ad & SAVE an additional $5! Val-U Pak #1
Val-U Pak #2
Val-U Pak #3
5 lbs. Mexican or Meatball Mix 5 lbs. Mexican or Meatball Mix 5 lbs. Cube Steak (round) 5lbs. Pork Steak 5 lbs. Stew Beef 5 lbs. Pork Chop (center) 5 lbs. Ground Beef 5 lbs. Ground Chuck 5 lbs. Ground Chuck 5 lbs Loose Hot Sausage 5 lbs. Chicken Breast 5 lbs. Morrell Franks 5 lbs. Chicken Legs 5 lbs. Rope, Hot, or Sweet Sausage 5 lbs. Mexican or Meatball Mix
Only $79.95! 25 lbs. Only $3.19 per lb.
Only $89.95! 25 lbs. Only $3.59 per lb.
Only $99.95! 25 lbs. Only $3.99 per lb.
Your old-fashioned, full service butcher! Butcher Block Meats (no pre-packaged meats) Specialty cuts - Storemade Patties & Salads Complete Grocery Line
Serving you Monday-Saturday! 24 West Main St., Mohawk (315) 866-3344 www.mohawkvillagemarket.com
Store & U-Pick Opens September 9th! New the Year- Pick Your Own Pumpkins! 577 East St, Cassville, NY 13318
(315) 822-0046
www.windyhillorchardny.com
Open 7 days a week: Mon–Fri: 10am-5pm; Sat & Sun 9am-5pm
apparently thought they owned the space, there was a nice view, including a clear-shot look at the last mountain of the Triad – a neighbor of Goodman’s – Coney. Coney Mountain proved to be a perfect illustration of why I enjoy these regional quests. If not for the Triad, I may never have considered hiking Coney. Another modest climb similar to the others with a 1.1 mile trail leading to the summit at 2,280 feet and an elevation gain of 581 feet, Coney Mountain is the one that proved to be a wonderful surprise and is the one I’ll likely return to again. Mark and I met five elderly folks on the summit who said they and their family members had climbed the mountain multiple times over the years, kind of a family tradition, and it was easy while standing there with them to understand why. Coney has a large, sprawling summit with a magnificent 360-degree view—such a great payoff for such a modest climb. It is one of the mountains I can imagine taking the grandkids up one day – preferably in late September or early October surrounded on every side with those awesome autumn hues. We were off the final mountain and headed back home by 4:30 p.m. making it a six-hour day for all three mountains, including the stop for the muffins. Roundtrip times for each mountain can be very different for those who hike depending on a number of factors, including such things as physical conditioning, weather, and the company. For those who would like to try the Triad, there is a website for the quest that has directions and more details as well as a roster of those who have successfully completed it, including a few names from the Mohawk Valley region. Visit www.tupperlaketriad.com. I learned I am number 397 – my summer patch arrived this week. You can also earn a patch for completing the Triad in winter. •
Coney Mountain boasts a large, sprawling summit with a wide open view in every direction.
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
Elite Taxi
“We Run 24/7 so you can!”
The Viti Brothers “Quality is our Specialty”
Medicaid Transportation Provider
1222 E. Main St., Frankfort
CALL: 338-9999
www.thefriendlybakeshop.com
Serving the Greater Rome area since 1994
Our guided fitness workouts and classes help you get stronger, improve balance, and increase flexibility, all in just 30 minutes.
$10* Join today for * $
Our guided fitness workouts and classes help you get stronger, improve balance, and increase flexibility, all in just 30 minutes.
Join today for 10
Our guided fitness workouts and classes help you get stronger, improve balance, and increase flexibility, all in just 30 minutes.
Live your most incredible life with Curves. *
10
Live your most incredible lifetoday with Curves. Join for $
Live your most incredible life with Curves. 300 N. Prospect 300 St. N. Prospect 9835St.River Road Herkimer, NY 13350 Herkimer, NY315-866-3100 Utica, NY 300 N. Prospect St. Herkimer, NY 13350 315-866-3100 300 N. Prospect St.
315-866-3100
Herkimer, NY 13350 315-866-3100
315-368-0062
*Monthly membership fees required and vary by location. Offer valid towards *Monthly membership fees required and vary by location. Offer valid towards 12-month recurring billing membership12-month only. Valid at participating locations only. recurring billing membership only. Valid at participating locations only. No cash value. Offer expires 12.31.16. No cash value. Offer expires 12.31.16. (1603_T2) © 2016 INTERNATIONAL, INC. (1603_T2) © 2016 CURVES INTERNATIONAL, INC.CURVES
12
*Monthly membership fees required and vary by location. Offer valid towards 12-month recurring billing membership only. Valid at participating locations only. No cash value. Offer expires 12.31.16. © 2016 CURVES INTERNATIONAL, INC. (1603_T2)
FRIENDLY BAKE SHOP
(315) 894-8861
Tues. - Fri. 7 - 5, Sat. 7 -3, Sun 7 - 12:30
REMSEN
COUNTRY BAKERY Famous for our homemade donuts & bread and dinner rolls (order for your event or banquet)
Also try our pizza, wings and sandwiches. Open Tue-Thurs: 7am-7pm, Fri & Sat: 7am-9pm
9624 Main St., Remsen (315) 831-2559
Mohawk valley astronomical society
Sagittarius the Steaming Teapot by carol higgins
Hooray, the warm summer weather has arrived! It’s time for picnics, swimming, hiking, other outdoor activities and, of course, astronomy. One of the most popular and interesting summer constellations is called Sagittarius. Sagittarius is in the southwestern sky in August. In ancient times it was known to the Greeks as a centaur, a half-man and half-horse creature holding a bow and arrow. Today we refer to Sagittarius by a unique pattern formed by eight of its brightest stars – the “Teapot.” Its handle is on the left, a lid is on top, and the spout on the right is complete with steam rising from it. More about that steam later. The Sagittarius region is rich with a number of beautiful and famous deep sky objects that are easily seen. Inside the Teapot toward the bottom are three globular clusters, each one a tight group of hundreds of thousands to millions of stars that are about 10 billion years old. Just above the top star in the lid and to the left are two more globular clusters. One of the brightest and largest objects in Sagittarius is the Lagoon Nebula. To find it, draw an imaginary line between the top star of the Teapot handle to the star in the lid, then continue to extend the line that same distance. You’ll see a glowing cloud of gas and dust and stars. It’s a place where
new stars are forming, and its size Constellation Sagittarius and the Milky Way Galaxy is mind-boggling. To get an idea of over Utica. Photo by MVAS member Chuck Higgins an object’s dimensions or distance, astronomers use a measurement called a “light-year.” That’s the distance a beam of light travels in one sive black hole, and all of the stars, planets, year, an astounding 6 trillion miles. The gas and dust, dark matter, and our entire Hanny’s Voorwerp. Credit: NASA,around ESA, W. Keel, Zoo Team Lagoon Nebula is 110 light years across solar Image system rotate it. Galaxy It takes our and 50 light years wide. solar system 225 million years to make Just above the Lagoon is the bright but one complete orbit. Guess where that gasmaller Trifid Nebula, an unusual com- lactic center is in our sky? Right next to bination of both an emission nebula and Sagittarius! It has a higher concentration of reflection nebula. It is also a star nursery, stars, and that’s why the Teapot’s “steam” with a bright star inside the emission nebu- is so bright compared to other areas of the la that ionizes hydrogen and makes it glow Milky Way. red, while the reflection nebula portion has The Mohawk Valley offers some of a blue glow lit up by a nearby star. You can the best night sky seeing conditions in the see both the Lagoon and Trifid with unaid- entire USA. Our skies aren’t polluted with ed eyes, but they are especially wonderful unnecessary lighting from buildings, street sights using binoculars or a small tele- lights, and illuminated signs like almost 80 scope. percent of our country. Scientists estimate Now, about that steam rising out of the one-third of people on the planet cannot Teapot spout. That is our Milky Way gal- see the Milky Way due to light pollution. axy, a “spiral galaxy” shaped like a com- Take some time to enjoy pact disk with arms curving out from the the steaming Teapot center like a pinwheel. Our planet is in one and our Milky of the arms, so when we look toward the Way galaxy; Join MVAS at center of the galaxy or the other arms we they are quite a Barton-Brown Observatory see the glow of an enormous amount of sight! in Waterville on August 6 gas and dust – thus the smoky band in our Wi s h i n g night sky. you clear from 8:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. to At our galaxy’s center is a super-mas- skies! • view the jewels of Sagittarius
and the Milky Way.
The Gallery Antiques at Pinebrick Come see us for all your maple syrup products! 8874 Tibbitts Rd., New Hartford 315-793-3114 www.facebook.com/tibbittsmaple www.tibbittsmaple.wordpress.com
A multi-dealer shop specializing in advertising, petroliana, lamps, furniture, glass, & quality smalls.
Look for our 1960s Texaco sign!
The Tepee, no longer a stop along the way. It’s the destination!
Since 1950!
(315) 893-7752
6790 Route 20, Bouckville www.thegallerycoop.com
7632 Hwy. 20 607-264-3987 CALL FOR HOURS www.thetepee.biz 13
downtown utica
what’s up downtown
Bob Pellegrino of Color Craft Interiors has been in business in Utica since 1962
by michelle truett
DOWNTOWN FOR 48 YEARS
Color Craft Interiors
Background photo by Matt Ossowski
421 Seneca Street (Franklin Square)
Bob Pellegrino is a fixture in Downtown Utica. He can tell you what businesses used to be where and who ran them. Spending a few hours with him is like being able to step back in time. He likes to joke that when people ask where he got his education, he says he has two B.S. degrees – one from “Brandegee School” and one from “Bleecker Street.” Bob has never been a stranger to hard work – at about 10 years old, he went to work at a barber shop in East Utica and at about 13, he started learning the flooring trade. Right after high school, he spent four years in the Navy and got a chance to travel the world. In 1962 he started Elite Flooring Service under which he did flooring installations for numerous stores in the Utica area. In 1968, along with his wife, Marie, he incorporated as Color Craft Interiors and opened on Lower Genesee Street in Bagg’s Square to go into the retail business. The company now specializes in commercial and residential carpeting, laminate, linoleum, and commercial tile. Over the years, he completed projects for many of the most notable buildings in the city, including Commercial Travelers, the Federal Building, City Hall, the Police Station, and the Utica City School District. At one point, he could safely say that he had worked in almost every building “from John Street to Court Street” in downtown. He carpeted many local colleges as well. He has done multiple projects for Bank of Utica, which was the bank that gave him his first business mortgage in the 1960s. Today, Bob is still in business, operating now out of Franklin Square, where he moved in 1992. He is working on renovating the second floor to create additional office space.
IRONWOOD Furniture Jelly Cupboards, Bookcases, Hutches, Tables, Baker’s Racks, Benches, Coffee/End Tables, Hoosiers & much more!
AMISH MADE
F F O % 0 10-3OREWIDE
ST MS 7686 Route 5, Clinton (315) 853-7300 IN-STOCK ITE Open Mon -Sat: 10am-5pm www.ironwoodcny.com 14
CNY FIGGERY Sweet Corn coming soon!
lity, a u Q , y t e i Var rvice! & Se
5841 Old Oneida Rd., Rome (315) 339-5182 Open 9-6 Daily, Closed Fridays www.wagnerfarmsny.com
Fresh Figs
Fresh Produce
Wagner’s Best Popcorn
A NEW DOWNTOWN BUSINESS
Tarik’s Bakery 6 Bank Place
Bank Place (that great little one way street right next to the gold dome bank building) is known for its intimate dining establishments. One of the newest ones to move in is about to celebrate its one year anniversary. Tarik’s Bakery is owned by Edin and Tarik Kulosman – a father and son team. They offer authentic Bosnian cuisine. Edin is originally from Bosnia and moved to Utica in 1997. He has always wanted to own his own business. Tarik is 19 years old and is attending Utica College. He is studying political science and hopes to one day become a lawyer. They chose Bank Place as the location for their new restaurant particularly because it has the distinct feel of an “International Row”. Everything at Tarik’s is made from scratch from the fresh baked bread down to the delectable desserts. Their bake case alone is a work of art. For first timers who want a taste of great Bosnian food, try the cevapi (sausage links tucked between two pieces of artisan flat bread served with onions) or Bosnian pita: Burek (beef), Sirnica (cheese) or Zeljanica (spinach and cheese). Don’t worry about pronunciation! The family will happily walk you through the menu. Need a jolt to your work day? The espresso, cappucino, and Bosnian coffee at Tarik’s are out of this world. They are also available for catering – their “meat pyramid” is something you won’t see anywhere else in the city!
Father and son, Edin and Tarik Kulosman, of Tarik’s Bakery
MUNSON-WILLIAMS-PROCTOR ARTS INSTITUTE
The World through His Lens:
Steve McCurry Photographs If you have not been to Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute’s latest photography exhibition, it’s a must to put on your calendar – the MWPAI Museum of Art is the only venue where The World through His Lens: Steve McCurry Photographs is being shown. If you have seen it, I’m sure you have the same pull as I to go see it again and again. The exhibit features 60 large-scale photographs by renowned National Geographic photographer Steve McCurry, including his well known “Afghan Girl,” which was named “the most recognized photograph” in the history of National Geographic magazine. McCurry is known for capturing unexpected moments and you will surely experience those as you take in the people and diverse societies of Thailand, Burma-Myanmar, Laos, Afghanistan, Cambodia, Russia, India, and Pakistan. The photographs, colors, expressions of the subjects and the accompanying narratives for each photo make the entire space come to life. To spend some time with this exhibition is like traveling the world with McCurry himself. •
Sharbat Gula, Afghan Girl, Peshawar, Pakistan, 1984 © Steve McCurry
Find out more on Facebook: “Downtown Utica”
SHAW’S
MAPLE PRODUCTS Put the car back in the garage! A family run business specializing in the manufacturing of affordable, well-contructed:
Storage Sheds Gazebos Pole Barns Garages (attached or unattached) Decks Free estimates for Pole Barns & Garages (315) 853-5285 4932 Rt. 233, Westmoreland
Pole Barns and Garages!
Fully insured with over 30 years experience! See examples at: www.ssheds.com
FREE Estimates
Find our sweet syrup and products at: Deansboro Superette, Clinton Tractor, Sammy & Annie Foodsin Utica, Tom’s Natural Foods in Clinton, The Mustard Seed in Little Falls, Westmoreland Antiques, Oneida Commons & our shop at 7945 Maxwell Rd., Clinton
See us at the Farmers’ Markets! www.shawsmapleproducts.com
315-725-0547
• Electrical • Hardware • Tools • Plumbing • Paint Supplies/Stain • Automotive • Bulk Nails & Screws • Midwest Fasteners
Main Street, Poland Intersection of Rt 28 and Rt 8
(315) 826-8086
Mon-Sat: 7am-6pm, Sun: 11am-3pm
15
The Everyday Adventures of Mohawk Valley Girl
the newport marketplace One perk about being Mohawk Valley Girl is that people often recommend interesting places for me to check out. Several people suggested I visit the Newport Marketplace on Main Street in Newport. It was not hard to figure out why. I was charmed by the place as soon as we drove up and saw all the flowers and garden decorations out front. It is clear that this is not your average antiques mart. Looking at the lovely pots of plants, I reflected that I really have not done enough with my container garden this year. The first thing I noticed walking into the building was the food. There were all kinds of interesting non-perishables on shelves. “Jake and Amos,” I said. “They make a really good hot sauce I used to use all the time at the Snack Shack.” That was a diner I greatly enjoyed, now sadly closed. Steven pointed out a cooler with drinks, because I had been lamenting that I had forgotten to bring a bottle of water from home. Before quenching my thirst, though, I wanted to look around and shop. We wandered through several rooms, marveling at the variety of vendors. I envied some beautiful antique furniture as well as a few re-purposed items, paused at some vintage clothing, and considered purchasing several knickknacks. I even saw some glasses from The Boilermaker. I have a few of those from running the Boilermaker 15K myself. A thrilling discovery was the back deck, overlooking the water. We walked along it, admiring the view. What a beautiful place to sit. There were some metal tables and chairs as well as some Adirondack chairs available for purchase. I also noted some fun deck decorations; I may go back and purchase them for my own deck. Back inside, we looked at a lot more merchandise but by no means everything. We got separated but met up again at the cash register. Steven asked the lady at the counter if there was a bathroom. “I was going to tell you to check out the bathroom,” I said. I had just walked by it myself. “There’s a wind chime of dragonflies that are lighted!”
DEANSBORO SUPERETTE
Babying Babies Since 1985!
All Breeds Welcome! Baths • Nails • De-Shedding • Day Care Cat Brush Outs • Teeth Brushing Pet Apparel & Supplies
Call (315) 736-7567 to schedule an appointment
16
Professional Pet Groomers 105 Main Street, Whitesboro
Prince-Boyd & Hyatt Home For Funerals, Inc.
Since 1967
Home of the Monster Sub!
Home-like surroundings for your convenience & comfort. Pre-arrangement Plans with prey-payment or no payment options.
210 West Court St. Rome • 336-1510 Handicapped Accessible
www.princeboydhyatt.com
Middle Eastern Favorites!
Humous, Kibbie, Falafel, Babaghanoush , Taboulie, Grape leaves, Spinach pies.
Open 7 days a week! Rt 12B, Deansboro (315) 841-4377 www.deansborosuperette.com
“We sell those,” the lady said. “They are solar.” How cool is that?! We soon got to chatting with the lady, who was Tracy Ryan, one of the owners, along with Mark Wagner. She told us the shop was formerly the Top Notch Garden Center in Little Falls but moved to the current location and expanded into the Marketplace two years ago. It currently has 53 vendors, which are constantly changing. “We do the seasons,” she said, “because it’s also a garden shop.” Steven purchased a shot glass for his collection while I got some sesame sticks and unsweetened iced tea. “Those are good sesame sticks,” Tracy told me. While we were talking, an Amish lady came in with a pint of strawberries to leave at the counter as samples. Tracy encouraged us to try them. Yum! The lady and her daughter were selling them outside the store. We bought a pint, but first we walked out back to look through the greenhouse and check out the deck once again. It was not until much later that I realized I had gotten so interested in our conversation with Tracy that I had completely forgotten to ask the price of the dragonfly lights. Now I have yet another reason to return. •
Mark Wagner on the back porch of the Newport Marketplace overlooking the West Canada Creek
Newport Marketplace
7583 Main St., Newport (315) 845-8822 “Like” them on Facebook! 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
Erin Brown, D.D.S.
Artisan Cheese handmade by the Felio Family and sold locally throughout the Mohawk Valley!
For locations visit: www.threevillagecheese.com Also see us every Saturday at the Oneida Co. Market at Utica’s Union Station!
Now Accepting New Patients 2702 Genesee St., Utica (315) 797-0030
www.neighborhoodfamilydentist.com info@neighborhoodfamilydentist.com
SavorING Summer GuidE
Clinton Art & Music Festival
Saturday, August 27, 10am Celebrate the end of summer with a full day of live music, artists’ wares, kids’ activities, and food. Village Green, Clinton, www.clintonnychamber.org/art-music-festival.html
Fandemicon
Utica’s Pop Culture Convention Saturday, August 20, 2016, 10am-5pm A family friendly celebration of all things fandom–from comics, superheroes, and gaming, to anime, manga and cosplay. Utica Public Library, 303 Genesee St., Utica, www.fandemicon.com
by Sharry L. Whitney
It’s time to slow down and relish summer. June and July were filled with busy days of gardening, chores, and the gobbling of summer. August is the month—as Mark Wagner of Newport Marketplace puts it—for “chewing slowly.” Here are just a few of the local events and festivals to help us savor summer’s second act.
Events & Festivals
Breakfast with Washington
Saturday, August 6, 9:30am Have breakfast with General Washington - a historic recreation of Washington’s breakfast with George Herkimer, Tickets: $10, Herkimer Home State Historic Site, 200 Route 169S, Little Falls www.herkimerhomeacademy.org
Farmers’ Museum Civil War Weekend
Drums Along the Mohawk
Sunday, August 7, 7pm The Mohawk Valley’s annual drum and bugle corps competition featuring world class drum corps! Rome Free Academy Stadium Turin St, Rome www.drumsalongthemohawk.com
Sat. & Sun., August 20-21, 10am–5pm Experience what life was like for the typical New York State Civil War soldier by interacting with re-enacting units. Free with museum admission. 5775 NY-80, Cooperstown www.farmersmuseum.org
29th Annual Little Falls Canal Celebration
August 8 - 14, Thousands of visitors attend this annual celebration of the community, heritage, and spirit of Little Falls. Entertainment, programs, and vendors. www.littlefallsny.com
Mohawk Valley Boat Charters Board the BELLA GIORNATA at Bellamy Harbor Park in Rome for all-day charters on the Erie Canal.
Wed: Loomis Gang Train Robberies 10, 12:30, 3pm • Thurs: Clown Train 12:30 and 3pm Fri: Hobo Days 12:30 and 3pm • Sat & Sun: Scenic Ride to Otter Lake 12:30 and 3pm Sat: Big Moose Station Lunch Train: Noon • Sun: Big Moose Station Brunch Train: 9:30am River & Rail: Paddle from Tickner’s down the Moose River and catch a train back
Max. 6 passengers, restroom aboard. 1 hour to all-day scenic canal cruises, historical tours, fishing charters. www.mohawkvalleyboatcharters.com
By appt: 315-335-2270 18
UticaZoo.org
Info & Reserve at 1-800-819-2291 www.adirondackrr.com
Rome’s 14th Annual Canalfest
August 5-7, Friday: 5-10pm, Saturday & Sunday: noon - 10pm Three fun-filled family-oriented days on the historic Erie Canal with nonstop music and entertainment. Bellamy Harbor Park, Mill St., Rome http://romeny.rotaryclub.pro
Rome’s Canalfest
man’s Field, 5476 Trenton Rd., Utica www.facebook.com/TOL2016
FREE Summer Concerts Clinton Concerts in the Park
Tuesday nights at 7pm through August 23rd. Village Green, Clinton Line up: www.clintonnychamber.org/ calendar.html
Utica Zoo Brewfest
Cooperstown Lakefront Concert Series
Saturday, August 6, 6-9pm 18th Annual Brewfest fundraising event with over 100 craft beers and hard ciders will be on tap for you to sample. Cost: $20-40, http://uticazoo.org/brew
Tuesdays at 7pm through August 30th, Lakefront Park, Cooperstown Line up: thisiscooperstown.com/events/ cooperstown-lakefront-concert-series
6th Annual Taste of Lebanon
August 5-7, Friday: 5-9, Saturday: 1-9pm, Sunday: 11-4 Lebanese food, music, dancing and special performances. Deerfield Fire-
Fort Rickey
Discover the fun... Fun for everyone! • Petting areas, animal presentations, maternity ward softplay maze-tubes, • Giant tunnels, slides, ballcrawl • Exotic and native animals
R
GET YOU
Route 49 - 3 Miles West of Rome (315) 336-1930
FREE SS CHILD kPeA y.com at fortric
19
Little Falls Concert Series
Old Forge Lakefront
Wed., August 10 at 6pm Rotary Park; Fri., August 12 at 9:30pm Eastern Park; Sat. & Sun. August 13 & 14 concerts throughout both days. Line up: www.littlefallsny.com
Levitt AMP Series, photo by Mark DiOrio Photography
Marcy “Betsy the Barge� Concert Series
Thursdays at 6pm through September 1st, Lock 20 Canal Park, Rte. 49, Marcy Line up: townofmarcy.org/content/ CommunityCategories
Richfield Springs Summer Concert Series
Wednesdays at 7pm through August 24th, Village Park Bandstand, Richfield Springs www.thisiscooperstown.com/events/ richfield-springs-summer-concert-series
Whitesboro Summer Concert Series
Wednesdays at 6:30pm through August 31st, Village Green, Whitesboro Line up: village.whitesboro.ny.us/content/calendars
Rome Summer Concert Series
New York Mills Summer Concert Series Tuesdays at 6:30pm through August 30th, Pulaski Park, Main St., New York Mills Line up: villageofnewyorkmills.org/ content/localeventcategories
Old Forge Summer Concert Series
Sylvan Beach Bands at the Beach
Wednesdays at 7pm through August 24, Kopernick Park, Oneida Square, Utica Line up: facebook.com/levittamputica
Utica, Levitt AMP Music Series
Sundays at 7pm through September 4th, Old Forge Lakefront Line up: www.oldforgeny.com/events. html/events
INC.
Mondays at 6pm through August 22nd, Griffo Green, Rome City Hall, Rome Line up: romenewyork.com/events
Mondays at 7:30pm through September 5th, Kopernick Park, Oneida Square, Utica Line up: facebook.com/levittamputica
Yorkville Concert Series
Thursdays at 6:30pm through August 25 Campbell Ave., Yorkville Line up: villageofyorkvilleny.org/content/calendars
Heartworks Quilts & Fabrics
Bicycle Parts, Accessories & Clothing Repairs on All Makes & Models of Bikes Cross-Country Skis & Snowshoes
Full Service Quilt Shop Baby Lock/Koala Dealer Famous for Flannel!
Go-Karts
Batting Cages
Bumper Boats
Kiddie Carts
Arcade
(607) 547-2501
Hours: Tues-Fri 9-5, Sat 9-3, Sun/Mon Closed
411 Mohawk St., Herkimer, NY 315-866-5571 www.dickswheelshop.com
20
www.heartworksquilts.com info@heartworksquilts.com
6237 State Hwy 28, Fly Creek
38 Years in Business!
Open Daily 11am-9pm
5615 Rome-New London Rd. (Rt. 49 W.), Rome
315-339-2666 www.peterpaulrecreation.com
Mohawk Valley road trip
Let’s go
fly a kite! Story and photos by Melida Karastury
A breezy afternoon while the kids are on summer break has the luxury of unplanned adventures and whimsy. Today the kids and I head to the New Hartford Shopping to pick up a kite at our favorite store, The Village Toy Shop. We enter the adorable brick-faced shop with the large arched wooden door and are greeted by the Willis family (Kara Willis Keeley, Nate Keeley, Tom Willis, and Eli Keeley). We can’t help but explore and play with the many tables of toys and games throughout the shop. Alana hops into the conductors seat of the wooden train that sits smack dab in the middle of the store while her brother, Josh, is sent to the caboose. After some interactive play and games the kids finally choose a colorful frameless kite for our next stop—the Sherrillbrook Park in the town of New Hartford. We find a nice open field so we can run freely. The wind is perfect and we each take a turn with the kite. Many of the people at the park stop what they are doing to watch the colorful orange, red, blue, white, and black kite zip across the blue sky. After an hour or so we decide to explore more of the park. We find
Stash Away quilt shoppe
FABRICS • NOTIONS • BOOKS HANDMADE GIFTS • CLASSES PATTERNS• WOOL/SUPPLIES 1249 Erie Blvd. W., Rome 315-533-7611 www.stashawayquiltshoppe.com
Mon 11-3, Tues 10-4, Thurs 11-8, Wed, Fri, Sat 10-5, closed Sundays
Kara Willis Keeley, Nate Keeley, Tom Willis, and Eli Keeley at The Village Toy Shop
CIAL SECURIT SO DISABILITY Y
Peter W. Antonowicz, Esq. Kelly L. Eichhorn, ADR Representing the disabled for over 30 years Offices in Rome and Utica
ANTONOWICZ GROUP (315) 337-4008
www.disabilitya-z.com
FAITH PROPERTIES Diane Lockwood Cell: 315-717-5379
MOTORCYCLE & MACHINE
315-735-2222 ext. 6660 • 2306 Genesee St., Utica
CNY’S HARLEY-DAVIDSON SPEED & SERVICE CENTER HARLEY-DAVIDSON ® PERFORMANCE ENGINE BUILDING ®
5225 S. MAIN ST., MUNNSVILLE OPEN: M-F 8-5, SAT 8-12 BY APPT.
315-495-6650
WWW.HILLSIDECYCLE.COM
$669,000
150 Cook Hill Rd, Herkimer
4bd, 4bth, 3 frpls, 4 car garage Contemporary home on 5+ acres! 21
a nice paved trail to walk and stop to watch a few happy dog’s frolic in the fenced-in area. The warm sun, fresh air, and exercise has tuckered out the family. We all look at each other and I announce, “Fish fry Friday!” We hop in the car and venture to Happy Sam’s Cocktail Lounge at the Ramada Inn in New Hartford. The staff caters to our every need. We notice the sign and menu logo and learn the caricature is of Sammy Scampone’s late father. Happy
J.B.'s
Small Engine Works (315) 797-4461 Downtown Schuyler, NY 2236 Route 5 • Open Mon - Fri: 9-5, Sat: 9-12
Your independent Cub Cadet dealer
•Expert service •Locally owned for 30 years!
Service on most makes and models of snow, lawn, and garden equipment.
G N I W O T 24 HOUR
N O T CLIN SION I L L CO 315.853.5665 PO Box 292, McBride Ave. Clinton, NY Fax: 315.853.4751
Hanging Baskets • Annuals • Perennials • Fresh Flowers Fairy Gardens • Dish Gardens • Garden Decor
Your florist for any occasion! Buy One, Get One Free!
Annuals, Vegetables, Herbs, Hanging Baskets, Flower Pouches!
*equal or lessor value
ice Your Full Serv Florist!
Gift Cards! Gift Shoppe!
Open Mon-Sat 10-5, Closed Sunday • www.michaelsgreenhouse.com
2774 Oneida St., Sauquoit, NY (315) 737-8181
Sam’s Cocktail Lounge serves up bar bites, sandwiches, stone baked personal pan pizzas, and a Friday fish fry! We order a variety of items from the menu and it’s all delicious. Also on Friday there is happy hour with complimentary pasta with sauce and tomato pie. There’s also live guitar music by Jym Syn in the relaxing lounge. Happy Sam’s definitely made our family and their tummies very happy! The afternoon in the park and dinner out was the perfect kickoff to the weekend and more summer fun in the Mohawk Valley. •
Happy Sam’s Banquet & Cocktail Lounge Ramada Inn, 141 New Hartford St, New Hartford Open: Tue-Sat: 4-9pm www.happysams.com Banquets for 10-250 people, call: (315) 737-3445
Happy Sam’s team: (Llto r) Mike Abraham, Marissa Giehl, Sammy Scampone, Samantha Russo, and Chef Cheech
For the child in all of us. We offer candy, coffee & desserts!
Come Swing a Few at the View! (315)723-7682
531 Varick St., Utica 765-6463
8300 Brimfield St., Clinton
M-F 8-5:30, Sat 8-4, Sun 8-2, Closed Tues
Open daily at 7am
www.brimfieldviewdrivingrange.com
www.facebook.com/sosweetcandycafe
Lessons available
All Breeds Welcome!
Bathing & Blowouts Grooming to breed standards Cat grooming • Ear cleaning Gland expression • Hand-stripping
ONE PAW AT A TIME
PET Salon
Over 20 Years Experience!
Melinda and her family know how to enjoy a sunny Friday
BUY 1lb of plain cheese curds
GET
FR TH ES E TU O IESHES E ND T C T SQ U M EAK
ST SD A UR RA AY YS DS I & TH GHT S • E V FR 2P AT OM M !
2 OFF oz
$
any 8 cheese curd flavor
Offer valid in store only at Stolzfus Dairy location through 8-31-16. Limit one per customer.
Visit our store for homemade breads, granola and farm fresh free range brown eggs!
3 Main St., Whitesboro
315-725-6486 Mon-Sat 8-5 by appt.
www.onepawatatimegrooming.com
Locally Produced Freshness Guaranteed
6300 Skinner Rd., Vernon Center, NY Open: Mon-Fri 10-5, Sat 10-1 (315) 829-4089 | www.stoltzfusdairy.com
23
mohawk valley food
aLL aBOARD!
tHE w.w. dURANT rAQUETTE lAKE nAVIGATION cO. story and photos by Jorge L. Hernández
All aboard! Donna Pohl readies to embark on yet another gourmet lunch excursion around the Adirondacks’ Raquette Lake this bright summer day. Donna, president and co-owner of the Raquette Lake Navigation Company, Inc., and her family (boat skipper Dean, two of her four children, and a small crew of servers) set sail for their 26th season this late June along the pristine and undeveloped lake with 99 miles of shoreline and 19 islands. Donna, a gracious former schoolteacher, and Dean, a former construction contractor, turned to the tourism trade in 1991 as another income stream when building work continued to dwindle in the region since New York State owns 80 percent of the sites. “People said we were taking a risk,” Donna says. “They laughed at us, but it worked out.” The W.W. Durant gleams in the startling morning sun as 64 passengers—the maximum allowed—climb aboard for the first of this day’s four cruises. The boat, built by Dean and three helpers during two-plus years, replicates the boats that cruised the lake during its glamour heyday in the late 19th century. It was named after William West Durant, builder of big vacation camps that credited him with opening the luxe world of Adirondack living to the wealthy movers and shakers of New York’s Golden Age. The beautifully wood-worked main cabin, framed by multiple windows, opens up to the scenery along the shore of camps, pines, and mountain views from snug quarters. For true nature lovers, an upper deck provides an open-air sun and wind experience during the excursion tour expertly narrated by Captain Dean. The lake itself is said to be named for a mass of snowshoes (raquette in French) left behind on shore during one early spring thaw. But enough about the tour—food ahoy! Executive Chef Jim Pohl, Donna’s middle son, graduated from the Culinary Institute of America in Hyde Park, N.Y. in 2003—and it shows. The lunch buffet starts with a tossed salad with apricot vinaigrette, along with a platter of whole and chunked assorted fruit, served by Donna and two helpers.
Country
Connections Shop Boonville! Bulk food, honey, alpaca products, woodcrafted items, clocks, furniture & more! (315) 796-6822 139 Main St., Boonville Wed-Fri: 11-5, Sat: 9-12 24
Guests settle in on the first of four cruises scheduled for the day
Skipper and tour guide Dean Pohl
The day’s menu included cocoa-and-chili-rubbed pork loin in brown sauce and boned chicken breasts in roasted red pepper sauce
Lil' Red Caboose Ice Cream
Lil' Red Caboose I
Fun Summer Nights!
Fun Summer N
Sundae Sunday—Large Sundaes priced at Regular Sundae price of $4.50 Monday Night Madness—All Glaciers only $1.95 (Save 50%) Tuesday Night—”Tue” Dollar Milkshakes (5—8 pm) (Save $1.90) Wednesday Night—”Free” Sprinkles on Cones Open Monday—Friday 4pm-8pm, Saturday/Sunday 12pm-8pm
Tel: (315) 826-7390 St. Rt. 28, Poland
Sundae Sunday—Large Sundaes priced at of $4.50 Monday Night Madness—All Glaciers only Tuesday Night—”Tue” Dollar Milkshakes (5 • Full service landscape company Wednesday Night—”Free” Sprinkles on Co Open Monday—Friday 4pm-8pm, Saturda • Nursery stock, trees, perennials,
Unique Garden Gift Shop! hanging baskets Tel:
(315) 8 St. Rt. 28 www.melindasgardenbarn.com
8442 St. Hwy 28, Richfield Springs
Donna plays mother hen during lunch, after first checking in and boarding the diners and collecting fees. But don’t say she looks so busy. “Don’t tell me that! I tell my staff that they have to make all the work seem effortless,” she says. But she does still scurry about the room, dispensing tour maps, salad plates, and good cheer. “Butter’s coming!” she assures. The buffet table offers two proteins: on this day, a cocoa-and-chili-rubbed pork loin in brown sauce and boned chicken breasts in roasted red pepper sauce. A carbohydrate complements the meats: pasta bow ties with sautéed red onions, cherry tomatoes, and artichokes. And a vegetable choice rounds out the entrée: broccoli, zucchini, and yellow squash with parmesan cheese. Dessert? Maple bread pudding. Iced tea, lemonade, and coffee are included with the meal; beer, wine, and cocktails are available at the cash bar. Luckily, there isn’t any room left in the dining cabin for cots. “Jim cooks in a commercial kitchen on shore,” Donna says. “And the food is loaded on board using catering vans equipped with catering ovens.” The buffet choices change each lunch tour; multiple entrée options are available for dinner cruises; and there’s also a more intimate dining cruise with limited seating. Perusing the cruise schedule over coffee, the moonlight excursion appears tempting to us for next time. But maybe we’ll hold out for an early evening dinner trip, enchanted by the advertised citrus-seared sea scallops over a bed of angel hair pasta with an herbed scampi sauce. Yeah, there’s no doubt that in that case we’ll pass on the moon. •
The breathtaking tour is expertly narrated by Captain Dean Pohl
Friendly Samantha Mayo, a summer worker from Albany, is one of our servers
Raquette Lake Navigation Co., Inc.
254 Antlers Rd., Raquette Lake • 315-354-5532 • raquettelakenavigation.com Runs approximately 18 excursions and dining cruises weekly, weather permitting, from late June through Labor Day. Cruising options include basic tours, lunch buffet, dinner, pizza cruises, moonlight cruises, and special event cruises like small wedding receptions or private parties.
Available in August...
“I’m an artistwho loves making beautiful things to help you cherish your memories!” www.intentionegrity.com www.facebook.com/intentionegrity
Custom Photo Art • Wall Displays
315-520-5295 intentionegrity@gmail.com
Fantastic Peaches!
As well as several varieties of early apples, sweet corn, zucchini, cucumbers, tomatoes, eggplant, melons, cabbage, potatoes.
Interior Painting by
Local maple syrup, honey, and Adirondack cheese!
Reasonable Rates • References Available
Dennis Polanowicz
An Eclectic Store
We want our visitors to be engaged, creative and spontaneous. The discovery process is the fun! 2398 State Hwy 80, West Burlington
607-965-0012
No Job Too Small for this “Old Guy”!
Also cider donuts and pies from our bakery, our awesome apple cake with apple cider frosting - a customer favorite!
Open Tues-Sat 10-5, Sun 12:30-4
315-839-5967 • 315-525-7664
We grow our own blueberries and raspberries!
Try our Cider Slushies!
Family Owned for 70 Years 4695 Middle Settlement Road, New Hartford, NY (315) 736-5883 Monday to Saturday: 9am to 6pm Sunday:10am to 5pm
TheOwl&Moon
www.theowlandmoon.com
Promoting a long, healthy relationship between you and your four-legged companions. Leatherstocking 607-847-9990 Veterinary Services
117 CoHwy 17, New Berlin
Service for all your large animal needs.
Marcy
Veterinary Clinic
315-570-6760
9225 River Road, Marcy
A full-service small animal veterinary clinic.
Mohawk Valley Nature
An August Morning in the High Field story and photos by Matt Perry Usually on the first day of the month of August, standing at the lookout point on our high field, I will enjoy an expansive view of the surroundings and I perceive a great amount of animal activity. Birds and insects are everywhere. There is also a surprising amount of birdsong given the date. The music of Common Yellowthroats, American Goldfinches, and Field Sparrows dominate the meadow chorus, but there are also a few Rufous-sided Towhees singing, and even an Alder Flycatcher is making “peek” calls. Most of these species are busy raising their second broods of the season. At this time of the summer the nature preserve seems to transform into a nursery. Nestlings and recently fledged birds represent about half of what I’m hearing. Most of their vocalizations are simple “chip” calls or light trills and can be easily dis-
An adult Field Sparrow feeds its fledgling in a border tree
tinguished from the calls of adult birds or from the more complex practice songs perA male Cardinal sings formed by juveniles. Most above the high field immature songbirds learn their repertoire by listening to and attempting to imitate their parents as well as neighbors of the same streaked cowbird chick would continue to folspecies. Hearing some of these training sessions low its foster parents around the habitat for anout of context can cause confusion to birders other week before unceremoniously abandoning who rely on sound as their primary identifica- them to join up with a flock of its own kind. A female American Goldfinch plucks tion tool. One of the most persistent calls I hear is downy material from a Canada thistle plant that a cowbird chick. Its call was a nagging harsh has gone to seed. At this time of year, the thistrill that cut though the other sounds in the tle plants offer finches quality one-stop-shopfield and provided me with a good idea of ping. They can feed on the ripe seeds and at the where the bird was calling from. As brood par- same time collect high grade fluff to line their asites, adult cowbirds rely on foster parents to nests. It would seem that the species even delays do all of their chick-rearing. This meant that the its breeding to coincide with the thistle’s bounadult birds engaged in raising that cowbird chick tiful period. Regardless, the goldfinch is a late could belong to any one of 50 species that breed breeder and often can be found with an active in the vicinity. This particular begging fledg- nest in the middle of August. Their nests are cupling probably belonged to a pair of Song Spar- shaped and comprised of a sturdy frame of sticks, row or Common Yellowthroats, which are but with an interior lined with soft white thistle among the most common cowbird host spe- down. I had been monitoring one goldfinch nest cies, and are typically still actively breeding in that was nestled in the branches of a stout honthe latter part of the summer season. With my eysuckle bush. Unfortunately, it was found by binoculars, that time I finally zeroed in on the a predator that emptied it of its contents. But cowbird chick. After watching it for a few min- now only two weeks following that disaster, the utes, I saw a Yellowthroat female (tiny in con- same nest had eggs in it again. Only rarely do trast to the chick) come forward and stuff insects goldfinches reuse the same nest, but evidently into its gaping bill. The grayish and heavily this was one of those times. The only problem
This Geoffrey Cornish designed golf course features:
GOLF CLUB of NEWPORT 26
- multiple tees - large undulating greens - more than 60 bunkers - views of the Kuyahoora Valley “Hidden Gem” Recipient -N.Y. State Golf Magazine Located 12.4 miles northeast of Utica and 13.5 miles north of Herkimer, offering enjoyment to golfers of all abilities. Please consider us for your next round of golf.
(315) 845-8333
760 Honey Hill Rd., Newport (GPS Poland) www.golfclubofnewport.com
Gifts of Distinction
One of Chenango County’s Best Kept Secrets! Featuring The Clothing Boutique Baby Boutique • Country Style Curtains
Mon-Sat: 9:30am-5:30pm; Sun: 12-5pm
29 S. Main St., Sherburne, NY • (607) 674-9440
could be that the same predator responsible for pilfering that nest could return to do it again. While checking on that nest, I startled a White-tailed Deer that was feeding in the hedgerow. It, in turn, startled me with a loud, explosive and cough-like exhalation. It then noisily bounded through the field of goldenrod. In the process, it flushed up some birds from the undergrowth. A pair of Field Sparrows seems to be particularly put out by the intrusion. They often place their nest directly on the ground where it is especially vulnerable to errant foot-
steps of both beast and man. As if I had been the one that disturbed them, the pair of adult sparrows issued sharp warning calls in my direction. One of them came in quite close and afforded me a great view of its breeding plumage. The species is replete with obvious field marks. They have an orange cap and a pinkish bill. They also possess a thin white eye-ring and white wing bars. They are not considered to be a common species anymore due to their highly selective habitat requirements. They prefer to nest in old fields that are partially filled in with bushes and young trees. By its very nature, transitional habitats A male American Goldfinch collects thistle down of this kind only exist for a short time as it will continue to evolve into young forest. Alas, when it does, it will be abandoned by the Field Sparrow. On my way out of the high field, I pass through a grove of young Black Cherry trees. Growing on the field’s south facing slope, these saplings developed faster than their counterparts in other parts of the field. Still, considering that
Pure Goat Milk Soap
Each bar is made with care from the finest vegetable oils, therapeutic grade essential oils and pure goat milk providing the ultimate in fine skin care and repair.
Great for the whole family!
Cranberry Ridge Farm www.cranberryridgefarmny.com
315.964.9900
Milkshake Thursdays!
$2.75 for regular shake
B&F
Milk Center Soft Ice Cream, Hershey’s Hard Ice Cream, Sundaes, Milkshakes, Root beer floats, Banana Splits, Coffee & Cappuccino, Bread, Milk, Lottery tickets, Groceries & More!
Open 7 days a week (315) 736-6857 38 Roosevelt Dr., Whitesboro
A female deer in the meadow it’s been 17 years since the field had last been mowed, its transition back to forest has been a particularly slow one. The general infertility of the soil is a consequence of erosion and of the farming practices that failed to return nutrients to the soil. Now, however, at least in this part of the field, the trees are beginning to take hold. Close examination of a cherry branch reveals twin cocoons of the Promethea Moth. This is a species of giant silk moth that inhabits the region but is so rarely seen by
WOODGATE PINES GOLF CLUB 18 Hole Public Course
Short drive from Old Forge, Tug Hill & Mohawk Valley! Tees for all skill levels Adirondack charm!
315-942-5442 Open Every Day
www.woodgatepines.com
2965 Hayes Rd. West, Boonville
WINDOWS • DOORS PATIO DOORS We also install windows and doors in Mobile Homes and Double Wides!
R.A. Dudrak 2318 Genesee St. • Utica, NY
45 West Main St. • Little Falls, NY
(315) 732-7121
(315) 823-4330
“The Window King”
(315) 794-9175 Rte. 365, Holland Patent FREE IN HOME ESTIMATES!
Over 50 Years in Business!
people; this is mostly due to their strict nocturnal habits. The Promethea Moth, like its larger and more ornate relative, the Cecropia Moth, have prominent eyespots on their wings that they will flash at predators to dissuade them from attacking them. The male Promethea Moth has large feather-like antennae that it uses to locate females – a feat that it can perform at great distances. Just like the other silk moths, the Promethea Moth adult possesses no mouth parts and its only mission in life is to breed. The cocoons that I found hanging from the cherry tree bough were simply rolled up cherry leaves covered by layers of silver gray silk. A moth pupa was tucked away inside each leaf. The leaf and cocoons’ attachments to the branch were bolstered by a strip of strong silk. In the very tops of the trees at the border of the field I see a gathering of about 15 songbirds taking turns flitting out over the field and catching insects. As I get closer, I hear their gently-trilled calls. They are Cedar Waxwings. Like the goldfinches, the waxwings can be late season nesters. They often wait for the mid-summer abundance of berries and insects to arrive before they commit to raise their families. My last bird encounter before entering the woods is fleeting. It is a flyover by a Yellow-shafted Flicker. With each wing beat, the flicker flashed its golden wing linings. Its undulating flight was punctuated by soft “tu-tu-tu-tu” call notes. Of all the birds, the flicker may possess the greatest amount of distinctive field marks. Everything from their bright yellow wing and tail linings to their white rump patch help clinch their identification even at a great distance. Inside the woods, there are still some birds singing, but not as many as in the field. As August progresses, the high-pitched trills of insects will begin to gain prominence, and fewer and fewer birds will make themselves known via their vocalizations. This means that I will have to go back to the quaint method of locating them by sight alone. It’s a surprisingly hard transition to make, but fortunately nature offers many rewards for those keen to explore its infinite complexity. •
A DIRONDACK VETERINARY SERVICE
American Goldfinch nest
Twin cocoons of the Promethea Moth
Yorkville Memorials Where compassionate service matters. . .
Now offering state of the art digital X-Ray!
Mobile Equine Medicine and Surgery Mobile & In-Clinic Small Animal Care In-home euthanasia Business Hours: Mon, Tues, Thurs, Fri 8-5, Wed 8-7
5500 Rome-Taberg Rd, Rome • 337-4160 • www.adirondackvet.com
Italian pastries, cookies, wedding & specialty cakes. Caruso’s Pastry Shoppe 707 Bleecker Street, Utica, New York 315-735-9712 Mon 7-5, Wed-Fri 7-5, Sat 7-3, Sun 7-Noon
28
Monument Cleaning & Restoration Pre-Planning Provides Peace of Mind Services Available (315) 736-1781 • 1309 Champlin Ave., Yorkville
For a Farewell that Lasts Forever...
Arrange your funeral plans. Pre-planning gives you peace of mind, takes the burden off your loved ones, and assures that your service will reflect your personal wishes
Surridge & Roberts Funeral Home
(315) 732-1039 470 French Road, Utica www.surridgeandroberts.com
On the farm with Suzie
A Neighborhood
Cheese Festival by Suzie Jones
Last month on July 9 the City of Little Falls hosted a wonderful, charming cheese festival. Our farm had a booth and my whole family (husband, Peter, daughters Harper and Margaret; my niece Lexi; and our neighbor’s daughter Kayla) all pitched in for the day. It was exhausting and exciting to talk to so many people about one of my favorite subjects—cheese—and to have them sample virtually every type we make. Clearly, the crowds were drawn for the day because they love cheese, too. Long known for their Garlic and Herb Festival (15th year), where festival-goers are encouraged to “eat, stink and be merry,” and their almost-week-long Canal Days celebration (now in its 29th year), Little Falls is accustomed to hosting this type of event. The brain child of two non-native Little Falls residents, Alice and Tom Laurenson, the cheese festival required a whole community of volunteers, city officials (includ-
Pohl’s Feed
When plan “A” fails, go to...
PLAN B
“B” Prepared Emergency Preparedness • Camping Hiking • Self Reliance 8585 Turin Rd., Rome (315) 533-6335 WWW.PLANB-BPREPARED.COM Facebook: Plan B Emergency Preparedness
Fynmore’s
CUSTOM FRAMING Master Picture Framers Conservators & Restorers of Art Needlework Specialists Custom Mirrors
New Hartford: 8502 Seneca Turnpike (315) 735-9066 Open Mon, Thurs, Fri: 10-6; Tues & Wed: 10-5; Sat: 10-3
Boonville: 143 Main Street (315) 942-4049 Open Mon-Fri 9-5, Sat 9-3
www.fynmorestudios.com
• Feed (locally made), Purina, Buckeye, & Nutrena • Garden supplies, garden seed, fertilizer • Pet food & bird seed • Farm supplies, equine supplies
On staff dairy nutritionist & horse specialist!
4560 Verona St., Vernon 315-829-2753 www.pohlsfeed.com M-F 7-5, Sat. 7-1, Closed Sundays
29
Join us
Every Thursday from
June 2 - October 6 on the Village Green
10:00 am - 4:00 pm
Extended Hours
6/16, 7/21, 8/18 and 9/15
10:00 am - 6:00 pm www.ClintonNYChamber.org
Brought to you by: Access Federal Credit Union, Krizia Martin, NBT-Mang Insurance, Strategic Financial Services
GARRO DRUGS 704 Bleecker Street, Utica NY 315.732.6915
PRESCRIPTIONS • COMPOUNDING DURABLE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT FREE Prescription Pick Up & Delivery
11th Annual
We accept ALL Medicaid managed care plans including Fidelis, Excellus BCBS, United Health Care. We also accept CVS Caremark, Veterinary Prescriptions for your pets, We process No Fault and Worker’s Compensation Claims
Serving “The Heart of Utica” Since 1910
BEST Massages, Facials, Body Scrubs/ Wraps, Hair Coloring & Hi-Lighting!
Ryan Quinn
Saturday August 27th 10AM-6PM
FREE ADMISSION
West Park Row, College Street & The Green
Heads R Turning Salon & Spa 6 West Clark Street, Ilion, NY (315) 894-1400 • Located next to Froggy’s Tuesday-Friday 11-6 & Saturdays 11-2 • Learn more at www.HeadsRTurning.com
CLINTON, NY
The city of Little Falls is no stranger to hosting large public events
BE IN G R E A D Y F O R
E AA DYRF RST TOSRTODAY. TOMOBRERINOGWST AR
TOMORR O W
T S TODAY.
UP TO $1,000 REBATE
ing the mayor and chief of police), small business owners, and other non-profit organizations to work together with imagination, passion, and a deep well of energy. Congratulations, Little Falls, you have an amazing new event to boast about and should be extremely proud of your citizens and your city! Besides talking about and eating cheese all day, I also loved seeing so many people that I know, but simply don’t get to see very often. It reminded me of other long-standing events like the Remsen Barn Fest, where the community is drawn together to socialize, see old friends, and reconnect. While the original intent of the Little Falls Cheese Festival was to highlight our area’s unique and important place in dairy history and its many talented local cheesemakers, the organizers accomplished so much more than that: They gave the city, its residents, and festival attendees a sense of community, a sense of cohesion and belonging that is all-too-rare these days. It may sound silly, but we all experienced a collective “kumbaya” moment over a shared obsession (cheese) and I can’t help but wonder if we aren’t a healthier, stronger community as a result. Perhaps I felt these warm community feelings because I don’t get out very much. It is certainly true that farmers have always been occupationally and geographically isolated but have long known the importance of reconnecting— despite how challenging it can be. Barn dances, ice cream socials, and community picnics were a quaint concept, but they also helped hold the fabric of the community together. I’ve been told on many occasions that our own farm was once the site of a wild leek festival, held every spring when the wooded hillsides filled with the little onion-y bulbs. At first I thought people were sharing these memories to entice us to bring back the tradition, but now I realize the memories are so precious, they simply had to share them. Today, farmers still find opportunities to socialize and reconnect. If the local equipment dealer is holding an open house complete with chicken barbeque or hot dogs, you can bet they’ll get a good crowd. I love going to county fair tractor pulls when I have the chance, not because I grew up doing it, but because I can sit next to my neighbor and cheer on her husband, son, and daughter who are all competing. Farmers love
UP TO $1,000 PLUSREBATE PLUS
A DYFINANCING F OR BE ING R E0% 0% FINANCING
A R T84 S84 TMONTHS OMONTHS FOR DAY. TOMORROW STFOR
SA A LL EE SS EEVVEENNTT S
*
*
UP TO $1,000 REBATE PLUS
0% FINANCING FOR 84 MONTHS
*
Get Ready theVseason with the tractor you need. Buy select New Holland S AtoL Roll E Sfor E E N ahead T Get Ready to Roll season ahead with theand tractor you need. Buy select New Holland tractors now and for getthe a REBATE up to $1,000 0% FINANCING FOR 84 MONTHS*. tractors now and get a REBATE up to $1,000 and 0% FINANCING FOR 84 MONTHS*. That’s SEVEN years with no finance charges!
That’s SEVEN years with no finance charges!
• Boomer™ Compact Tractors – 24 to 50 Gross HP • WORKMASTER™ Compact Tractors 32 to 36 Gross Boomer™ Compact Tractors – 24 to– 50 Gross HP HP • WORKMASTER™ Utility Tractors – 53 to 70 Gross HP HP WORKMASTER™ Compact Tractors – 32 to 36 Gross
• WORKMASTER™ Utility Tractors – 53 to 70 Gross HP Stop by today or visit readytoroll.newholland.com for more details. Don’t wait! Offer ends September 30, 2016. Stop by today or visit readytoroll.newholland.com for more details. Don’t wait! Offer ends September 30, 2016. Get Ready to Roll for the season ahead with the tractor you need. Buy select New Holland tractors now and get a REBATE up to $1,000 and 0% FINANCING FOR 84 MONTHS*. That’s SEVEN years with no finance charges! • Boomer™ Compact Tractors – 24 to 50 Gross HP Clinton Tractor and Implement Co. Inc. • WORKMASTER™ Compact Tractors – 32 to Gross HP St., Clinton, NY 13323 3136Meadow • WORKMASTER™ Utility Tractors – 53 toClinton 70 Grosswww.clintontractor.net HP Tractor and Implement Co. Inc. Stop by today or visit readytoroll.newholland.com for315-853-6151 more details. Don’tNY wait! Offer 31 Meadow St., Clinton, 13323 ends September 30, 2016. www.clintontractor.net
315-853-6151
*For Commercial use only. Customer participation subject to credit qualification and approval by CNH Industrial Capital America LLC. See your participating New Holland dealer for details and eligibility requirements. Down payment may be required. Offer good through September 30, 2016 at participating New Holland dealers in the United States. Not all customers or applicants may qualify for this rate or term. CNH Industrial Capital America LLC standard terms and conditions apply. Taxes, freight, set-up, delivery, additional options or attachments not included in price. Offer subject to change or cancellation without notice. © 2016 CNH Industrial Capital America LLC. All rights reserved. New Holland Agriculture is a trademark registered in the United States and many other countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrialparticipation N.V., its subsidiaries CNH Industrialand Capital and New Holland Construction areAmerica trademarks in the *For Commercial use only. Customer subjectortoaffiliates. credit qualification approval by CNH Industrial Capital LLC. See you United States and many other countries, owned by or licensed to CNHdealer Industrial N.V., itsand subsidiaries affiliates. Down payment may be required. Offer good through September 30, 2016 participating New Holland for details eligibility or requirements.
31 Meadow St., Clinton, NY• 315-853-6151
Clinton Tractor and Implement Co. Inc. 31 Meadow St., Clinton, NY 13323 www.clintontractor.net 315-853-6151 participating New Holland dealers in the United States. Not all customers or applicants may qualify for this rate or term. CNH Industrial Capital Americ
www.clintontractor.net
LLC standard terms and conditions apply. Taxes, freight, set-up, delivery, additional options or attachments not included in price. Offer subject to chang or cancellation without notice. © 2016 CNH Industrial Capital America LLC. All rights reserved. New Holland Agriculture is a trademark registered the United States and many other countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates. CNH Industrial Capital and New Holland Construction are trademarks in th United States and many other countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates.
*For Commercial use only. Customer participation subject to credit qualification and approval by CNH Industrial Capital America LLC. See your participating New Holland dealer for details and eligibility requirements. Down payment may be required. Offer good through September 30, 2016 at participating New Holland dealers in the United States. Not all customers or applicants may qualify for this rate or term. CNH Industrial Capital America LLC standard terms and conditions apply. Taxes, freight, set-up, delivery, additional options or attachments not included in price. Offer subject to change or cancellation without notice. © 2016 CNH Industrial Capital America LLC. All rights reserved. New Holland Agriculture is a trademark registered in the United States and many other countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates. CNH Industrial Capital and New Holland Construction are trademarks in the United States and many other countries, owned by or licensed to CNH Industrial N.V., its subsidiaries or affiliates.
Green or White, Go with Wright's!
going to regional farm shows to see the latest technology and the opportunity to catch up on gossip is an added bonus. Auctions, too, aren’t necessarily only for those looking to bid on used equipment; it’s a time to see what the neighbors have been up to and hear about their kids and grandkids. Being able to reconnect with fellow farmers at events like these mean we all get the chance to seek a sympathetic ear when we need it and to provide empathy when we’re all navigating similar challenges. It could be advice from a seasoned farmer that helps the younger generation manage tough times or simply the knowledge that “you’re not alone” that can make all the difference. Of course, the flavor and identity of communities change over time, too, making the act of reconnecting even more important. Rural farming communities are certainly not immune: Farms change hands and new owners take over, or city folk move into the country. When we moved to this area, our small neighborhood farming community held a “hill party” so everyone could meet, chat, and socialize. I can’t think of a better way to welcome a new family! It was a recognition that the neighborhood was changing, but that we, as a community, still have much in common. Plus, it’s a lot harder to get angry at your neighbor for spreading manure on a Sunday when you just spent an afternoon playing horseshoes together! With recent events and a presidential election seemingly always forefront in our minds, it is often easier to identify our differences rather than all the things we have in common. But honestly, the opposite is true. We have far more in common–and I don’t care where you’re from—than what separates us. That is why I suggest that this month we all go to a community festival, a county fair, fundraiser barbeque, or ice cream social. Reconnect with your neighbors, whether it’s for the first time or perhaps you’ve known them your whole life. Talk with them; ask them about their kids and their grandkids. What are their hopes and fears? I’ll bet it’s the same sorts of things that have been weighing on your mind. And as long as we all don’t go overboard with our passion for fair food, we’ll all feel much better the next day. •
Did you miss it?
The 3rd Annual Little Falls Cheese Festival will be Sat., July 8, 2017 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: www.anotherjonesfamilyfarm.com
Lawn Maintenance
Spring and Fall Clean-Up • Weekly Mowing • Hedge Trimming Core Aeration • Cemetery Maintenance • Seeding or Sod
Landscape Design and Installation Mulch Renewal • Flower Installation • Retaining Walls Stone Work • Ponds • Lot Clearing
Snow Maintenance
Snowplowing • Shoveling Walks and Roofs • Salt and Sanding 24-Hour Availability
Residential & Commercial
Call Wright’s Lawncare & Snowplowing today for a free estimate! Wright’s Lawncare & Snowplowing of Rome, NY, offers a full range of services, including lawn maintenance, landscape design and installation, and snow maintenance to residential and commercial customers in Oneida County, NY, and surrounding areas. No matter what time of year, Wright’s has a service to help keep your property looking maintained and fresh.
315-334-2087
10% OFF ALL NEW SERVICE! 20% OFF ALL NEW LANDSCAPE SERVICE! www.wrightslawncareandsnowplowing.com
mohawk valley Gardens
Second Coming
The late summer Garden By Denise A. Szarek
Just when you thought you were all done planting for this year and could sit back and harvest the fruits of your labor, I’m going to make you get back out in that garden and do a little more work. Let’s take a stroll around the garden to see where we can get some more production space out of it. If you’re like me, you just finished harvesting all your garlic for the season and have a pretty sizable area that you can work some compost and organic matter into the soil and plant some great short season crops. You should also be harvesting or
A Spectacular Setting
have harvested your broccoli, cauliflower, peas, lettuce, and spinach beds. So why not maximize your space and yield with another planting? I know it’s hot, muggy, and humid here in the Mohawk Valley and this year especially—we are experiencing not only long periods of drought, but also torrential downpours when we do get rain. But a little extra work in your garden in August could reap you some fresh broccoli, carrots, lettuce, beets, greens, and peas for your holiday table. First of all, timing is everything. Our
frost date here in the Mohawk Valley varies slightly. It’s around October 1, but it’s usually another month before we get a killing frost. Next, check your seeds packets for the days to maturity. Even though the days are getting shorter, the soil is much warmer than it was in May, so seeds sown now will germinate faster. Be a risk taker. Tender veggies like summer squash and zucchini will bear fruit in 45-50 days. With many varieties of cucumbers ready for harvest in as little as 50 days and bush bean varieties
D.H. Burrell
Bed & Breakfast and Event Center Now is the best time to reserve this stunning venue for your 2017 wedding! There are still a few dates open for weddings or parties this summer & fall. Check our website for availability.
55 Douglas Street, Little Falls • (315)823-1907 • www.overlookmansion.com
Raulli’s Iron Works
Custom hand-made iron railings, fences & gates.
zensations Therapeutic Massage Offering a wide range of massage therapy to suit every need.
By appointment only. Check website for monthly specials!
www.raullis.com 133 Mill St., Rome, New York 315-337-8070
Like us on Facebook
for news, contests & more!
316 N. Washington St., Rome (315) 339-9100 www.zensationsmassage.com
4 LMT’s available • Online Gift Certificates & Booking
33
ready in 6-8 weeks, just think of all the holiday pickles, zucchini bread, and dilly beans you could put up right from your garden in fall. But keep in mind, even a mild frost could kill off these beauties if you haven’t arranged for some coverage protection for them. The Gold Standard: For the best options for fall planting, look no further than the cold-tolerant veggies with the shortest maturity dates that we plant in spring – salad greens, lettuces, spinach, broccoli, carrots, beets, kale, chard, Asian greens, cabbage, kohlrabi, radishes, scallions, and Asian turnips. If you were paying attention, you noticed that broccoli gets planted twice a year in my garden. Unlike a famous president, I love broccoli and it’s so much better tasting when coming from your own garden. So, this month I will be sharing my Broccoli Salad recipe with you. This recipe can be easily halved or doubled for any occasion. I especially like taking it to potlucks. •
MVL RECIPES
Potluck Broccoli Salad By Denise Szarek
Correction to last month’s Chocolate Beet Cake: Please include 1-1/2 tsp baking soda as described in directions but absent from ingredient list.
6 cups chopped broccoli 1 small red onion, finely chopped 1 cup raisins 5-6 slices bacon 1 cup mayo 2 T. white wine vinegar 1/2 cup sugar 1/3 cup sunflower seeds or almonds Place bacon in a large skillet and cook over medium-high heat, turning occasionally, until evenly browned, about 10 mins. Drain the bacon slices on paper towels and cool. Chop bacon. Mix broccoli, bacon, red onion, and raisins in a bowl. Whisk mayo, sugar, and vinegar in a bowl; stir dressing into broccoli mixture until evenly coated. Cover bowl and refrigerate for flavors to blend, about an hour. Just before serving sprinkle salad with sunflower seeds. Serves 8. Don’t feel like you have to follow a recipe as a “rule.” Make it your own. Change out the raisins for dried cherries or craisins. Add pecans or toasted almonds. Leave the bacon out for a vegetarian option. If you like more onion, add it. Too dry, add more dressing. Enjoy!
Manager - Jared Alesia, pastry chef C.I.A. • Martin Alesia, cake decorator
Ben & Judy’s
Sugarhouse
Pure maple products. We can ship anywhere!
Call (315) 899-5864 to purchase products or schedule a tour!
Available at: Peter’s Cornucopia, Twin Orchards, Stoltzfus Dairy 770 Beaver Creek Rd., West Edmeston Find us on Facebook!
Good taste
Impress your guests at your wedding or special event with a cake from Florentine Pastry Shop!
OPEN BOWLING DAILY! CONSIGNMENT SHOPPE
667 Bleecker Street, Utica (315) 724-8032 Open Mon: 8-3, closed Tues, Wed-Sun: 8-5
STATE BOWL
17 E. State St., Ilion • 315-894-4862 www.statebowlingcenter.com
Quality pre-owned ladies, junior, & plus size clothing, shoes, handbags, jewelry & household items.
(315) 896-2050 Mapledale Plaza 8010 Route 12, Barneveld
The Everyday Adventures of Mohawk Valley Girl
so sweet candy cafe in utica
I’ve heard that life is uncertain; you should eat dessert first. It was appropriate, therefore, that on a recent day of adventuring with my sister Cheryl and our friend Penny our first stop was the So Sweet Candy Cafe in Utica. Margaret Rienzo, owner of the shop, grew up across the street from Cheryl and me in Rome, so, you see, our main purpose was to see our childhood friend and support a local retail establishment. The fact that we expected to eat delicious treats was strictly by the way. You believe me, don’t you? We had sampled some of Margaret’s sweet treats before, when we encountered Candy Jar Confections at the Mohawk Valley Garlic and Herb Festival in Little Falls. Margaret and her husband used to travel to craft fairs and farmers’ markets throughout the area. They got a little tired of dragging everything around. Another advantage of the store: The chocolate won’t melt in the sun. The shop is located on the corner of Columbia and Varick (531 Varick St). It is in the vicinity of the Saranac Brewery, right in the heart of Utica. I was very excited to go in and find something sweet. In the display cases are baked goods and candies and other goodies, including a few fun non-food items as well. Old-fashioned and unusual candy is available as well. Penny purchased some cinnamon toothpicks. I got a little rubber ducky that looked like he was covered with fudge. I also chose a number of treats from the display case. They all featured dark chocolate, so that was healthy, right? The unusually shaped truffles are made by a supplier, but many of the baked goods such as biscotti, muffins, and cookies are made by Margaret. I got a couple of fun shapes but I was mostly interested in the stuff my friend made. Can I just say, yum! You can also get a cup of coffee or tea and sit at a table, enjoying your beverage and a baked good (for example). I hope to do that one day soon with my husband, Steve. I’ll probably write a blog Margaret Rienzo of post about it. Then again, maybe I ought to go without Steve So Sweet Candy Cafe brought but bring my notebook and write. Didn’t I read somewhere that her traveling fair and market biscotti dipped in coffee is inspirational? It couldn’t hurt. •
booth to a more permanent home at 531 Varick St. in Utica
Serving Central New York Since 1976
A YANKEE TRADER 2617 Genesee Street, Utica • (315) 732-3113
Art VanVechten Broker/Owner
Cell: (315) 723-0477 artvanvechten@gmail.com
35
august
GAllery Guide
Detail of Autumn Symphony by Kathy Kernan of Utica, on display during the Adirondacks National Exhibition of American Watercolors at View in Old Forge
Circus Circus
Collage: Homage to Elephants
Through October 16, 2016 Art Talk: Sat., August 6, 2pm
July 30 - August 28, 2016 Opening: Saturday, July 30, 5-7pm A fundraiser to save orphaned elephants in Africa. In addition to this stunning and important exhibition of accomplished artists, we will hold a silent auction, we and will take tax-deductible donations.
Karal Ann Marling noted author, art historian presents and illustrated talk about the Beech-Nut miniature circus.
Arkell Museum
Cherry Branch Gallery
2 Erie Boulevard, Canajoharie, NY (518) 673-2314 www.arkellmuseum.org
25 Main Street, Cherry Valley, NY (607) 264-9530 www.cherrybranchgallery.com
The Perfection of Harmony: The Art of James Abbott McNeill Whistler Celebrating Regional Quilt Artists Through September 3, 2016 Also: The Banner Art of Alice Gant and Contemporary Art Quilts
Through October 2, 2016 Character Tours, Sundays at 2pm, August 14-September 14 Take a lively tour with James Whistler, portrayed by one of the museum’s talented Templeton Players. $2 with paid museum admission
Fenimore Art Museum
5798 Highway 80 Cooperstown, NY (607) 547-1400 fenimoreartmuseum.org
Earlville Opera House
18 East Main Street, Earlville, NY (315) 691-3550 www.earlvilleoperahouse.com
eflections Full Moon R Art Center et 80 Main Stre 13316 Camden, NY 9 (315)820-426
Kitchen & Bath Cabinets Hardwood Flooring & Countertops
Cabinetry for Every Budget!
FREE In-Home Estimates Installation Available Showroom Open Tues 11-6, Wed-Sat 11-4 or by appt. www.knottybynature.com
36
on
Reflect io Full Moon Art Cen Reflections ter 80 Main
jwillson3@yahoo.com
Cabinetry by Shiloh, Aspect & Waypoint
Street
Cam ART CEN TdeEn, R NY 133 16 (3 15)820-4 80 Main St. Camden 269
(315) 820-4269
315-822-0010
Corner of Rte. 8 & 20, Bridgewater
Full Mo
ery Art Gallsses Art Cla op Gift Sh
Sheila Feldman, Oil Painting August 3- 27, 2016 Reception: Fri., August 5, 6-8pm
Fusion Art Gallery
8584 Turin Rd, Rome, NY (315) 338-5712 photoshoppeofrome.com
Purple Stardust, Tribute to David Bowie and Prince August 27 - September 25, 2016 Reception: Sat., August 27, 5-9pm Works by artists with a shared feeling of loss and a desire to celebrate the creative genius of David Bowie and Prince.
Grime Co.
2 Bank Place, Utica, NY www.facebook.com/EastCoastGrime
Spirits Making A Passage
Great Art Giveaway
Open Studio: 26-28, 2016 Preview Party: Fri., August 26: 5-9pm, Saturday and Sunday: 1-6pm
August 20 - September 25, 2016 Opening: Saturday, August 20, 2-4pm Auction: September 25
Paintings, clay vessels, and quilt-inspired accent paintings by Juanita Finn.
Original artwork by local and regional artists, auctioned off by Chinese auction.
The House By The Water
Mohawk Valley Center for the Arts
9530 Main St., Remsen, NY (315) 205-4001
401 Canal Place, Little Falls, NY (315) 823-0808 www.mohawkvalleyarts.org
Mythology in Contemporary Art August 13 - December 31, 2016 The stories of passion, ambition, greed, and human suffering in ancient mythologies represent humankind’s attempts to understand the curious and inexplicable.
Munson Williams Proctor Arts Institute 310 Genesee Street, Utica, NY (315) 797-0000 www.mwpai.org
1st Floor: “Nuances,” Oil Paintings by Susan Jones Kenyon 2nd & 3rd Floors: “Interior Spaces” August 1 - 28, 2016 Reception: Monday, August 1, 5-7pm
The Smithy
55 Pioneer Street, Cooperstown, NY www.smithyarts.org
August Openings
Adirondacks National Exhibition of American Watercolors August 6 - October 9, 2016 Opening Reception: August 5, 5-7pm
Carl Rubino: Painted by the Elements July 30-October 30, 2016 Opening Reception: August 5, 5-7pm
Ruth Clegg: Under and Over—Adirondack Pond Life July 23-October 16 Opening Reception: August 5, 5-7pm
The Central New York Watercolor Society Signature Show July 23-September 25 Opening Reception: August 5, 5-7pm
Virginia Cassetta: Inner Landscapes August 13-November 6
View
3273 Route 28, Old Forge, NY (315) 369-6411 www.viewarts.org
Having an art opening? Let us know. Email: mohawkvalleyliving@hotmail.com
ALONE TOGETHER The Mollin-Clay Jazz Duo Carleton Clay, Trumpet Rich Mollin, bass Playing for dining Friday nights at the Horned Dorset Inn, Leonardsville www.horneddorsetinn.com (315) 855-7898
Sunday brunch at Origins Cafe, Cooperstown and Tuesday night ethnic dinners at the Tulip and the Rose Cafe in Franklin (near Oneonta)
Creating magical musical moments Concerts, weddings, receptions, banquets, special occasions of all types Booking info: (607) 263-5230
claycc@oneonta.edu
Original artwork by Julia Hasbrouck Clay
Perfect. Weddings. Events.
Whether you celebrate inside with panoramic views of our beautiful golf greens and lush floral gardens, or outside on our spectacular grounds, when you choose Twin Ponds for your event, you’ll receive the impeccable attention to detail that will ensure your special day will be nothing short of perfect.
Accommodations for up to 700 guests Open year-round 169 Main Street, New York Mills 736-9303
TH
AnnuAl NYS
6 9 WOODSMEN’S FIELD DAYS
Boonville, new York
AUGUST 19, 20 & 21, 2016! BooNVIlle oNeIdA CouNty FAIrgrouNdS
Gates Open Daily at 8 am, Rain or Shine Plenty of FREE Parking Available • Community-Wide Events
• 100’s of forestry Displays • Huge paraDe • fireworks • 10k foot race • cHilDren’s sawDust Dig • canoe race • craft sHow • nys open lumberjack cHampionsHips • worlD’s open lumberjill cHampionsHips • nortHeast jr. lumberjack cHampionsHips • greaseD pole climb • forestry seminar • bearDs contest • fooD concessions & mucH mucH more!
Ch Un ildre d Fr er 5 n ee !
For INForMAtIoN: INForMAt MA IoN: NyS MAt y woodSMeN’S yS wood FIeld dAyS, INC. P.o. BoX 123, BooNVIlle, Ny 13309
(315) 942-4593 • http://www.starinfo.com/woodsmen/ For Your Safety ... Officials of the NYS Woodsmen’s Field Days, Inc. reserve the right to inspect, search and/or seize any backpacks, coolers, and/or personal items that are perceived to be unacceptable. Sorry - No PetS Allowed in the Event and/or Seating Areas Only Pet Aides for the Handicapped are Permitted
mohawk valley blueberries
heywood blueberries in remsen
What started out as a college fund for their children in the late 1980s ended up being a retirement hobby for Al and Linda Heywood— their initial 50 blueberry bushes took longer than expected to get established. Today, their blueberry crops have grown to approximately 1,200 plants on 1.2 acres. They grow large, juicy BlueCrop and BlueRay varieties and offer you-pick on Saturdays.
Heywood’s Blueberries 9947 Evans Road, Remsen (315) 831-8096
www.heywoodsblueberries.com
Like us on Facebook
Cleaners, Inc.
for news, contests & more!
Shirt Laundry, Cold Storage & More! (315) 733-0461 Utica: 1323 Rutger St. and 2524 Oneida St. Barneveld: Mapledale Plaza, Rt. 12 North
GROCERIES • GAS • CAR WASH • NYS REDEMPTION CENTER • DELI/PIZZA
Reilly’s Dairy, Inc. PLUS
SAUQUOIT SELF STORAGE!
Since 1942, when we delivered to you!
Berry Hill Book Shop
Over 75,000 used books!
See what we have cooking on facebook! (315) 797-6835 2520 Oneida St., Utica
40
2349 Rte 12-B, Deansboro, NY 315-821-6188 Open Tues-Sat 10-5 dls@berryhillbookshop.com
9553 Pinnacle Rd., Sauquoit (315) 737-5560
You-Pick Blueberries
Note: It is always a good idea to call or check out Facebook pages to verify schedules and availability of ripe berries.
AnnDel Farms, 547 State Route 29, Middleville (315) 891-3613 Brick House Acres, 10628 Roberts Road, Frankfort (315) 737-5635 • www.brickhouseacres.com Candella’s Farm & Greenhouses, 9256 River Road, Marcy (315) 736-8782 • www.candellasfarm.com Heywoods’s Blueberries, 9947 Evans Road, Remsen (315) 831-8096 • www.heywoodsblueberries.com Irvada’s Blueberry Lane, 9459 Point Rock Rd, Taberg (315) 337-1088 North Star Orchards, 4741 Route 233, Westmoreland (315) 853-1024 • www.northstarorchards.com Swistak Farm, 6644 Greenway New London Rd.,Verona (315) 336-1251 • www.swistakfarm.com Wereszczak’s Blueberries, 1080 Steuben Hill Road, Herkimer (315) 867-5735 • www.herkimerblueberries.com
The Crafty Ladies host a fundraiser for Making Strides Against Breast Cancer. There will be prizes, baked goods and handcrafted items by the Crafty Ladies!
Fri., Aug 19th, 12-5 • Sat., Aug 20th, 10-5 • Sun., Aug 21st, 12-5
The Laubenthal Residence, 7 Shelly Place, North Utica
Swan Pools & Spas
Custom Inground & Above Ground Pools • Spas by Saratoga Chemicals, Supplies, & Accessories • Service & Repairs
“Valley’s Best Kept Secret” MV Living fans save $10 OFF any purchase of $50 or more! 132 E. Main Street, Ilion (315) 895-4321
www. makingstrideswalk.org/utica or call 1.800.227.2345
For more information about the Craft Sale call Linda Laubenthal at 315-561-7271
3989 Oneida St., Washington Mills (315) 982-9760
Mon - Fri: 10- 5pm, Sat: 9-4, Sun: Closed (Washignton Mills), 9-12 (Ilion only) • www.swanpool.net
BEADS & GEMS FARM FRESH
Featuring Little Falls & Herkimer Diamond Jewelry 32 W. Main St. • Little Falls, NY (315) 823-0454 •
www.fallhillbeadandgem.com
GRASSY COW GRAZING DAIRY
ENJOY
You will taste the difference!
A Squeak Above The Rest
Fresh cheese curd made every Friday
The ability for our cows to graze fresh Central New York grass every Spring, Summer, and Fall is of utmost importance to the health and happiness of our cows. 100% of our quality milk products are made from milk from our own happy, healthy cows.
Other Local Available! Take a break from Products your hectic, hurried, high-tech day to slow Come visit our store any day of the week.
down and Enjoy Country Quality. Come visit our creamery and get your fresh cheese curd today – made right in your own backyard.
COUNTRY QUALITY 9628 Prospect Road, Remsen, NY 831-3276 Rte 12
Jam
Prospect Rd
Rd
REMSEN
es
Steuben St Main S
Grassy Cow Dairy is where you will find rich, creamy, squeaky, cheese curd made fresh with today’s dairy milk making them…..a squeak above the rest!
GRASZSINGYDAICOW GRA
RY
Fran
cis
Rd
Mohawk Valley nature
Running With Killdeer
Killdeer have red rings around their eyes
story & photos by matt perry
One of my favorite birds to watch has always been the Killdeer. It’s a species I have known throughout my life. They roamed the lawns and parking lots of my old grammar school and became a fixture in the town park near my old family home. Their distinctive call (which sounds like “kill-deer, killdeer”) was occasionally heard from our yard as the birds flew in wide circles over the fields and pastures behind the house. It was a thrill to watch the Killdeer diving and swooping through the air and executing quick maneuvers. On the ground, the birds’ movements consist of short dashes and abrupt stops as it pursues its elusive insect prey. The plumage of the Killdeer is very distinctive. Its underside is white, while the top of its head, wings, back and tail are brown with tawny highlights. They have a prominent orange patch above the tail which they flash when
Mohawk Village Market
excited. The Killdeer shows two broad black bands around its neck and has a prominent red eye-ring. When they fly over, there’s an obvious white stripe visible on their wings. The combination of long pointed wings and a long tail gives them a flight profile not unlike a falcon’s. All of these field marks together with its voice make the species virtually impossible to mistake for anything else. The Killdeer belongs to a family of birds called plovers, which are for the most part, robin-sized shorebirds with relatively stout bills. The Killdeer is the most familiar member of the plover clan but there are several other species in the U.S. of which some are known to pass through the Mohawk Valley. Over a century and a half ago, during migration, sizable flocks of American Golden Plovers are said to have passed through the region in late summer. At that time,
Your old-fashioned, full service butcher! Best Grilling Steaks! Butcher Block Meats (no pre-packaged meats) Specialty cuts - Storemade Patties & Salads Complete Grocery Line
Serving you 7 days a week! 24 West Main St., Mohawk (315) 866-3344 42
www.mohawkvillagemarket.com
all plovers were considered fair game for gunners and overhunting significantly depleted their numbers, so much so that even today the population of American Golden Plovers hasn’t completely recovered. When in breeding plumage, the stately Black-bellied Plovers show a bold pattern of black and white. Like the American Golden Plovers they are migrants that breed in the arctic, but while Golden Plovers press on to spend their winters in South America, some Black-bellied Plovers will overwinter along the southern coast of the U.S. A few decades back, the Black-bellied Plover was not an uncommon visitor in the Mohawk Valley. They could be seen at migratory stopover habitats like Sylvan Beach and Lake Delta. At these places and a few others on the right day, flocks of up to a dozen might be seen. Rarely flocks of up to 50 were reported. The rare grass-
land species called the Upland Sandpiper was formerly known as the Upland Plover. This re-designation more appropriately reflects the species’ lineage. (Since this article is devoted to true plovers and primarily to Killdeer, I won’t delve into the life history of the Upland Sandpiper here. Instead, I’ll save that for another piece dedicated to our vanishing grassland birds.) The only other plover that regularly passes through the Mohawk Valley on migration is the Semipalmated Plover, which looks a bit like a mini version of the Killdeer, but possess only a single black neck band. The name “semipalmated” refers to their feet, which are only partially webbed. It’s conceivable that the rare Piping Plover may have had a history of breeding in the Mohawk Valley, but I could find no good evidence of it. After many decades, the species has apparently begun to reestablish itself as a breeding species on the Lake Ontario shoreline in Northern Oswego County and Southern Jefferson County. In fact, the only true plover whose population has proved resilient and is also a reliable breeder in the Mohawk Valley is the Killdeer. No one has to go to a beach to find a Killdeer. Almost as a rule, the species seeks out and establishes breeding territories far inland and well away from bodies of water. They favor plowed or mowed fields, golf cours-
es, expansive mowed yards, parks, and large parking lots. Occasionally, they’ll try to nest on flat graveled rooftops, which can be problematic when the young are ready to leave the nest but are still unable to fly. Gravel driveways and roads and even parking lot medians are readily adopted as nest sites by Killdeer. The species doesn’t build a proper nest – or at least the stereotypical kind of nest that most people associate with birds (perhaps epitomized by a robin’s nest). The male simply uses his feet to scrape a depression in the gravel, thereby creating a place for the female to lay her eggs. She may then bring in some additional nest materials – most often small stones. The female then lays three to five, but more often four eggs, directly onto the stones. The Killdeer’s eggs are heavily spotted and sometimes can match the surrounding stones quite closely. The camouflage works so well that when the nest is left unattended, which it rarely is, one might be hardpressed to find the eggs among the rocks. Killdeer are a joy to watch. I’m a fan of their boisterous vocalizations, their swift and acrobatic flying, as well as their interactive displays, which they perform both in the air and on the ground. The species is packed with personality. Rivals will face off with each other and squabble over territory, and their altercations are not just limited to the breeding sea-
son. Even during migration they can get quite testy with each other. Typically though, they get along well enough and are at home in large flocks. During migration you can see dozens or sometimes more than 100 together in a single location, which may be in afield or on mud flats. On a day in September last year, we observed nearly that many in a horse pasture at Spring Farm. Interestingly, they were spread out pretty evenly over the ground, with at least 15 to 20 feet separating each bird. Killdeer are one of the last shorebirds to leave in the fall and typically the first one to
Fine furniture made in the USA
Extraordinary craftsmanship, all solid wood handcrafted Amish furniture. We can customize any piece of furniture, whether new or you need to match an existing piece, we have numerous choices of stains, colors, and woods.
JEFF’S
A gardener’s wonderland! Large Selection of Rare Plants Ponds, Patios, Walks, Complete Grounds Pondscaping • Fountains Handcarved Bluestone birdhouses
HANDCRAFTED
AMISH
FURNITURE
(315) 858-1010 1058 Route 28, Jordanville, 13361 just 4 miles north of Richfield Springs, or 9 miles south of Herkimer Mon - Sat: 10am - 5pm, Sun: 11am - 4pm
1346 Higby, Frankfort, NY (315) 738-0434 Over 40 Years Experience!
Little Falls Fuel & Hardware Store 441 West Main Street, Little Falls (315) 823-8822 Your Complete Hardware Store
• Wayne Dalton Garage Doors • Electrical • Bath & Kitchen • Plumbing • Lawn & Garden • Hand Tools • Hardware & Auto • Fencing • Roofing & Siding • Trusses • Windows & Doors • Propane • Pellets • Kero at Pump • Paint, Stain & Sundries • Animal Feed
(315) 823-8822
Your Hometown Fuel Provider Always accepting new fuel customers!
s ’ o n JulmiaMarket Far
Farm and Greenhouses located on Route 5, West Schuyler Also at our Farm Stand in the Big Lots Shopping Center!
Look for our hydroponic Basil at local grocery stores and markets! 44
New Treatment Shows Great Promise For People Who Suffer With Pain K-Laser Patient Benefits
Laser Therapy is proven to biostimulate tissue, and decrease inflammation and pain. When it comes to pain management, K-Laser treatments are very safe and may provide dramatic results.
Painless, Non-Invasive, Side-Effect Free!
Reduces symptoms of osteoarthritis Eliminates trigger points Improves and promotes healing Reduces pain and spasms Increases joint flexibility Advanced pain relief
Schedule a NO COST consultation today!
Dr. M. Tucciarone, D.C. 54 Dwight Ave., Clinton, NY 13323 (315) 853-6225 www.drtucciarone.com
Need laminate, luxury vinyl, tile, or hardwood flooring? We’ve got you covered!
Blueberries!
Plus our own Pole Beans and Sweet Corn, Zucchini, Yellow Squash, Cabbage, and Pennsylvania Peaches!
Ronald E.
Building Supplies • Ha Lumber,Lumber Building•Supplies & Hardware
(315) 735-9385
Open 7 Days a Week June-October www.julianosgreenhouse.com
by the same family since 1872 8689Run Summit Road • Paris Station, NY
8689 Summit Rd., Paris Station Phone: (315) 839-5740 lincolndavies@fron (315)-839-5740 Fax: (315) 839-5380 www.lincoln www.lincolndavies.com Just 10 miles south of New Hartford on Summit Road between Routes 12 and 8
Killdeer are shorebirds that nest far from water
come back in the spring. In fact, sometimes they are too anxious to return and arrive as early as late February. These early birds are then tested by snow falls and freezes. As a species that feeds primarily on invertebrates, they require access to open ground in order to find sustenance. When their preferred habitats are locked up by snow and ice, they will seek out wetlands and creek sides where they might find some bare ground or exposed mud. This year, back in early spring, following a snow fall that effectively covered everything, Killdeer and robins were seen foraging together in the scant amount of available open ground. At Spring Farm, the birds were rel-
egated to roadsides and the edges of parking lots. At the farm, a well-intentioned colleague put out bird seed for these disparate companions. I had to break it to her gently that neither species was able to benefit from her kind offering. Not all birds eat seed. When I was young, we always had Killdeer as visitors or as summer residents at our local town park. The large playing fields provided great opportunities for them to hunt for insects in short grass. The species prefers well-cropped grass since it allows them to see predators from a distance and it also makes it easier for them to locate their own prey. About 20 years ago, a gravel road was laid down in order to access the park’s back acreage. This turned out to be an invitation for Killdeer to nest, and that they did. In a not very secluded place in the center of the new road, a male Killdeer made a shallow depression (called a “scrape”) and subsequently the female laid four beautiful and well-camouflaged eggs on the spot. Of course, the problem with the birds’ plan was obvious. Although the road wasn’t yet open to vehicles, it was open to pedestrian traffic, which consisted mostly of people walking their dogs. It was clear that the nest was vulnerable to human feet and to intrusive canine muzzles. To their credit, the park managers recognized this and they erected a fence
around the nest. The flexible plastic fencing was rolled up about eight inches on the bottom in order to allow the parents (and eventually the young) to come in and out as needed. It worked well, and even though the nest was unavailable to the Killdeer during the completion of the fence, the eggs didn’t suffer. After approximately 28 days of incubation by both parents, all four eggs hatched and suddenly there were four gangly hatchlings on the nest scrape. Unlike the comparatively helpless young of songbirds or raptors, newly hatched plovers are ready to run virtually as soon as they emerge from the shell. Their parents don’t ever bring food back to the nest either. Pretty much as soon as they are dry, the young are keen to forage for themselves and explore
Killdeer eggs are camouflaged to look like stones
The Olde
Kountry Market w
Your Connection to Local Organic Produce
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
Alyssa Sadallah, Executive Pastry Chef
Your Source for:
Bulk Foods & Spices Canned Goods, Candies, Jams, Deli Meats & Cheeses, Yogurt, Baked Goods, Outdoor Furniture, Gifts & More!
Custom Cakes, Cookies & Gourmet Pastries Fresh Hot Beignets every Sunday!
French Macarons, Cupcakes, Cookie trays, Truffles, and more! 12 Erie Street, Yorkville (315) 864-8124 • Open Tues-Fri 8-6, Sat 8-2, Sun 9-2 wickedsweets@hotmail.com • Find us on Facebook: Wicked Sweets by Alyssa
6505 Route 5, Vernon, NY 13476 (315) 829-3035 Mon-Wed 9-5, Thur-Fri 9-6, Sat 9-4
45
★ FREE Package of Hearing Aid Batteri
★ FREE Complete Electronic Hearing Test
If you now wear a hearing aid, you will receive one free packa hearing you will receive another free package. (This offer goo
★ FREEyourLosing Losing Hearing, your HEARING,
This Audiometric evaluation will precisely show what you’ve been missing.
Building ★ FREE Better Pools for 50 Years! 3 Days Only
COME JOIN US FOR OUR OPEN HOUSE
Video Otoscope Ear Inspection
In Office Repairs
or are your ears just plugged with EARWAX? or are your earsseejust plugged with earwax? so you’ll exactly what we see. FIND OUT FOR YOURSELF!
This show-all picture of your ear canal is displayed on a color TV monitor,
All in-one repairs shall be free... and factory repairs, reg
You are invited for a FREE ear inspection using the latest technology
FREE Complete Electronic Hearing Test & FREE Video 3 DAYS Otoscope ear Inspection! ONLY All-In-The-Canal
Now that’s A LOT of HAPPY Customers!
Tuesday, November 17th Wednesday, November 18th Thursday, November 19th
Call now to avoid waiting! TOLL FREE 1-888-490-HEAR (4327)
The Digital Programmable Hearing Aid of the future… IS HERE TODAY!!
SAVE IT’S ALL FREE
$695
NOW The Digital Programmable Hearing Aid of the future… OR… Maybe 3 Days Onlyyou want better hearing that no-one can see. No manual volume con for you to adjust. Just slip it into your ear and it adjusts itself automatically as yo IS HERE TODAY!!$695 $400 off the purchase of a set of Digital Hearing Aids. ★If youFREE Package of Hearing Aid Batteries ★ThisFREE Complete Electronic Hearing Test now wear a hearing aid, you will receive one free package of hearing aid batteries. If we test your Audiometric evaluation will precisely show what you’ve been missing. hearing you will receive another free package. (This offer good for one usage by hearing aid user only)
★ThisFREE Video Otoscope Ear Inspection show-all picture of your ear canal is displayed on a color TV monitor,
so you’ll see exactly what we see. Offer valid on Model Shine Plus. Valid at participating Hearing Health LLC locations only. Offer valid on one aid. May not be combined All-In-The-Canal with any other offers. Offer does not apply to SAVE NOW prior sales. Expires 11/20/15.
★ FREE In Office Repairs
All in-one repairs shall be free... and factory repairs, regardless of make or model shall be 50%
off!
The Digital Programmable Hearing Aid of the future… IS HERE TODAY!!
OR… Maybe you want better hearing that no-one can see. No manual volume controls for you to adjust. Just slip it into your ear and it adjusts itself automatically as$400 youofflisten. HEARING HEALTH HEARING AID CENTERS $400 off the purchase of a set of Digital Hearing Aids. Offer valid on Model Shine Plus. Valid at participating Hearing Health LLC locations only. Offer valid on one aid. May not be combined with any other offers. Offer does not apply to prior sales. Expires 11/20/15.
SAVE NOW
OR… Maybe you want better hearing that no-one can see. No manual volume controls for you to adjust. Just slip it into your ear and it adjusts itself automatically as you listen.
the purchase of a set of Digital Hearing Aids.
HEARING HEALTH HEARING AID CENTERS Rome Utica All-In-Canal $695 Rome
Wal-Mart • 5815 Rome Taberg Rd.
Utica
Wal-Mart • 710 Horatio St.
Visit the Virtual Pool Builder at www.geratypools.com
TOLL FREE 1-888-490-HEAR (4327) CODE: HB11EBG pt We Acce an Hearing aids do not restore natural hearing. Hearing test and video otoscopic inspections are always free. Empire Pl Hearing test is an audiometric test to determine proper amplification needs only. These are not medi cal exams or diagnoses, e! nc ra su In Offer valid on Model Shine Plus. Valid at participating Hearing Health LLC locations only. Offer valid on one aid.norMay notintended be combined are they to replace a physician’s care. If you suspect a problem, please seek treatment from a doctor.
Wal-Mart • 5815 Rome Taberg Rd.
with any other offers. Offer does not apply to prior sales. Expires 1/31/16 UT-000552292_V3
Individual experiences vary depending on severity of hearing loss, accuracy of evaluation and ability to adapt to amplification.
Wal-Mart • 710 Hora
HEARING HEALTHtHEARING AID CENTERS TOLL FREE 1-888-490-HEAR (4327) ccep
A Utica WeRome Hearing aids do not restore natural hearing. Hearing test and video otoscopic inspec Wal-Mart • 710 Horatio St. Emp Hearing test is an audiometric test to determine proper amplification needs only. These are no ! e anc 1-888-490-HEAR (4327 TOLL surFREE We accept In nor )are they intended to234 replace a physician’s care. suspect a problem, please see South Caroline St.,If you Herkimer lanRd. Wal-Mart • 5815iRome re PTaberg
Empire Plan Insurance!
UT-000552292_V3
PROOF O.K. BY:___________________________ O.K. WITH test CORRECTIONS BY:________________________ Hearing aids do not restore natural hearing. Hearing test and video otoscopic inspections are always free. Hearing is PLEASEneeds READ CAREFULLY ONLINE an audiometric test to determine proper amplification only. These• SUBMIT are notCORRECTIONS medi cal exams or diagnoses, nor are they intended to replace a physician’s care. If you suspect a problem, please seek treatment from a doctor. Individual experiences UT-000552292_V3 (100%) vary depending on severity of hearingADVERTISER: loss, accuracy of evaluation ability toPROOF adaptCREATED to amplification. AMPLIFON HEARINGand CENTER AT: 11/11/2015 6:23:21 AM
315-866-4030 • www.geratypools.com
Individual experiences vary depending on severity of hearing loss, accuracy of evaluation and
SALES PERSON: UT6008
NEXT RUN DATE: 11/13/15
SIZE: 10.913X10.125
PROOF DUE: 11/12/15 12:59:55
PUBLICATION: UT-DAILY
Solid Hardwood Fabulous Fabrics
Made in Richfield Springs
MANUFACTURING & SALES
Buy Direct from the Manufacturer
One Stop Shop for Custom Made Roofing! PROOF O.K. BY:___________________________
O.K. WITH CORRECTIONS BY:________________________ • Roll Formed Metal Siding & Roofing PLEASE READ CAREFULLY • SUBMIT CORRECTIONS ONLINE • Overhead Doors • Sliding Door Track and Parts UT-000552292_V3 (100%) • Laminated Posts ADVERTISER: AMPLIFON HEARING CENTER PROOF CREATED AT:•11/11/2015 6:23:21 AM Roof Trusses SALES PERSON: UT6008 NEXT RUN DATE: 11/13/15 • Insulation SIZE: 10.913X10.125 PROOF DUE: 11/12/15 12:59:55 • Complete Post Frame Building Packages Call to make an appointment to visit our showroom in Richfield Springs. PUBLICATION: UT-DAILY • Radiant Floor Heat Supplies
Company coming for the holidays? Need an extra place to sleep? Just lean back! (315) 717-6435 • Nationwide shipping • Made in the USA w w w. j u s t l e a n b a c k . c o m
Made & Manufactured d! in Westmorelan
4901 State Route 233, Westmoreland
(315) 853-ROOF (7663) www.mohawkmetalsales.com
One hatchling and one egg still in the nest
their surroundings. Whenever they stray too far, their anxious parent noisily come to round them up again. Amazingly, right out of the gate, plovers are adept at plucking up insects and other invertebrates from the ground. Did I mention that they look ridiculous? Very young Killdeer look like they are made out of cotton balls and pipe cleaners. Their legs are very long and seem way out of proportion to their tiny fluffy bodies. After all four eggs hatched in the nest at the park, the young Killdeer scampered off and began hunting insects on the base-
ball fields. During this period, the parents kept a close watch on them and at the slightest sign of danger, a few sharp warning whistles by either parent served to reel the young back in to the safety of a parent’s feathered skirts. Crouching over the young, the parent bird is able to effectively conceal them – all but their legs and feet. To the unwitting observer, a brooding adult bird can look as if it has five pairs of legs. At the point when the danger passes, the parent Killdeer stands up and signals the all-clear. With this, the chicks bolt back out onto the outfield and resumed foraging. There’s an inherent problem with raising young on a sports field: Eventually a ball game is going to take place. Also, at some point the grass is going to be mowed. When those things happened at the park, all the Killdeer family could do was to try to keep out of the way. It did ensure regular frantic episodes for the parents as they tried to keep the young safe and together. Killdeer are well known for performing distraction displays. When their young are threatened by a perceived predator, a parent Killdeer will attempt to draw attention away from their young by feigning a broken wing and by creating a great commotion. In this way they make themselves the more appealing target for the intruder to attack. As you can probably imagine, there were a lot of distraction displays going on in that out-
field. It takes 25 days or so before a young Killdeer begins to fly; prior to that they are ground dwellers that rely on running away from danger and on their parents playing interference. The park became a much more active place in late June as more and more ball games began taking place. During this period, I watched the Killdeer family adeptly navigate around the action and, remarkably, they appeared to go almost completely unnoticed by the teams and their supporters. A few instances of near trampling of the young prompted me to start having conversations with the players before each game. I’d tell them about
Man with a Pick Up Truck
Awards
and Engraving, Inc.
For Your Golf Tournament
Cedar Park Farm John Armstrong, Sr.
Awards • Sponsor Gifts Giveaways • Golf Towels
Fresh, healthy, raw goat milk. Drink it up!
8411 Seneca Turnpike, Crossroads Plaza, NH
Call ahead: (315) 858-0294
Clean-Outs • Home • Barn • Attics Cellar • Junk Removal • Leaf Cleanups Serving Oneida & Herkimer Counties www.manwithapickuptruck.com
982-9302
A SMARTACHOICE 8107 St. Hwy.CHOICE 80, Springfield Center, NY 738-0808 SMART www.speedyawards.com
CedarParkFarm.WordPress.com
www.mvfoodaction.com
Choosing the right insurance is about more than just getting rightFAMILY insurance is about more than just getting FARM the quickest quote. For more thanChoosing 60 years,the quickest quote. For more has provided reliable service andthe knowledgeable advice from than 60 years, FARM FAMILY provided reliable service local agents who take the time tohas listen and understand your and knowledgeable advice from
A SMART CHOICE unique needs.
local agents who take the time to listen and understand your unique needs.
Choosing the right insurance is about LINDA FOX more than just getting the quickest Agent quote. For more than 60 years, FARM 239than Academy Choosing the right insurance is about more justStreet getting Boonville, NY 13309-1329 FAMILY has provided reliable service the quickest quote. For more than 60 years, FARM FAMILY and knowledgeable advice from local has who provided and knowledgeable advice from agents take reliable the timeservice to listen and linda.fox@farm-family.com local agents who take the time to listen and understand your understand your unique needs. 315.942.3073 unique needs.
Products and services may not be available in all states. Terms, conditions and eligibility requirements will apply. Life insurance and annuity products are issued through American National Insurance Company of New York, Glenmont, New York; or Farm Family Life Insurance Company, Glenmont, New York. Property and casualty products and services are made available through Farm Family Casualty Insurance Company, Glenmont, New York or United Farm Family Insurance Company, Glenmont, New York.
LINDA FOX Agent
LINDA FOX Specializing in Buyer Representation & Relocation Agent
We have a wide range of listings and can search thousands more to
help Street you find what you’re looking for. We can assist with purchases of 239 Academy Boonville,homes, NY 13309-1329 vacation homes, farms, land, investment property or rentals. Contact us today. Office: 315-858-2110 Cell: 607-282-0315
Joann Christmann, Lic. R.E. Broker linda.fox@farm-family.com
164 Main Street, Richfield Springs www.scenicbywayrealty.com 315.942.3073 Equal Housing Opportunity
Helping Buyers & Sellers Meet Their Goals
Products and services may not be available in all states. Terms, conditions and eligibility requirements will apply. Life insurance and annuity products are issued through American National Insurance Company of New York, Glenmont, New York; or Farm Family Life Insurance Company, Glenmont, New York. Property and casualty products and services available throughTerms, conditions and eligibility requirements will apply. Life insurance Products and services may notare bemade available in all states.
47
the Killdeer family and ask them to be mindful of them when bolting over the field. I had similar conversations with the folks that mowed the grass. For the most part, the people I talked to were reasonable and usually indicated that they would be careful of the birds. I strongly suspected, however, they were merely saying what they thought it would take to make the crazy bird man go away. Certainly, nobody seemed to act more solicitous toward the birds after I walked away. Besides, there was only so much I could do. My brother said “It’s not like anyone is actively chasing down the birds,” and thankfully that seemed to be correct. For colorful, noisy, and boisterous birds they sure had a knack of not being noticed by people. With that, my concerns were largely allayed, and I went back to worrying about other things. I was sitting at the kitchen table in my parent’s old house when our neighbor Jack stopped over. Jack seemed overexcited about something, but then again, that was his natural state. Jack usually traveled around with an entourage of younger brothers, as well as a few of their friends from the neighborhood. They were a bit like an unofficial Boy Scout troop – except they didn’t have to earn badges, nor did they seem to have any real goals. Still, they’d go out into the greater area around the neighborhood, hiking or enjoying some informal athletic competition.
Regardless of where they went, they would always come back exhausted and invariably they wound up sprawled out on our front lawn. I figured that Jack was here to tell us that he was about to have an impromptu picnic in our yard, or maybe he was here to read some of his surreal children’s poetry to my family. Instead, he was here to tell me all about a new game that he and his gang had just invented. He said to me in a breathless fashion, “Matt, we were just at the park and there were these weird birds there. They were running around the baseball fields and they were really fast. We ran after them with all our might, but could never catch them. They wouldn’t fly for anything.” When he stopped talking, all I could do was stare at him with my mouth open. I couldn’t believe that of all the people in the neighborhood and in the universe he would choose to tell this to me. “Well, Jack, that’s just … great. But can I ask what you would have done if you caught them?” He looked at me with eyes as wide as an owls would be if you dangled a mouse on a string in front of its face. “I don’t know! We didn’t think of that. It was all about the chase, I guess.” When I came back to the park the next day, I could only locate three of the four young. It’s certainly not unusual for Killdeer (or most bird species) to lose offspring in the
Killdeer flash their colorful tails to signal aggression
pre-fledging period, so I wasn’t too surprised. I surely wasn’t blaming Jack or anyone in particular for the loss. Instead, I just redoubled my efforts to ensure the birds’ safety. That meant monitoring them during endless ball games and bi-weekly mowing sessions. That was hard enough, but there was one thing I dreaded more than anything. It was nearly the Fourth of July, and on that date the park turned into festival grounds. During the day, people would be thick on the ground picnicking, flying kites and whatever else it is that non-naturalist people do outside, and by evening the annual firework display would
Transitional items are arriving!
the
Kountry Kupboard II
& the summer sales go on... and on!
A division of Earley Farm & Hardware, Inc.
“Always a Great Deal More at the Kupboard!”
Deli • Bulk Foods & Cheese • Chocolate Items Coffee (ass’t. blends) • Baking Supplies & Much More! Phone (315) 893-7437 Fax (315) 893-1854
Open M-F 8-5, Sat 8-4, Closed Sundays
Route 20 in Madison, New York www.earleyfarm.com
15 Seymour Lane, Westmoreland, NY Veterinary Care Boarding Grooming by Toni Bartolomie 315-853-2408
www.cnyveterinary.com 48
Home of Dr. Heather’s House Calls
40-50% off
Summer Fashion! 30% off summer shoes & totes! Summer Hours Mon: 12-4pm, Tues-Sat: 11am-5pm, Thurs til 6pm
11 W. Park Row, Clinton 853-5299
Check out our new online store @ thevillagecrossing.com
Sponsored by the M&T Bank / Partners Trust Bank Charitable Fund,
a donor-advised fund of The Community Foundation of Herkimer & Oneida Counties, Inc.
Utica’s Pop Culture Convention
what are you a fan of?
is a free, full day, family-friendly celebration of all things fandom – from comics & superheroes; to games & gaming; to anime, manga, & cosplay; & everything else fanboys & fangirls enjoy. featuring an exhibit hall, great guests & presentations, & awesome events all day! for the full updated list, visit:
fandemicon.com
facebook.com/fandemicon twitter: @FANDEMICON
#FANDEMICON
The best way to enjoy beautiful Raquette Lake is from the deck of the W.W. Durant! Breathtaking scenery. Fascinating history. Scrumptious food.
Nurture the mind, body and soul cruising and dining aboard the WW Durant on Raquette Lake. Call today to book a reservation: (315) 354-5532
303 Genesee street Utica, Ny 13501 315.735.2279 THE LIBRARY utica public library uticapubliclibrary.org facebook.com/uticapubliclibrary
Raquette Lake Navigation Co. 254 Antlers Rd, Raquette Lake, NY www.RaquetteLakeNavigation.com
Old Forge… Adirondack Base Camp Eagle Bay Beaver River Big Moose Stillwater Less than one hour from The Mohawk Valley
So Close By… A World Apart Free Sunday Lakefront Concerts
Home of Best in ADK (Adirondack Life readers poll) Best Fine Dining: 5 Corners Café Best Golf Course: Thendara G C Best Diner: Walt’s Diner Best Arts Center/Gallery: VIEW Best Donuts: The Donut Shop Best Bar: Wakelys Speakeasy@ & MusicVenue Van Auken’s Inne Best Theater: The Strand Theatre Yeah, You know the best; You make it so.
bring in hundreds and maybe even a thousand more. This was not good. The young Killdeer chicks still had a week before they were ready to fly and if they got swarmed by revelers, they weren’t likely to make it. After some discussions with other birder folks, we came up with a plan, and on the evening of July 3, I cooperated with a wildlife rehabilitator and captured the three surviving chicks. That’s right, I played Jack’s “chase down the birds” game and netted the little runners one by one. My brother told me that I looked especially absurd, wildly chasing after the birds with a net, all the while wearing a fedora and my unorthodox approximation of a suit. Luckily, this was in an era before cell phone cameras. As you might imagine, the Killdeer parents were not happy at all about this plan, but we were determined that they weren’t going to lose any more chicks due to human interference. “They’d thank us for this later” became our maxim. We were almost positive that the parents would be there after the holiday festivities were over, and they would have no issues about accepting their young back. With the youngsters safe in a box, we drove them to a specially constructed pen on a lawn not too far away. They took to their captivity surprisingly well and we had no trouble at all getting them to feed. As a matter of fact, they had voracious appetites and it was all we could do to supply them with enough worms and insects. Fortunately, rain fell that day and brought many earthworms to the surface so that all we had to do was scoop them up off the pavement and put them in the pen. The Killdeer gobbled them up like spaghetti and then looked around for more! The Fourth of July was a circus and, as anticipated, the park grounds were swarming with people, though not quite as many as expected usual due to the damp conditions. I had a look around for the parent Killdeer to see how they were coping, but I couldn’t locate them and so I returned to our makeshift holding area with a fresh batch of worms for the kids. The evening’s fireworks display was brash, loud, and colorful. It’s an interesting thing to experience fireworks from the per-
spective of animals. As you might imagine, it does cause some distress, though probably not more than what would be caused by an intense thunderstorm. At least fireworks aren’t accompanied by strong winds and hail. On the morning of the release, I admit to feeling some trepidation. What if the parent Killdeer had left the area? What if they didn’t accept their young? Would we have to continue shoveling worms into a pen for the next two weeks? Oh please, not that! In the early morning of July 5, we took a pet carrier holding the three Killdeer chicks back to the park. The release couldn’t have gone smoother. The young plovers blasted out of the container and trotted across the expanse of turf and immediately began hunting in their trademark style, which consisted of running a few meters, abruptly halting, and then stabbing down at some unseen cricket in the grass. After about 15 minutes, as if from nowhere, both adults appeared and joined their offspring in the outfield. It was clear that all was back to normal. In another week and a half, the young birds had begun making their first attempts at flight. The progression to flying was very natural. Not unlike an airplane on a runway, the Killdeer would gain speed by running, begin flapping and then lift off. Their first flights were little more than short jumps, but they advanced quickly. Soon, no one would be able to chase them down or net them, and that was a good thing. There has been a long-standing debate regarding the origin of flight in birds. Did they first become fliers by jumping out of trees and gliding down like flying squirrels or did they do it by running on the ground and lifting off like Killdeer. I can only say that observing young Killdeer in action helps to bolster the case for the latter scenario. As people continue to alter the landscape – destroying some habitats while simultaneously creating others, the onus falls on us to recognize and understand the needs of the wildlife that are able to live among us. The act of coexisting with wildlife may sometimes require us to go out of our way and even on occasion modify our own behavior, but the advantage of doing so is multifold. By maintaining diverse wildlife populations in our parks,
neighborhoods, and cities, we not only make a healthier environment for ourselves, we also create a far more interesting and dynamic place for us to live and work in. During the entire time I watched the Killdeer family, I marveled at how easily they were able to integrate into the manicured park habitat. I also was amazed at how invisible they seemed to be to my fellow park goers. In other words, they constituted no nuisance. The price for tolerating and/or facilitating wildlife is paid back many times over for those of us who can appreciate nature in all its complexity. Whether it’s Killdeer, Peregrine Falcons or American Robins, I challenge everyone to make room for them in your busy lives and along your busy streets. You will undoubtedly learn something in the process and may make a few feathered friends along the way. •
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
Enjoy fresh, lean, and delicious American Lamb raised on a family farm in the Mohawk Valley! Shop the Cooperstown Farmers’ Market or call to order
Clarkshire Farms (315) 867-2121
Mohawk, NY
Like us on Facebook 50
clinton
the mvl
restaurant
guide barneveld
Try a delicious Primo Margarita!
8170 Seneca Tpke., Clinton (315) 732-3631 Mon-Fri 6am-2pm, Sat & Sun 6am-1pm
Primo Pizza 1
HOME STYLE COOKING
•Daily breakfast
Where good friends Meet to Eat! Enjoy breakfast or a quick lunch!
Friday Fish Fry!
At The Kettle
& luncheon specials •Ask about our family bowling special!
315 381-3231
The Most Unique Upside Down Pizza You Will Ever Taste!
8125 Rt.12, Barneveld, NY
(315) 896-2871 Open early everyday!
Celebrating 7 Years In Clinton in June
MVL Ad_Layout 1 7/8/15 3:05 PM Page 1 Cold Brook
Try our Gourmet Pizzas
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
Life is Good at The Ohio Tavern!
Primo Margarita Philly Cheese Steak Chicken Bacon Ranch Chicken Wing And More
Introducing: BBQ Shrimp And Bacon Pizza
Weekday Specials Tuesday 20” X-Lg Cheese Pizza .......$9.95 (Toppings 2.25 ea, X cheese 2.95)
Wednesday Sm Cheese & 20 Wings ... $14.95 Thursday 2 Lg Cheese ..................... $16.00
Every Day Specials Sm Cheese & 20 Wings ....$17.95 Lg Cheese & 25 Wings .....$22.95 Lg Cheese & 50 Wings .....$32.95
Local Delivery After 4
7756 State Route 5, Clinton Located Next Door To Spaghetti Kettle www.primopizza1.com Tues-Thurs 11am-9pm Fri-Sat 11am - 10pm Sun 1pm- 8pm
forestport
WIGWAM TAVERN
NY 28, Forestport 315-392-4811
Thursday is Clam Day at the Wigwam. Fresh Nova Scotia clams steamed to perfection and served with real butter!
Find/Friend us on Facebook and check out our daily specials and upcoming events! 51
Herkimer
fRANKFORT Celebrating our 42nd Anniversary! The Palumbo Family will treat you like Royalty!
Serving the “real” deal Crowley soft ice cream! Plus
Gifford’s award-winning hard ice cream!
Breakfast, Lunch, Dinner! Window Service Take Out Outside Seating
Try our delicious daily specials! Mon: One stuffed pepper with side of spaghetti, a salad & garlic bread Tues: Chicken Riggies with a salad & garlic bread Wed: Meatloaf with mashed potatoes or fries & a vegetable Thurs: Mushroom Stew served over ziti with a salad
New Advertiser! Check out Jamo’s salmon salad!
143 Marina Dr., Frankfort • (315) 717-7724 Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner Sunday Brunch (limited menu) & Ice Cream! Indoor/Outdoor seating overlooking the sparkling Mohawk River! Open: Wed-Sat:10am-8pm, Sun: 10am-2pm
21 years in business!
Fri: Choose from one of our wide variety of seafood dinners!
RESTAURANT & BAR
The
Casual American Cuisine
Seafood & more!
Restaurant and Ice Cream Parlor since 1974! 264 East Main Street, Frankfort, NY
Open Mon-Fri: 6am-10pm, Sat & Sun: 7am-10pm www.theknightspot.com (315) 894-4054
little falls
Raw or cooked • Eat in or take out!
200 King St., Herkimer (315) 866-5716 Wed-Thurs 11-7; Fri 11-8; Sat Noon-7
good food, good wine, good friends, good times 123 Mohawk St., Herkimer • 866-1746 www.jamosrestaurantandbar.com Tues-Thurs 11-9, Fri 11-10, Sat 12-10, Sun 12-9, Closed Mon
Serving Breakfast and Lunch M-F: 7am-2:30pm FREE WI-FI Mon-Fri 7am-3pm, Sat & Sun 7-4
Let me create a culinary experience for you!
823-3290
Breakfast, Lunch, Homemade Soups & Sandwiches and our delicious Desserts Including our Famous Cream Puffs!
“At home” dinners our specialty!
S. Ann St., Canal Place, Little Falls Next to Showcase Antiques
Est. 1982
(315) 866-7669 122 W. Albany St., Herkimer
Celebrating 30 Years!
Traditional French & American Cuisine Owner/Chef James Aufmuth
Fine Dining • Lounge Grill Menu • Bed & Breakfast We use seasonal products from local and regional farmers and artisan producers. Serving fresh, sustainable seafood and fish.
Now open for our 35th year!
Located at historic Canal Place, Little Falls (315) 823-1170 Serving dinner Tues-Sat at 5pm www.canalsideinn.com
by Chef Dominick Scalise
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
MARCY
Great food served in a relaxing atmosphere.
Ice Cream window open til 9 every night!
9663 River Rd., Marcy
Soft and Hard Ice Cream!
27 draft beers on tap featuring many NY state craft beers.
518 East Main Street, Little Falls (315) 508-5156
Open Tues-Thurs 4-10, Fri & Sat 4-11, closed Sun & Mon facebook.com/CopperMooseAleHouse
19 Flavors of Hard Ice Cream 33 Flavors of Soft, Flurries & Milkshakes Take Out & Delivery!
797-7709
Serving Dinners Mon-Fri til 7:30! PLUS Fresh Haddock • Giambotta Mushroom Stew • Chicken & Biscuits Meatloaf Goulash & More!
Mon-Fri: 6am-7:30pm, Sat: 6am-2pm, Sun: 7am-1pm
new hartford
HAPPY SAM’S piccolo cafe
Known throughout The Valley for hearty homemade soups, traditional Italian and zesty Mexican dishes! Check out our tempting specials on facebook every week!
Lunch Monday-Friday, Dinner Wednesday-Sunday 365 Canal Place, Little Falls www.piccolo-cafe.com
BANQUET FACILITY and COCKTAIL LOUNGE • LOUNGE OPEN 5-9
Friday Happy Hour 6-8pm • Complimentary Buffet
Banquet Facility offers buffet & sit down style meals. Seating up to 250! Smaller rooms available for business meetings and personal gatherings.
At the Ramada Inn • 141 New Hartford St., New Hartford • (315) 737-3445 WWW.HAPPYSAMS.COM
Phoenician R E S TAU R A N T Enjoy authentic Lebanese Cuisine
Enjoy traditional, naturally flavored, healthy soup and entrées at Pho Ever Noodles Vietnamese Cuisine. Come try our refreshing Bubble Tea and Traditional Pho or make your own noodle soup!
CHECK OUT OUR NEW SUSHI BAR!
Fish Fryy Frida ! Nights
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
Graduation Time!
Order your Sandwich & Salad Platters 624-0015
From 10 to 250 people, Happy Sam’s Banquet Facility can host your small business meeting or large special event!
Rolled Sandwiches • Soups • Salads
Plaza 5, 8469 Seneca Turnpike • New Hartford • (315) 733-6888 Open Mon-Sat: 10am-8pm, Sun: 10am-7pm • Like us on Facebook! Menu and order online: www.phoevernoodles.com
8457 Seneca Turnpike, New Hartford • 315-624-0015 • Open Mon-Sat 10-6, Sun 11-5
New Hartford 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
Oneida
Lakeview Restaurant and Bar
Specializing in the area’s only coal-fired pizza oven!
Open Year Round, Open to the Public!
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 Open: Mon-Sat 11:30am-9pm, Sun 12pm-7pm
Customizable catering for any size event!
Perfect atmosphere for a romantic dinner or family event.
Chesterfield’s
Tuscan Oven
Dinners: Mon-Sat 3:30PM-9PM, Sun 1-7PM Lunch: Wed, Thurs, Fri Open at 11:30AM
212 Main St., Oneida • 315-363-6510
Dominique’s Chesterfield’s Tuscan Oven’s wings are marinated 24-48 hours in Italian seasoning, lemon, 2184 Glenwood Plaza, Oneida • (315) 361-9900 and olive oil & then baked in a coal-fired oven at temMon-Thurs: 11:30am-9pm, Fri: 11:30am-10pm, Sat: 12-10pm, Sun: 12-8pm o peratures that reach 800 then tossed with carDaily lunch specials Mon-Sat amelized onions, Romano cheese, and basil!
REMSEN
ROME
Brenda’s Natural Foods
Something Good & a Lot of It! www.brendasnaturalfoods.com
DRIVE-IN
Visit Our Natural Food Cafe!
Open 7 days a week!
Serving breakfast, lunch, & dinner
n u f r o f s u n i Jo ! r e m m u S l l aNites, Car Shows and so much more!
Featuring:
Gluten-free options and homemade soups!
Natural Groceries • Supplements • Local Foods Organic Produce & Plants
236 W. Dominick St., Rome (315) 337-0437 M-F 9:30-6, Sat 10-3
Woof
A family tradition since 1963! A local favorite for simply delicious family fare, great sandwiches, and delicious ice cream.
Champagne Brunch
Weddings
Banquets
8524 Fish Hatchery Rd, Rome, NY 13440 315-533-7710 www.deltalakeinn.com
10101 Dustin Rd (Route 12) Remsen (315) 831-5181
Try our wood fired brick oven pizzas! “Specializing in homemade fettuccine, cavatellli, gnocchi, and ziti served with our signature homemade sauces” t& Take Oeury! Deliv
Call 336-0671
615 Erie Blvd. W., Rome Open M-Thurs 11-9, Fri & Sat 11-10, Sun 4-9
Weekend Specials!
See our summer entertainment schedule!
Haddock Specia Prime Rib Every Sat. ls Night!
DiCastro’s BRICK OVEN
salisbury
www.paparickssnackshack.com
OPEN DAILY 11am-10pm End of N. Madison Street at Ridge Mills, Rome • (315) 339-2622
sauquoit Valley/Cassville
The Country Store with More!
www.countrystoreny.com
Restaurant • Ice Cream Parlor
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
’s what ? new
Friday Fish Fry: 11:30am-8pm Voted 2nd best Fish Fry!
1/2 lb. Juicy Angus Burgers! NewSpecialty Sundaes! 32 Soft Serve Ice Cream flavors! 32 Milk Shake flavors! A Variety of Parfaits!
& Ice Cream Too! 1717 Route 8, Cassville (315) 839-5000
Open 7 Days a Week • Open 6am-8pm or later, Serving Breakfast 6am-Noon
sharon springs
utica Innovative food made with local & organic ingredients whenever possible. Exceptional service with a warm atmosphere.
Mon-Thurs 11-3, Fri-Sun 8-3 195 Main St., Sharon Springs (518) 284-2575 www.blackcat-ny.com
Celebrate Bagels. simple. fresh. delicious. breakfast • lunch espresso • pastries • cakes
Order Online @
bagelgrove.com 7 Burrstone Rd. Utica, NY 724-8015
Utica’s Authentic Bagelry Since 1988
53 Franklin Square, Utica • (315) 790-5747
Mon-Thurs:7am-8pm, Fri & Sat: 7am-11pm, Sun: 10am-2pm
bitebakeryandcafe.com
#downtownutica
CAFE
COFFEE • LATTES • TEAS • ESPRESSO SANDWICHES • SOUPS • SALADS
1st Floor Breakfast, Lunch, “Grab-and-Go!” Deliveries, 8am-2pm Take Out & Catering!
Fresh & all natural ingredients
Your Meeting Place Private Parties & Meetings Drive Thru Open All Day
1315 Genesee Street, Utica
1256 Albany St., Utica • Parkway Drugs Plaza Mon-Fri 7am-6 pm, Sat 7am-2pm • 982-9665
Creaciones del Caribe
Palomita de Mi Tierra
Check out our weekly specials on facebook and at www.rososcafe.com
Fried plantain topped with guacamole and shrimp
Open: Mon-Fri 9-2 185 Genesee St 2nd Floor, Utica
315 735-7676
(Creations of the Caribbean) Luisa Martinez - chef
(315) 864-3057 Open 7 days a week: 9am-11pm
Stop In For Our “Savory Breakfast And Lunch Pusties”™ And “Ice Cream Pusties”™!!
Yorkville
Also Shop Our Pasta, Sauces, Starters, Ready To Cook Meals And Other Local Products!!
KARAM’S Middle Eastern Bakery & Restaurant
T ry O u r S ea so n a l I t a l i a n S p eci a l t i es, Co o ki es, Pa st a ci o t t i “ Pu st i e s ” & M o re ! H a n d m a d e - A l wa y s F resh - Never Fro ze n ! Have An Upcoming Party Or Event, Contact Us For All Of Your Catering Needs!
(315) 896-2173 www.sammyandanniefoods.com Open Monday -Through- Friday 8:00AM -To- 4:00PM
westmoreland
Voss’ at the Zoo!
Enjoy the hot dogs, hamburgers and other BBQ items Voss’ is famous for!
Traditional Lebanese fare for breakfast & lunch! Middle Eastern Specials and Groceries Pita and Flat Bread • Spinach & Meat Pies • Baklawa
Tues - Fri: 9am -5pm, Sat: 9am - 3pm
(315) 736-1728 137 Campbell Ave, Yorkville www.karamsbakery.com
www.knucklheadsbrewhouse.com
Knuckleheads BREW HOUSE
Homestyle American Fare From Wings to Prime Rib!
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.
56
Serving lunch and dinner 7 days a week. Open til 2am 7362 East Main Street, Westmoreland (315) 853-1351
78 years serving the Mohawk Valley! Visit our three Locations:
The Utica Zoo • Oriskany Blvd., Yorkville Ilion Marina, 190 Central Ave, Ilion
mv living
antique shopping guide Celebrating our 18th year in business!
BlackCat
Attic Addicts The Queen’s Closet
Pristine, Practical, and Priced Right!
Specializing in estate sales, large and small.
Conducted with respect and dignity. We take the pressure out of estate liquidation, moving, or downsizing. Call for a consultation:
(315) 736-9160
ANTIQUES
We’re letting the cat out of the bag!
Consignment at its Finest!
Clothing Jewelry Household Items Furniture Mon-Fri: 10am-5pm Sat: 10:30am-3pm New consignment by appointment only
22 Oriskany Blvd., Yorkville (315) 736-9160 www.thequeenclosetatticaddicts.com
Black Cat Antiques is the destination for Antique Furnishings, Vintage Clothing, Jewelry, Accessories, and Primitive Handmade Gifts!
Summer is Here! Open Daily 10am-5pm 10242 Route 12N, Remsen
(315) 831-8644
www.backofthebarnantiques.com
14 East Main St. Earlville (315) 691-5721
Open Tues-Fri: 9-4, Sat: 9-2, Closed Sun & Mon
Bear Path Antiques A general line of quality, affordable antiques including furniture, primitives, smalls, china, and antique accessories. Open weekends (and by chance) late May-June; Open Thurs-Mon: July-October. Closed Tues & Wed
(315) 369-9970 • 13912 State Rte 28, Otter Lake
Canal House Antiques Multi-Dealer Shop
Specializing in antique furniture, glassware, jewelry, books, linens, and primitive rug hooking accessories
(315) 893-7737
Open Thurs-Tues 10-5, Closed Wed
6737 Route 20, Bouckville, NY
Foothills
Mercantile 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
The Gallery Antiques at Pinebrick A multi-dealer shop specializing in advertising, petroliana, lamps, furniture, glass, & quality smalls.
Look for our 1960s Texaco sign! (315) 893-7752
6790 Route 20, Bouckville www.thegallerycoop.com
57
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
0 6 1 r e ovor booths &
100 E. Main St., Mohawk (Thruway Exit 30)
(315) 219-5044 www.mohawkantiquesmall.com
vend ay cases! displ MOHAWK ANTIQUES MALL
Mon, Wed-Sat: 10-5, Sun: 11:30-4:30 Closed Tuesdays
Main Street Gift Shoppe
Newport’s Best Kept Secret for Primitive Gifts!
Barn Stars, Candles, Antiques, Textiles, Olde Century Colors Paint, Lighting, Signs, Furniture and more!
Always gathering for our shop! A unique visit each thyme you stop! Red Barn Primitives out back now open! 7431 Main St Rt. 28 Newport, NY
NEWPORT MARKETPLACE Top Notch Garden Center 7583 Main St., Newport, NY (315) 845-8822
OVER 52 VENDORS! NEW ITEMS ARRIVING DAILY! Antiques and Vintage
Re-Purposed Handcrafted Items • Unique Gifts • Honey Cheese • Holistic & Local Foods • Grass-fed Beef, Lamb & Pork Jones Family Farm family gelato • Kombucha on tap
OPEN: Wed thru Sat 11:30am til 8pm • 315 845-8835 www.mainstreetristorante.com
Check out our popular Ristorante on site!
Muck Boots • Seeds • Garden Accessories Statuary • Pottery • Bird Baths “Northern Grown” Shrubs and Trees • Perennials • Annuals
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!
FOR THOSE WHO CRAVE THE UNIQUE! Open 7 Days a Week at 9am • Gift Certificates Available • Like us! 59
The Online Exchange 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
Picker’s Dynasty SHOWCASE Antiques of CNY
Estate Sales & Content Liquidation Professional Stager & Organizer Curb Appeal Specialist
Visit my eclectic spaces located at Little Falls Antique Center & Mohawk Antiques Mall CALL: (315) 527-5707 • www.pickersdynasty.com
Anniversary Give-Away!
ESTATE & HOUSE SALES APPRAISALS ALWAYS BUYING
THE POTTING SHED 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)
Time to check out the antiques at the Village Basement!
! d n u o F
A great new location! 214 Oriskany Blvd, Suite 4 Whitesboro, NY
TREASURES
LOST & FOUND CONSIGNMENT/RESALE SHOP
Vintage items, consignment & décor Daina: 272-7700, Danielle: 941-0965
uuuuuuuuuuu u u u u u u u u u u u 375 Canal Place, Little falls u u next door to ann street deli u u (315) 823-1177 u u u 75 Dealers in: u u Quality Antiques, u Primitives, Furniture, u u u Art and Jewelry u u u Open 7 days 10-5 u u www.showcaseantiquesofcny.com u uuuuuuuuuuu u
Help us Celebrate our 1st YEAR! MVL fans stop in and enter to win a
THRIFT SHOP
$50 VISA Prepaid Card! To be drawn SUNDAY AUG. 14TH
29th Annual
We BUY merchandise!
Stop by and see what kind of treasures you can find! Open: Wed 10-6, Thurs, Fri, Sat 10-4, Closed: Sun, Mon, Tues
(315) 831-5445 • 9605 Main Street, Remsen
Little Falls Canal Celebration Aug 8th-Aug 14th
City Wide Festivities All Week! www.littlefallsny.com/canaldays/schedule
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
8056 Route 13, Blossvale (315) 245-0458 Open 10-5 every day
Open Tues-Fri: 10-6, Sat: 10-4
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 Call for consignment terms.
A Multi Dealer Shop
Featuring 60 Dealers displaying a diverse array of antiques and collectibles.
315-337-3509 Open Daily 10-5, Closed Tuesdays
337 Genesee St., Utica (315) 738-1333
Come Spend the Day With Us! Route 233 Westmoreland, NY 1/4 mile North of NYS Thruway Exit 32 www.westmorelandantiquecenter.com
www.vintagefurn.com
59
Herkimer county historical society
The Suiter Family of Herkimer
By Susan Perkins, Town of Manheim Historian
John Suiter (ca.1789-ca. 1875) married Catherine Blanchard Wayman (ca. 1793-1871), both from Orange County, NY. Their children were Jane A. Suiter (1811-1892) and Col. James A. Suiter Sr. (1816-1906). Jane was born in Salem, NY, according to her obituary. The family moved to Herkimer sometime after Jane was born. James was born in Herkimer. The 1820 Census is the first time that John Suiter shows up in Herkimer, Herkimer County, NY. John moved to Mexico, NY, in 1858 and died there ca.1875. Catherine lived with her son Col. James A. Suiter until her death in 1871. Col. James Suiter Sr. (1816-1906) was married to Catherine (Bowers) (1826-1897) daughter of Joseph Bowers (17991854) and Sarah (Casler) (1795-1882). James and Catherine had three children: James Anthony Suiter Jr. (1847-1926), Dr. Augustus Walter Suiter (1850-1925), and Mary Grace Suiter (1856-1935). Dr. Suiter and Mary Grace never married. James married Elizabeth (Bellinger) (1849-1937). James Jr. and Elizabeth never had any children. Col. James A. Suiter was educated in the common schools. At an early age, he took up the trade of saddle and harness making. He was tutored in the trade by John D. Spinner. He started his own business in 1840 in rooms over Charles Spinner’s grocery store, which was located on North Main Street where the Palmer House building stands today. He moved his business to different places in Herkimer. He retired in 1899. At age 31, Col. Suiter was made Second Lieutenant of Co. E First Regiment in the Mexican War. (1846-1848). He mustered out at Fort Hunter, New York Harbor. He was a member of the Lafayette Guards, which was
Col. James Suiter Sr. (1816-1906)
Col. Suiter and Billy
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 60
Watch Mohawk Valley Living
Celebrating Our 12th Year on TV!
Sundays on FOX33 7:30am & 11pm WUTR TV20 11:30am
The Crafty Ladies host a fundraiser for Making Strides Against Breast Cancer. There will be prizes, baked goods and handcrafted items by the Crafty Ladies!
Fri., Aug 19th, 12-5 • Sat., Aug 20th, 10-5 • Sun., Aug 21st, 12-5
The Laubenthal Residence, 7 Shelly Place, North Utica www. makingstrideswalk.org/utica or call 1.800.227.2345
For more information about the Craft Sale call Linda Laubenthal at 315-561-7271
Summer ART Camps All your fencing supplies at one location! Treated posts of all sizes, high tensile accessories, energizers, gates and much more. 2033 Brothertown Road, Deansboro, NY 13328 (315) 841-4910 Fax: (315) 841-4649 Mon.-Fri. 8am-4pm; Sat. 8-Noon • www.williamsfarmfence.com
Mon-Thur: August 8-11; Mon-Thur: August 15-18 Ages 7 to 9: 9:30am until Noon; Ages 10 to 12: 1pm until 3:30pm, Fee: $40/week, both weeks for $75 (campers may choose either week or both), includes a snack each day. Come explore the science and art of papermaking/printing taught by certified art teachers. Both groups will then use their printed paper to make booklets. A field trip to Burrows Paper Corp is planned.
Space is limited, please register early! A few scholarships are available.
Mohawk Valley Center for the Arts
401 Canal Place, Little Falls
315.823.0808
www.mohawkvalleyarts.org
See you at the Market! Summer Market Every Saturday, 9am-1pm
Behind Utica’s Union Station Cornell Cooperative Extension is an employer and educator recognized for valuing AA/EEO, Protected Veterans, and Individuals with Disabilities and provides equal program and employment opportunities.
www.oneidacountymarket.com Visit www.cceoneida.com for a complete listing of local farmers markets.
61
commanded by General Francis E. Spinner (1802-1890). In 1852, he was elected Captain of Co. G 38th Regiment New York State Militia, and was made lieutenant colonel of the regiment. In April 1861, President Lincoln issued the first call for troops. Col. Suiter was the first man to enlist in Co. G of the 34th Regiment. This became known as the Herkimer County regiment. Suiter was elected captain and then promoted to lieutenant colonel. On March 20, 1862, he was commissioned as colonel. The 34th Regiment fought at the battles of Fair Oaks, Glendale, Antietam, Fredericksburg, and 14 other battles during the Civil War. Suiter’s horse “Old Billy,” which he rode through the war, was wounded at Fair Oaks, Antietam, and Fredericksburg but the colonel escaped without injury and returned home in 1863 along with the horse. Col. Suiter was well respected by his men. He aided his comrades in securing pensions and never tired in helping those who battled so loyally for their country. The first Grand Army Post was organized in Herkimer, which was named the Suiter Post in his honor. It later was re-named the Arron Helmer Post in honor of a hero who was killed in battle. Col. Suiter was appointed post master by President Zachariah Taylor. He served as supervisor of the town in 1860 and again in 1872, served as justice of the peace, office trustee, treasurer, and assessor of the village of Herkimer. His son, Dr. Augustus Walter Suiter, was educated in the public schools of Herkimer, Fairfield Seminary, and the Oneida Conference Seminary of Canastota. He studied medicine at the University of Michigan, and transferred to the College of Physicians and Surgeons at Columbia University, NY, where graduated in 1871. He worked at Rhode Island Hospital at Providence, RI. He then came to Herkimer and had his practice there until his death in 1925. Dr. Suiter was secretary of the Herkimer County Medical Society for more than 50 years. He was a member of the Herkimer Masonic Lodge, Col. James A. Suiter Camp, Sons of Veterans, and was a part of the Herkimer County Historical Society. In Dr. Suiter’s later years, he was a consultant on the subject of pathology, microscope technology, municipal state and national sanitation, and medical jurisprudence. He was an expert medical consultant in various courts. In 1884, Dr. Suiter was the one who went to the swamp near the Druse household to look for the remains of William Druse, who had been murdered by his wife, Roxalana Druse. He did a detailed report of his findings of bones of William Druse. In 1906, Dr. Suiter was one of the
POHLIG
ENTERPRISES, INC.
Dr. A. Walter Suiter
LOVENHEIM’S Paint, wallcoverings, window treatments, floor coverings, carpet, floors & more!
Think Summer, Think Arborcoat! Serving you Mon-Fri: 8-5, Thurs ‘til 6, Sat: 9-3 634-636 E. Main St., Little Falls (315) 823-2640 62
Dr. Suiter’s Library
Smart Features. Timeless Dependability.
www.toro.com
Own the Best
Recycler with SmartStow • Best-in-class warranties •Features “Quick Wash” washout port • Powerful Engines Toro’s w o t S • Superior mulching Smart es Sav performance torage physicians who was called in for the autopsy of Grace Brown, who was murdered by Chester Gillette on July 11, 1906. Dr. Suiter formulated the defense of imbecility in the Jean Gianini case in 1914. Jean had murdered his schoolteacher, Lida Beecher. Dr. Suiter built a Queen Anne-style mansion in 1884 on the corner of Court and North Main Street. He purchased the property at an auction in 1867 for $2,000. The doctor never lived in the mansion but used it as his doctor’s office. As a matter of fact, no one has ever lived in the mansion. Dr. Suiter lived down on North Washington Street with his parents and siblings. Why he did not live in the mansion remains a mystery. He died in 1925 at the age of 75. He left the mansion to his sister Mary Grace in his will, which also stated that the mansion would go to the Herkimer County Historical Society upon her death. Mary Grace died in 1936, and the society took over the mansion in 1938. Today, the Herkimer County Historical Society has its museum and collection storage in the Suiter Memorial Building, which has a plaque stating that the building was given in memory of his parents, Col. James Suiter and Catherine Bowers Suiter. The society museum is open Monday to Friday from 1 to 4 p.m. and on Saturdays in July and August from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. •
Sue Perkins is the Executive Director of the Herkimer County Historical Society and historian for the town of Manheim.
S Space
Call 315-853-5581
Stiefvater Distributors, Inc.
225 Clinton Rd., Rt. 12B, New Hartford, NY
Mon. 8am-7pm; Tue. thru Fri. 8am-5pm; Sat 8am-2pm www.sdoutdoorpower.com
WE SERVICE MOST MAJOR BRANDS & CARRY CURRENT & MANY HARD-TO-FIND PARTS See dealer or toro.com (toro.ca for Canadian residents) for warranty details. Product availability, pricing & special promotions are subject to dealer options.
Tent Rentals
Also Tables, Chairs, Lights & Linens! Weddings Graduations Family Reunions & Parties
Delivery Set-Up & Take-Down
17 McBridge Ave., Clinton, NY
(315) 853-2931
Celebrating 75 Years & 4 Generations!
Crum Creek CSA Selling locally raised, USDA inspected Beef, Pork, Chicken & Elk! 200 Crum Creek Rd. St. Johnsville • (518) 568-5476
www.crumcreekcsa.com
Shawangunk nature preserve, cold brook
TALES FROM
SHAWANGUNK Chapter 23 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.
Growing up, I must have gone swimming in practically every river, lake, creek, pond, and pool in central New York. Mom would pack a picnic and drive us to a watering spot. Then, she’d read a book, paint, or do handwork, turning brown as a sun-toasted nut while we children frolicked like rambunctious dolphins. Like most kids, we were content if we had water to play in and food to eat. Twice a week, our school athletic program in Westmoreland sent a bus around to take interested students to the Clinton Pool. There, I learned to dive with the passion of a love 64
affair. Superman could fly through the air; Tarzan could fly through the forest on his vines; now I could fly, too, twirling and twisting through the air with the help of a diving board, and got good enough to rank fifth in an interstate SUNY competition during college. I finally lost interest when I hit my nose on a board doing a reverse dive in pike position. Now, Tim has taken to flying, with a selfbuilt powered parachute. He has quite a few good, short flights over our forest, and one day decides to venture all the way to Grant, 3½ miles away. Before he knows it, he’s floating over the sun-kissed, blueberry blue waters of Hinckley Lake, watching tiny boats below scurrying about like water-bugs in a diamond-studded pond. Pleased with this expansion of his ventures, he slowly turns for home by lowering one side of the parachute. But he’s moving
much slower now. “What’s going on?” he ponders. “Ah-ha! I was going downwind before and am now going upwind. Oh well, I’ve got plenty of time before it gets dark.” (He always flies near sunset when the winds repose.) At last, I hear the distinctive sound of his Rotax engine as he nears the airstrip on Dan Davis Road, where I await him. His approach is looking good. Then the engine sputters and dies. Suddenly, all is quiet except for the evening trills of veery from the woods. “Why did he turn off the engine already?” I wonder, with a nervous swallow. He, too, is wondering: “Why did my engine quit?” as the wind vibrates his parachute cords like a giant harp. A spectral realization illumines his query. He curses and exclaims, “Oh, no! Flying into the headwind used up all my gas!”
Fortunately, he has the parachute, and he’s nearly reached the runway. There’s a chance he’ll be able to glide in ... a chance. He has to clear 60-foot trees, power lines, and a road. The runway comes closer and closer as he slowly drops. Will he make it? He grimly prepares for any possibility while attempting to mentally will his craft forward. He just misses it, dropping onto the slope between the runway and Pardeeville Road. It’s a hard landing, but he walks away from it, intact and chagrined, but thankful. “I couldn’t see the gas tank in the back,” he explains. “And I was too low to glide all the way in.” Before his next flight, he mounts a mirror in the front so he can keep an eye on the gas tank. After Tim has had many successful flights, he invites me to go up with him. We’re both light enough for the engine to lift us. (This is now illegal except with a special license.) My sense of adventure wins over trepidation, and I decide to go for it. I take my camera, hoping to get some interesting aerial perspectives. We spend a good hour on the ground in quiet, serious, intense concentration as we lay out the parachute, examining every line and connection, making sure nothing is twisted. Finally, we strap ourselves in and start. Tim guns the engine and we are suddenly speeding down the runway. We lift quickly
and easily, soaring above the forest and into infinity. I am in a state of disbelief and confusion. I love it, yet I’m afraid. How beautiful our earth is! Huge fir trees now look like a tapestry of tiny sphagnum mosses blanketing the earth in jade. Black Creek is an iridescent convolution of gossamer, meandering through the lowlands like a child rambling aimlessly through a meadow, with no purpose except to enjoy the day. In the distance, I see our beloved Adirondacks, enduring undulations of indigo and turquoise under a cerulean sky. I photograph some camps and houses, but I can’t on the way back because there is a headwind now, and we are swinging and bouncing around like a puppet on a spring. People below wave cheerily up at us. I wave enthusiastically back. keep waving long after they have stopped, wishing I were down there instead of up here. At long last, we approach the runway, tree tops skimming by just below our feet. I am extremely concerned because we are flying sideways. “Are we OK?” I yell to Tim. He either doesn’t hear me, or doesn’t want to say.
Bird’s Marine
Bird’s Adirondack Real Estate
Serving the marine needs of the Adirondacks for over 60 years!
Rentals & Dockage Sales & Service 2730 State Route 28 Tahoe pontoon boats Old Forge, NY (315) 369-2136 Starcraft & Grumman Mercury & Yamaha 179 State Route 28 Venture & Yacht Club Raquette Lake (315) 354-4441 trailers www.birdsmarine.com
Serving the real estate needs of the Adirondacks for over 40 years!
Lehr propane outboard motors
2730 Rt. 28, Old Forge, NY (315) 369-2136 www.birdsadkrealestate.com adklands@frontiernet.net
Take a hike through our forest of Adirondack fabrics! Located at the Shoppes at the Finish Line Mon: 9:30 - 8, Tues - Fri: 9:30 - 5 Sat: 10- 4
“Are we OK, we’re coming in sideways!” I yell, lifting up his ear protectors. “Yes! We’re fine! We’ll straighten out when we get below the trees!” he yells back. I hope he’s right! This seems like the craziest and scariest part. I want to return to dear old Earth, but I’m afraid to. But we do straighten out, and hit ground with a jarring thump, rolling many yards before stopping. Tim cuts the engine and all is quiet except for the swoosh of the parachute gently billowing over our heads, descend-
Designed by a Quilter, for Quilters!
Tim takes Peg into the sky
John and Anne’s soon to be property
Vacation homes, lakefront, commercial, lots, and camps
3rd Lake Ranch Home $795,000 Year-round 4 bedroom, 2 bath Ranch with boathouse and dock on 100 ft. lakefront, sunporch, walkout basement, and deck
Modular, Doublewide and Singlewide Homes!
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.
65
AUGUST Savings
AND HISTORIC VILLAGE
Sale prices valid August 1st -31st, 2016 August Savings Vitamin & Herbal Supplements
August Savings
25% Off
Omega 3 Supplements Original Formula Only
20% Off
Enjoy Some Good Ol’
SUMMERTIME
FUN
Organic Bulk Thompson Raisins
Protein, Greens & Coconut Oils
Omega 3 Supplements $3.39/lb.
20% Off $2.49/lb.
Reg. $3.69/lb. Organic Bulk Organic Bulk Thompson Raisins Cranberries
Protein, Greens & Coconut Oils
$3.39/lb.
20% Off
$5.59/lb.
Reg. $7.99/lb.
Prices Valid August 1st - August 31st
Van's Gluten Free Waffles Fresh Ground Peanut Butter
Stonyfield Farm Organic Valley Organic 100% Grassfed Half & Half
$
2.79 Reg. $3.79 Reg. $3.69/lb.
5775 ROUTE 80, COOPERSTOWN, NY
3.19
$
Tofu
$ $5.59/lb. 2.29 3.19
Rice Pasta $
Reg. $4.69
Reg. $2.79
Reg. $7.99/lb.
Honest Tea Organic Bottled Tea 16 FL OZ $
$
2.99 Reg. $4.39
Nature's Bakery Gluten Free Fig Bars $
4.29
Reg. $5.99
Cascadian Farm Organic Cereal $
3.99
Reg. $5.99
Neo Water
Prices Valid August 1st - August 31st
12.49 Reg. $16.99 1.49 Reg. $1.89 Kind Gluten Free Granola Bars $
1.39
Reg. $2.19
Reg. $4.29
Tinkyada Organic Bulk Woodstock Organic & Organic Cranberries Natural Brown
Cup 4 Cup Gluten Free 3lb. Flour
Finding High Quality Care Has Never Been Easier!
Whole Milk Yogurt
16 OZ
$2.49/lb. $ FarmersMuseum.org
25% Off
20% Off
Original Formula OnlyReg. $4.69/lb. Fresh Ground Peanut Butter
Reg. $4.69/lb.
SEE WEBSITE FOR HOURS AND SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
Vitamin & Herbal Supplements
R.W. Knudsen Organic Juice Boxes $
50.7 FL OZ
$
2.49 Reg. $2.89
Annie's Homegrown
Macaroni & Cheese
(Select Varieties)
$ 2.79 1.49 Reg. $3.49 Reg. $3.99
Hail Merry Miracle Tarts $
3.49 Reg. $4.89
Cheribundi Tart Juice Cherry 32 FL OZ
$
6.49 Reg. $9.69
WWW.CCEONEIDA.COM/CHILDCARE
1-888-814-KIDS
Mon-Fri 9-8, Sat 9-6, Sun 11-4
New Hartford Shopping Center 724-4998
Visit our cafe serving fresh sandwiches, salads, soups, realwww.peterscornucopia.net fruit smoothies and organic coffee!
Happy to be back after an exciting flight with Tim ing to Earth like a tired rainbow. I am elated! We made it! We’re alive! I’ve never felt so giddy and energized! I can’t stop smiling. That was such fun! I eventually fly with him again, but decide that it’s not my cup of tea.
*** Our son, Dave, begins to build his own house on the eight acres we gave each of our children as their inheritance. Meanwhile, he and his family live in the little Children’s Cottage. It’s pretty small for four people, so, his older son, Todd, is using our back room as his bedroom. It has its own entrance, giving his parents some measure of privacy. “Ding-a-ling-a-ling!” Cathy calls Todd to breakfast by pulling the rope strung through the woods between the two cottages that is attached to a bell by his door. We hear the door slam as he bolts for their cottage. Todd has a friend spend the night, and they have a jolly time climbing trees, jumping off the springboard, feeding the chipmunks, and exploring the woods. It’s dropping into the high 40s after dark, so we turn on their kerosene heater. We’ve fashioned an outside air intake and a chimney over the top for ventilation. This may negate some of the heating capacity, but we feel it’s safer. In the morning, though, we are shocked when they come to breakfast in soot-spotted faces and sleepy white eyes peering
Located in Munnsville, Custom Woodcraft has been handcrafting wood furniture and designing beautiful cabinetry since 1979. You’re not just buying cabinets, you’re investing in a tradition.
out in wonderment. “What happened to you!” we query in amazement. “I don’t know, we just woke up this way,” Todd replies, equally amazed. In his room there is kerosene soot everywhere. Something went wrong with the heater. Grateful that nothing more serious happened, this marks the demise of our use of kerosene for heating or cooking, and we install an outdoor ventilated, LP gas heater that can be thermostatMuzyk farm from the air
LIQUORS & WINES Welcome to the Station!
Good Friends Good Times Good Wines
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! Mon-Sat 9am-9pm, Sun 12pm-6pm
HALF & FULL CASE DISCOUNTS
8231 State Route 12, Barneveld (315) 896-4444
Custom Woodcraft Quality Cabinetry & Furniture Crafted exclusively for you 2509 Perry Shumaker Road Munnsville (315) 843-4243
1-800-843-3202
Book with us for a perfectly planned, hassle free, and memorable vacation! With so many specials available, let us find the perfect deal for you!
Deb Lawendowski, CC Brenda Gray, ACC
Tel: 315-768-1700 • Toll Free: 1-866-722-SHIP(7447) Fax: 315-768-8919 • 214 Oriskany Blvd., Whitesboro
www.TheCruiseWizards.com • email: Brenda@TheCruiseWizards.com 67
ically controlled without electricity. It’s blueberry time and we take Todd and Brandon with us to graze in the meadowlands that overlook the blue-green Adirondacks, misty with warm sumOur guest Barry Sinnot flies mer haze. off our springboard We cover our heads and wear long sleeves despite the heat because swarms of deer fly beleaguer us like paparazzi in helicopters as we bike up the road. We decide to stop at Louie’s along the way since the boys have never seen the two-headed calf that was born on his farm years ago. It didn’t live long, and his parents had the unusual heads stuffed and mounted. We find Louie near his gray weathered farmhouse with a long staff in his hand, peacefully guiding his herd through the glorious masses of wildflowers that adorn his fenceless fields. “Do you have names for your cows, Louie?” we ask. “Rosie!” he calls out. A cow with reddish spots raises her head and calls back, “Moooooo,” then placidly returns to munch on succulent grasses and blossoms. We admire the ancient maple trees that grace the front of his house. “My folks planted those when they came here,” he explains. “One Arbor Day, I planted that big fir tree behind the schoolhouse when I was a kid.” His staff points toward an old house a half mile away. “That little house up the road was your school?” we ask. “Yep.” Louie has lived here all his life, perhaps never having gone further than Utica or Herkimer, and is almost a hermit, like Noah John Rondeau. We hear that his radio has died, and he is still complaining about that “so-and-so,” years ago, who stole the socks off his mother’s feet when she was dying, and decide it wouldn’t hurt for him to have some access to contemporary realities. We purchase a little TV and give it to him for his birthday. We know he likes it because we see the faint blue glow of the screen from his window when we pass by after dark. It gives him new things to think On Louie’s birthday with Tim and Peg and talk about. We return 68
Candella’s
farm and GREENHOUSES 9256 River Rd, Marcy (315) 736-8782
Fresh Home Grown Produce
Sweet Corn, Tomatoes, Sweet & Hot Peppers, Pickles, Cousa, Eggplant, Squash, Italian Pole Beans & Much More! www.candellasfarm.com www.candellasfarm.com
Wed: Loomis Gang Train Robberies 10, 12:30, 3pm • Thurs: Clown Train 12:30 and 3pm Fri: Hobo Days 12:30 and 3pm • Sat & Sun: Scenic Ride to Otter Lake 12:30 and 3pm Sat: Big Moose Station Lunch Train: Noon • Sun: Big Moose Station Brunch Train: 9:30am River & Rail: Paddle from Tickner’s down the Moose River and catch a train back
Info & Reserve at 1-800-819-2291 www.adirondackrr.com
Cushman’s
AUTOMOTIVE In an Accident? We’ll fix it! Chuck Cushman, Jr.
p vai in le.ysa hr dos p
WINERY & TASTING ROOM 2 miles from Cooperstown in Fly Creek, NY
pailshopvineyards.com 607-437-6450
Mon-Fri: 8-5, Sat: 9-2 8541A Route 365, Stittville
(315) 865-4721 or 525-2886
Blueberry availability varies daily so always call ahead or check our website 1080 Steuben Hill Road, Herkimer, NY • (315) 867-5735 www.herkimerblueberries.com
home unaware that this will be our last viewing of the two-headed calf, which will soon disappear into obscurity, like his mother’s socks. There are late summer chores to get to, and because we still adhere to the middle-class standards of cleanliness we grew up with, there are clothes and bedding to wash, beds to make, our daily showers to take. Every day must see a little more firewood harvested, split, and stacked to dry. The garden mint must also be cut and hung to dry for our year’s supply of tea; there are tomatoes to can, apples to gather, potatoes to dig.... At day’s end, we climb the ladder to our tiny loft with tired satisfaction to dream in each other’s arms, comforted with the knowledge that we’ve worked hard and accomplished meaningful tasks. They may not alter the course of history, but they fulfill the vision of our ancestors: to live in freedom and peace with humble gratitude for the opportunity to live, and let live. • 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.
August Workshops at Shawangunk All workshops are on Saturday mornings unless otherwise indicated. Workshops are free except for a materials fee when requested. Please call at least a few days ahead to reserve a spot and assure adequate available materials. (315) 826-7405
August 6: En Plain Air Painting at Misty Brook: 9:30 – 11:00am
Bring your own watercolors, pastel pencils, acrylics, etc., or share some of our paper and paints to experience a session “en plein air” next to a flowing brook in an evergreen forest. We have emerald mosses, forest wildflowers, flowing ferns and stately trees among our choice of subjects and with some succinct advice in quotes from impressionist, Claude Monet as our teacher in absentia.
August 13: Botany 101: Introduction To Plant Identification—With Hillary Joy Pitoniak, Botanist and Certified Herbalist: 9:30am – Noon
Have you ever looked around the forest, or perhaps even your own backyard, and noticed how much diversity there is in the vegetation there? Have you ever wondered what these little (or big) plants are? If so, then this is the workshop for you! In this workshop you will learn some basic skills for identifying plants, including plant anatomy and morphology, taxonomy, and using dichotomous keys and other resources for identification.
August 20: Nature Treasure Hunt: 9:30 – 11:00am
Have some family fun on a treasure hunt in the wilderness! In this multi-generational event, each participant will receive a picture booklet nature guide of fun facts to help us discover our treasures during a slow-paced leisurely walk through the forest, on a well-managed path, taking our time to discuss what we find. Natalie Parent, a resident naturalist at Shawangunk Nature Preserve as well as a dedicated land preservationist at Spring Farm CARES Nature Sanctuary will be your guide. She has taught children’s art programs in Washington, D.C. and Utica, NY. Bring a magnifying glass & binoculars if you have them for a closer look at nature. Please register ahead.
August 27: Harp & Harmony For Lunch: 12:00 Noon
Bring a bag lunch and relax for an hour with some live, acoustic music from Harp & Harmony in the gardens at Shawangunk.
www.shawangunknaturepreserve.com
COMING SOON! 259 GENESEE STREET, uTIcA, NEW yORK
FOR TIX & INFO call (315) 724-4000 or visit thestanley.org
KESSLER PROMOTIONS PRESENTS
AMBROSIA with special guests SHOWTIME Fri | Aug 5 | 7:30 pm
SITRIN FOuNdATION PRESENTS
GAVIN dEGRAW ANdy GRAMMER Sat | Oct 8 | 7:30 pm
BROAdWAy uTIcA PRESENTS
FAME
Tues & Wed | Sept 20 & 21 | 7:30 pm
AEG LIVE PRESENTS
JOHN MELLENcAMP
The Plain Spoken Tour Wed | Oct 12 | 7:30 pm
don’t miss this FuNdraiser! SWING WITH THE STANLEy - Golf Outing at Hidden Valley | Sunday, Aug 14 at Noon
Hughes Farms
Tour the Boonville Black River Canal Museum!
A small sustainably managed farm in Deansboro
Visit our retail store for fresh seasonal produce, maple syrup, & free range eggs. Open 9am to dark
2626 State Rt.12b, Deansboro and the Oneida Co. Market on Saturdays in Utica
FREE Admission!
• See “The Walter C. Pratt” canal boat! • A fully operating mini-canal for the kids! • Shop the Hemlock General Store!
Can you escape The Room? You have 60 minutes to decipher clues and escape our themed rooms! Great fun for parties & team-building! Only $20 per person!
BLACK RIVER CANAL
MUSEUM Open 7 days a week from Fourth of July - Columbus Day Just off Route 12 at Main St., Boonville
(315) 942-6763 www.blackrivercanalmuseum.com
Owner Michael D. Jones
Book a room today! the-skeleton-key.com 315-367-3004• 138 Main St., Oneida
Fort Schuyler Trading Co.
er w o fl rals
Coffee Roasters - tea & herb shop
Sun N
Raw Honey, Beeswax Candles, Maple Syrup Handmade Soap, Natural Skin Care Products
tu
a
Custom Printed & Embroidered T-Shirts, Jackets, Hats, Polo Shirts, Sweatshirts, Hoodies, Tote Bags, Fleece Blankets, Dance & Spirit Wear, Cheerleading & Team Uniforms
foods
Feed your body, nurture your soul.
Natural Stone Tile & Slabs
Quality Products for 21 years!
Granite, Limestone, Marble, Onyx, Quartzite, Slate, Travertine
UticaZoo.org
Open Mon: 10-5, Tues-Fri: 10-6 8024 Route 12, Barneveld 896-2820
From Artisans Around the World Pottery, Glass, Woodwork, Jewlery
315-853-5001
Buy - Trade - Sell
M.L. CROAD
Americana, Vintage Collectables, Tractors, Trucks, Motorcycles, Boats, Cars, Guitars, Musical Instruments, Knives North Utica Shopping Center 50 Auert Ave. Utica, N.Y. 13502 315-733-1043
70
Monday - Friday: 10 AM - 6:00 PM Saturday & Sunday: 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM
STOREMADE:
Kielbasa, Sausage, Hams, Patties, Salads, Variety of German Style Frankfurters
The 4 Corners in Clark Mills
Tues-Fri 10-6, Sat 8-1, Closed Sun & Mon
INSURANCE AGENCY Serving our customer’s needs since 1982.
AUTO • HOME BUSINESS • LIFE Mary Lou Croad 315-336-8875 200 East Garden St., Rome
M-Thurs 9-4:30, Fri 9-4 www.mlcroadinsuranceagency.com
the music never stops
Rick Montalbano by john keller
There is so much music here in the Mohawk Valley. All types, all cultures, all feelings. One of the most emotional genres of music is jazz. This area has been blessed with a plethora of amazing jazz performers. Jimmy Wormwood, Sal Amico, JR Monterose, The Zitos, Carmen Caramanica, and Rick Montalbano—just to name a few. Montalbano has been a constant in the jazz field for some time, not just locally, but on a national front as well. He’s worked with the likes of Louis Bellson, Lionel Hampton, Aretha Franklin, Wayne Newton, and Jaco Pastorius. He has toured with Lou Rawls, been a radio DJ, and currently teaches piano at three local colleges. His piano style has graced many recorded efforts. He is also assistant music director of the CNY Jazz Orchestra and has performed with the Syracuse Symphony. In his “spare time” he performs weekly at The Savoy in Rome and Pastabilities in Syracuse. He is an always moving musical force and one of this area’s major influences in jazz. His passion for the music is forever present on his face as he plays. Catching Montalbano in a bit of free time, I asked him to give us an overview of his remarkable career. What propelled you toward a career in music? I started making money when I was very young. I loved playing and people paid me...so, a simple choice. Do you come from a musical family? Yes. Not necessarily professional musicians, but musically talented and very good artists. My dad loved Enrico Caruso and Cab Calloway. My mom knew the lyrics to and could sing just about every standard song written. My brothers and sisters listened to Sinatra, Ella, Nat Cole, Louie Prima, and then on to rhythm and blues, the early rock ’n’ roll things, the Beatles, Miles Davis, and onward. Put that all together in a big pot, mix in some Bach and Bill Evans, add some tomato sauce, heat, and serve. Where did you get your first piano lessons? Like a lot of neighborhood Italian kids in the 50s, I started on the
Property Owners:
We prescreen and qualify tenants for your vacant dwellings.
Tenants: Let us find the perfect place for you!
This area’s premier full service NY State licensed Real Estate Rental Agency
The Apartment Connection
2033 Genesee Street, Utica • (315) 733-7501
Over 23 Years Experience!
accordion. John Jaski Sr. and Jr. were my first teachers. I played the Hammond organ and Fender Rhodes after that and eventually in my late teens focused more on the acoustic piano. We didn’t always have a piano, so it was catch as catch can for a while. Jim Straney, Joanne Geller, and Albert Bowen helped me with some lessons, but mostly I learned by listening to recordings, to the great area players, and asking the old timers a thousand musical questions. Who have been you biggest influences—musically and personally? Well, of course, the great players that we all know, with a special leaning toward Miles Davis and his piano players, Frank Sinatra and his gifts. Especially the guys right here in Central New York: Jack Palmer, Sam and Dolores Mancuso, Chick Esposito, Sal Amico, JR Monterose, bands like Andy and the Classics, and many, many others. Was jazz your first passion? If you mean after girls, then yes. What goals did you set for yourself early on? Making myself good, so the musicians I admired would hire me. The philosophy is really that simple. I still believe that if you concentrate on the music, all the rest will fall into place. I never really had good luck trying to market myself. Could you briefly describe your early musical adventures? I played dance music early on. Not really full-on jazz, but standard songs for dancing. What we now call the Great American Songbook.
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 71
Custom Fabrication/Welding • Sheet Metal Work • Specialize in Stainless Steel C&C Press Braking • Plasma Cutting • Rolling & Forming (315) 732-4939 • 9669 River Road • Marcy • www.inmansheetmetal.com
DRY CLEANING SHIRT LAUNDRY
103 Main St., Whitesboro, NY 768-1462 Tues-Fri 6-2 Sat & Sun 6-1
1212 Catherine St., Utica, NY 733-6603
(315) 732-8501
Tues-Sun 6-2
SUNNYBROOK FARM (315) 841-4910
Pastured Poultry & Pork Grass Fed Beef
In Stock Again
Specializing in Weddings & Banquets
EXCEPTIONAL CUISINE • COMPETITIVE PRICING PROFESSIONAL WAIT STAFF ACCOMMODATIONS UP TO 200 GUESTS WEDDING RECEPTIONS • REHEARSAL DINNERS • BRIDAL & BABY SHOWERS FAMILY REUNIONS • BUSINESS MEETINGS • ALL OCCASION PARTIES
Hours: Mon-Fri 8-4, Sat 8-Noon
Friday night dinners featuring our famous fresh haddock fish fry!
2033 Brothertown Rd., Deansboro
16 Erie St. Yorkville, NY 13495 (315) 736-9359
Pick up at Williams Fence www.sunnybrookmeats.com
Full menu available - Serving every Friday 4-8:30
www.clubmonarch.net Kanien’kehá:ka (Mohawk)
NORTH STAR ORCHARDS FARM MARKET & BAKERY
Rt. 233, Westmoreland • OPEN DAILY 8-7 • 853-1024 • WWW.NORTHSTARORCHARDS.COM
The great trumpeter Jack Palmer give me a list of several hundred songs when I was about 16 and said, “learn these and you can play anywhere in the world.” It took some time, but I now know lots of songs. I played almost exclusively with older musicians from when I was 13. Never really with my own generation until after high school. Then I went on the road with rock bands, played in what we used to call “jazz-rock bands” and various other groupings. I also did radio work on several local stations in those years, leading eventually to singer Lou Rawls, and then on from there in more serious jazz settings. How did the gig with Lou Rawls come about? Through my old friend, and great guitarist, Carmen Caramanica. That standard tradition of an opportunity opening up, other musicians liking your work and recommending you for the gig. Throughout your impressive career, you’ve had the honor to work with many greats. What have been some of the most memorable moments thus far? I’ve been blessed with getting a chance to play with a great deal of my musical heroes. It’s a little “who’s who” of jazz. These days I especially love playing with my son, Rick, on drums and his wonderful wife, vocalist Jane Monheit. Getting a chance to play with Aretha Franklin many times has been a thrill. But there’s always the hope that my most memorable moments have yet to come. You are also a composer. Where can we find some of your recordings? I’ve done lots of playing on other people’s recordings in 40-plus years in the studio, but there are also some of my own. One is called amazingly “The Rick Montalbano Quintet.” There’s also an older piano trio recording called “Kindred Spirits,” The Central New York Jazz Orchestra’s “Then and Now,” and the Syracuse Symphony Orchestra’s “Big Band Bash” to name a few. Jane Monheit has recorded several of my Christmas songs for Internet release and also some of my arrangements for big band and combo. Recently, a wonderful West Coast singer named Tish Oney recorded one of my tunes called “One More Spring” for release later this year. Several songs will be on a Glen Cashman recording called “Forever Young.” What do you feel sets your style apart from many others? If I have a unique voice, then that makes me very happy. It’s taken a long time to understand all the details and nuances of this music and then be able to find a personal way to express it. In my case everything works behind my touch. When I’m happy with that, then the shackles are gone and everything flows. Of course, as in every musician’s case, expression is a sum of his personality, upbringing, and all of the music he’s experienced. For me, growing up along the Mohawk River in a very
2014 COMMANDER 1000 MAX DPS
2015 OUTLANDER 650 XT - $10,849 2016 OUTLANDER 570 XT - $10,149 2016 OUTLANDER 650 MAX XT - NOW $11,849 2016 OUTLANDER 1000 XMR - NOW $14,299
YELLOW - WAS $16,199
NOW $13,700 price includes rebates
UP TO 40% OFF Select In-Stock
Can Am Clothing! ®TM and the BRP logo are trademarks of Bombardier recreational Products Inc. or its affiliates.
ethnic area in the 1950s and ’60s gives a certain vibe to the way I feel melodically and rhythmically. I understand that you have a recording studio. When did you open the Music Factory? What services do you offer? The Music Factory opened in the late ’80s in an old warehouse in Rome. I ran it in that location until just a couple of years ago, and have since reconfigured and set up a Pro-Tools recording studio at home. I do all of the basic recordings, editing, and mastering. I have a great natural-sounding room, two pianos, a classic Hammond B3 organ, drums, synths, and all the standard small studio recording goodies. You’re extremely active. Where can we catch you performing soon? I play solo piano at The Savoy in Rome every Friday and Saturday evening 6 to10 p.m. I also play quite often at Turning Stone Casino and just about anywhere from concerts to clubs. You also teach jazz piano at some of the local colleges. How is that experience? Again, I feel blessed. I’ve been teaching music since I was a teenager and at Hamilton College, Colgate University, and Syracuse University for many years. It keeps me on my toes working with smart and talented young people. And it gives me faith that this music will be here for awhile. Is there anything you would still wish to accomplish? To stay interested and to keep improving my craft. It’s a fascinating puzzle that you can never finish. With all that you have seen and done, what is your outlook on the current music scene, both locally and globally? Jazz is a notoriously hard sell. It will never be more than a small slice of the music pie, but as long as there’s a little room for the great songs we love to play, I’m happy and that’s enough for me to think about. In the 1960s, my brother started telling me that I would soon be replaced by a computer. I’m glad I’m still here. Lastly, looking through experienced eyes, what advice or words of wisdom do you have for those wishing to follow in your footsteps? I’ve done a lot of music education clinics all over the country and always end with one standard piece of advice. Don’t ever leave your wallet in the dressing room when you’re onstage. Ha, I believe those are fine words indeed! Thank you, Rick, for taking the time for us. • John Keller is a local musician and owns Off Center Records in Utica.
Summer Inventory Sale! Giftware, Apparel & much more!
20-75% off selected items
27 Genesee St., New Hartford 315.797.7700 www.villageflorals.net
GENESEE JOE’S
live & local Back in the late ’70s a progressive rock group took Central New They play a mix of old and new Genesis, not focusing on just one York by storm. They even got signed to a record deal. That prog rock genre. You may hear “Watcher of the Skies” one minute and “Driving powerhouse was 805. Well, the keyboard wiz from 805 has resurfaced the last Spike” the next. “Dance on a Volcano” then “Home by the with an amazing Genesis tribute. This new band even features a singer Sea,” etc. Too many Genesis tribute bands, Carl says, spotlight only from Wales who auditioned for Genone era of the band (with respect, The Musical Box). Some listeners esis. even claim to be purists, claiming I recently asked Carl Goodhines anything post-Gabriel is not Genfor some info on the new band, The Epping Forest Band. Here’s what I esis. If Genesis closed up shop as learned. soon as Peter Gabriel left, they’d The Epping Forest Band was all be working as busboys or somestarted about two years ago in the thing right now, Carl says. Instead, Syracuse area. They all seemed to they managed to sell more than 300 find each other through ads looking million albums worldwide. The The Epping Forest Band to start a Genesis tribute project. Epping Forest Band offers the wide After several personnel changes, variety of material they do to cater numerous lead vocalist auditions, and an eight-month rehearsal hiatus, to everyone possible, while carefully avoiding songs like “Misunderthe call for a lead vocalist was answered by Owen McKenzie from the standing” or “Abacab,” etc., basically avoiding AM radio hits. U.K., of all places (It goes to show you that a simple want ad can reach And, yes, they do “Suppers’ Ready.” anyone in the world!). Owen had at one time auditioned for Genesis They’re looking forward to playing some large rooms throughout itself, but was turned down because he “sounded too much like Phil the Northeast U.S. and expanding out from there. Carl really wishes Collins, and the band was seeking another direction,” says Carl. Upon there was a 1,000+ seat club in the Utica area because Carl believes the hearing this, they had to see the letter he had from them. It was real! listeners and fans are into it. They came up with the name Epping Forest after the Genesis song www.facebook.com/eppingforestband “The Battle of Epping Forest”—an actual place bordering London and Essex, England. Their logo depicts a mighty tree, as well as references News and Notes: to a few Genesis songs, namely “Squonk.” Look for an anthology from Stik Slabicki, They’ve all had experience playing Genesis’ music over the years former vocalist of many CNY bands, including (Carl with 805, and Over the Garden Wall/Seconds Out) and with the Sky Church. It’s titled White Burro Anthology. dwindling numbers of bands that are playing Genesis’ music, espeThe retrospective covers his career and does cially in this part of the country, as well as the fact that Genesis is no include two recently unearthed songs from longer recording or touring, this seemed like a perfect opportunity to legendary CNY rockers Sky Church (who jump into “the deep end of the pool,” Carl says. They are all accombegot the Frogs). Pick up the disc at Off plished, veteran musicians in their own right, and they all felt that this Center Records or The Tramontane Café. would fill a listening gap in the ears of people who like Genesis. After For all the happenings in the clubs around all, if you’re old enough to remember, one day after Elvis died, the enCNY check out the Live and Local Calentire country and its ballrooms were booking Elvis impersonator shows dar at: www.927thedrive.net • left and right. They feel that it’s what people miss and want. They’ve re-created all of the original sounds, from mellotrons to bass pedals, etc. They even employ the famous Mike Rutherford “Shergold” bass/guitar double neck. And to hear that distinctive BritListen to Genesee Joe live on 92.7FM, The DRIVE. ish accent between songs puts you right there, he says.
74
MV Comics Featuring Rome artist & “Bob the Squirrel” creator, Frank Page! Catch Bob every day in the Rome Sentinel or at www.BobtheSquirrel.com
Plumbing • Lumber • Lawn & Garden Pet Products • Hardware
“We have solutions for all your problems, even the crappy ones!”
8992 Turin Rd., Rome • (315) 337-3320 www.deltaplumbingsupplies.com Mon-Fri: 7:30-5:30, Sat: 8-3
Hughes Farms
A small sustainably managed farm in Deansboro
Visit our retail store for fresh seasonal produce, maple syrup, & free range eggs.
Can you escape The Room? You have 60 minutes to decipher clues and escape our themed rooms! Great fun for parties & team-building! Only $20 per person!
Open 9am to dark
2626 State Rt.12b, Deansboro Book a room today! the-skeleton-key.com and the Oneida Co. Market on Saturdays in Utica
315-367-3004• 138 Main St., Oneida
MUSEUM & COUNTRY STORE
See Remington firearms and artifacts from the 1800s to today. Shop for clothing, hats, and souvenirs in the Country Store. 14 Hoefler Avenue, Ilion (315) 895-3200 FREE! Mon-Fri. 8am-5pm (store closes 4:30pm) 75
Advertiser Directory please support Our sponsors, they make this magazine possible Antiques Attic Addicts, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Back of the Barn, Remsen . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Bear Path Antiques, Forestport . . . . . . . . 57 Black Cat Antiques, Earlville . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Butternut Barn, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . . 57 Canal House Antiques, Bouckville . . . . . . . 57 Foothills Mercantile, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . 57 Gallery Antiques, Bouckville . . . . . . . . . . 57 Little Falls Antique Center, Little Falls . . . . . 58 Madison-Bouckville Antique Week , Aug. 15-21 . . 30 Mohawk Antiques Mall, Mohawk . . . . . . . . . 58 Newport Marketplace, Newport . . . . . . . . . . 58 The Old Blacksmith Shop, Schuyler Lake . . . . 6 The Online Exchange, Dolgeville . . . . . . . . . 59 The Outlet Center, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Picker’s Dynasty, Little Falls and Mohawk . . 59 The Potting Shed Antiques, Whitesboro . . . 59 Red Door Thrift Shop, Remsen . . . . . . . . . . 59 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 Apartment Rentals Apartment Connection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Art Classes & Supplies Full Moon Art Center, Camden . . . . . . . . . 36 MVCA Summer Classes, Little Falls . . . . . 61 Art Galleries Full Moon Art Center, Camden . . . . . . . . . 36 Fusion Art Gallery, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 View, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Art and Picture Framing Fusion Art Gallery, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Fynmore Studios, New Hartford/Boonville . . 29 Artists, Local Frank Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
Auto Dealerships Steet Ponte Auto Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 Automotive Repair Clinton Collision, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Cushman’s Automotive, Rome . . . . . . . . . . 68 Precision Unlimited, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
54 52 53 56 40 56
Cheese (see Produce)
Automotive, Custom Fabrication Custom Fab, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
Child Care Child Care Council, 1-888-814-KIDS . . . . . 66
Awards & Engraving Speedy Awards, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . 47
Chiropractors Dr. Michael Tucciarone, Clinton . . . . . . . . . 44
Bakeries, Pastry, and Candy Shops Bagel Grove, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Caruso’s Pastry Shoppe, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Florentine Pastry Shop, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Friendly Bake Shop, Frankfort . . . . . . . . . . 12 Heidelberg Baking Company, Herkimer . . . 52 Karam’s Middle East Bakery, Yorkville . . . . 56 Remsen Country bakery, Remsen . . . . . . . . 12 So Sweet Candy Cafe, Utica . . . . . . . . . . 23 Star Bakery, Whitesboro and Utica . . . . . . . 9 Wicked Sweets, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
Clothing The Village Crossing, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . 48 The Queen’s Closet, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Walk-in Closet, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Contrators Cedarville Carpentry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 Coffee Shops Mojo’s Cafe, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56
Bike Shops Dick’s Wheel Shop, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . 20
Consignment The Online Exchange, Dolgeville . . . . . . . . The Queen’s Closet, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . Treasures Lost & Found, New Hartford . . . The Village Basement, New Hartford . . . . . Walk-in Closet, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Boat Tours Mohawk Valley Boat Tour . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Raquette Lake Navigation Co. . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Delis Kountry Kupboard, Madison . . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Olde Kountry Market, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . 45
Books Berry Hill Book Shop, Deansboro . . . . . . . . . 40
Dentistry Neighborhood Family Dentistry, Utica . . . . 17
Bowling Adirondack Diner and Lanes, Barneveld . . 51 State Bowl with Cosmic Bowling, Ilion . . . . . 34
Diners Adirondack Diner and Lanes, Barneveld . . 51 Charlie’s Place, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Wendy’s Diner, Cassville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Bars and Ale Houses BBG, Beer, Bites, Games, New Hartford . . . . 69 Copper Moose Ale House, Little Falls . . . . 53
59 57 59 59 34
Attorneys Antonowicz Group, Rome/Utica . . . . . . . . . . 21
Cabinets and Kitchens Custom Woodcraft, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . . . 67 Knotty By Nature, Bridgewater . . . . . . . . . . . 36
ATV Sales C J Motorsports, Boonville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
Camping West Canada Creek Campsites, Poland
Audio and Visual Systems Professional Technologies . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
Camping and Hiking Supply Plan B, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Estate Sales Attic Addicts, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Picker’s Dynasty, Little Falls and Mohawk . . 59 The Potting Shed Antiques, Whitesboro . . . 59
Authors Local Grumpy Tomatoes, Autumn Kuhn . . . . . . . . 8
Catering Club Monarch, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
Events, Entertainment, and Activities Adirondack Scenic Railroad . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
GOODSELL MUSEUM Local Adirondack History
2993 State 28 Old 2993Route State Route 28Forge, NY 13420
Old315-369-3838 Forge, NY 13420 www.WebbHistory.org 315-369-3838
www.webbhistory.org Open All Year All Year FREEOpen TO THE PUBLIC
FREE TO THE PUBLIC Museum Hours:
Tues – Sat, 10AM Museum Hours:– 3 PM
Tues-Sat, 10am-3pm Headquarters of the
Town of Webb Historical Association
Headquarters of the Town of Webb Historical Association
76
Creative Chefs Catering, Oneida . . . . . . . . Dominick’s Deli & Catering, Herkimer . . . . . Happy Sam’s Cocktail Lounge, Utica . . . . . Knuckleheads Brewhouse, Westmoreland . . . Maria’s Pasta Shop, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . RoSo’s Cafe & Catering, Utica . . . . . . . . . . .
Dry Cleaners Dapper Dan . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72 M & M Cleaners, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
. . . . 24
Summer ART Camps
Mon-Thur: August 8-11; Mon-Thur: August 15-18 Ages 7 to 9: 9:30am until Noon; Ages 10 to 12: 1pm until 3:30pm, Fee: $40/week, both weeks for $75 (campers may choose either week or both), includes a snack each day. Come explore the science and art of papermaking/printing taught by certified art teachers. Both groups will then use their printed paper to make booklets. A field trip to Burrows Paper Corp is planned.
Space is limited, please register early! A few scholarships are available.
Mohawk Valley Center for the Arts
www.mohawkvalleyarts.org
401 Canal Place, Little Falls
315.823.0808
Black River Canal Museum, Boonville . . . . 70 Canal Celebration, Little Falls, Aug. 8-14 . . . 19 Clinton Art & Music Fest, Sat. Aug. 27 . . . 30 CNY Arts, www.cnyart.org . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Fandemicon at the Utica Library . . . . . . . 49 Farmers’ Museum, Cooperstown . . . . . . . . 66 Fenimore Art Museum, Cooperstown . . 2 & 5 Fly Creek Cider Mill, Fly Creek . . . . . . . . 69 Fort Rickey Discovery Zoo, Rome . . . . . . . 19 Goodsell Museum, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . . 76 Mollin-Clay Jazz Duo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 NYS Woodsmen’s Field Days, Aug 19-21 . . 39 PeterPaul Recreation Park, Rome . . . . . . . 20 Remington Arms Museum, Ilion . . . . . . . . . 9 Skeleton Key Escape Room, Oneida . . . . . 70 The Stanley, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 Town of Webb Tourism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49 Utica Zoo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 View, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37 Farm Equipment Clinton Tractor, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31 White’s Farm Supply, Waterville/Canastota . . 80 Fencing William’s Fence, Deansboro . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Feed and Farm Needs Pohl’s Feed, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Financial Services Turnbull Insurance, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 7 Van Meter & Van Meter, Little Falls . . . . . . . 17 Fitness & Gyms Curves, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Flooring Lincoln Davies, Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Florists Clinton Florist, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 Village Florals, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73 Funeral Services Nunn & McGrath, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Prince-Boyd & Hyatt, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Furniture Ironwood Furniture, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Jeff ’s Amish Furniture, Jordanville . . . . . . . . 43 Furniture Makers Custom Woodcraft, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . 67 Just Lean Back, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . . 46 Garden Centers and Greenhouses Candella’s Greenhouses, Marcy . . . . . . . . . . . 68 D’Alessandro’s Landscaping, Frankfort . . . . . . . 43 George’s Nursery & Garden, Clinton . . . . . . . . 8 Juliano’s Schuyler Greenhouses . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Melinda’s Garden Barn, Richfield Springs . . . . 24 Michael’s Greenhouse, Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 North Star Orchards, Westmoreland . . . . . . . . . 72
Sheep Run Daylily, Newport . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Top Notch Garden Center, Newport . . . . . 58 Wagner Farms, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Gift Shops/Shopping Between Us Sisters, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . . 60 Butternut Barn, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . . 57 Cat’s Meow, Sherburne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Country Connections, Boonville . . . . . . . . 24 Fusion Art Gallery, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Little Falls Antique Center, Little Falls . . . . 58 Main Street Gift Shoppe, Newport . . . . . . . . 58 Newport Marketplace, Newport . . . . . . . . . 58 Owl & Moon, West Burlington . . . . . . . . . 25 Remington Country Store, Ilion . . . . . . . . . . 9 The Tepee, Cherry Valley . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Golf Courses and Driving Range Brimfield View Driving Range, Clinton Golf Club of Newport . . . . . . . . . . Twin Ponds Golf & Country Club, NY Woodgate Pines Golf Club, Boonville .
Grocery/Convenience Stores B & F Milk Center, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . . The Country Store, Dolgeville . . . . . . . . . . Deansboro Superette, Deansboro . . . . . . . Meelan’s Market, Clark Mills . . . . . . . . . . Mohawk Village Market, Mohawk . . . . . . Olde Kountry Market, Vernon . . . . . . . . . Reilly’s Dairy, Inc., Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . .
. 23 . 26 . 38 . 27 . . . . . . .
27 55 16 70 11 45 40
Hardware/Farm & Home Delta Plumbing, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 Little Falls Fuel, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Lincoln Davies, Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Pohlig Enterprises, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . 62 Pohl’s Feed, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Poland Hardware, Poland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Morgan’s Hardware, Waterville . . . . . . . . . . . 60 Turner Lumber, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Hearing Consultants Hearing Health Hearing Aid Centers, Rome . . . 46 Heating Oil Little Falls Fuel, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Ice Cream B & F Milk Center, Whitesboro. . . . . . . . . Cucina Berto, Frankfort . . . . . . . . . . . . Kayuta Drive-In, Remsen . . . . . . . . . . . . The Knight Spot, Frankfort . . . . . . . . . . The Li’l Red Caboose, Poland . . . . . . . . Papa Rick’s Snack Shack, Rome . . . . . . Riverside Diner, Marcy . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wendy’s Diner, Cassville . . . . . . . . . . . . . West Canada Creek Campsites, Poland . . . Voss’, Yorkville, Ilion, and Utica Zoo . . . .
Iron Work - Architectural & Ornamental Raulli’s Iron Works, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Jewelry Fall Hill Beads & Gems, Little Falls . . . . . . 41 Goldmine Jewelers, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 6 Landscaping D’Alessandro’s Landscaping, Frankfort . . . . . . 43 Man With a Pick-up . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Lawn Care Wright’s Lawn Care, Serving CNY . . . . . . . 32 Lawn Mowers J.B.’s Small Engine Works, Utica . . . . . . . . 22 SD Outdoor Power, New Hartford . . . . . . . 63 Lighting Mills Electrical Supply, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Liquor Stores and Wine Trenton Station Liquor & Wine, Barneveld . . . 67 Lodging Canal Side Inn, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Overlook Mansion, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . 33 Manufactured and Modular Home Builders Leisure Village, Taberg . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 Maple Syrup (see Produce) Massage, Therapeutic Zensations, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Marinas Bird’s Marine, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 Meats, locally raised (see Produce) Media 92.7 The Drive WXUR, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 74 FOX33/WUTR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Weekly Adirondack, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . 9
27 52 55 52 24 55 53 55 24 56
Milk, local Cedar Park Farm, Springfield Center . . . . . . 47 WintersGrass Farm, Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . . 27
Insurance Gates-Cole Insurance, New Hartford . . . . . . 3 Farm Family Insurance, Boonville . . . . . . . . 47 Marshall Agency, Ilion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Natural Food Stores Brenda’s Natural Foods, Rome . . . . . . . . . . 55 Cooperstown Naturals, Cooperstown . . . . . 11 Peter’s Cornucopia, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 66
Off-Center Records
. . . . . . . . . .
Monuments & Memorials Burdick & Enea Memorials, Clinton . . . . . . 10 Yorkville Memorials, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Motorcycle Speed/Service Center Hillside Motorcycle & Machine, Munnsville . . 21
Crum Creek CSA Selling locally raised, USDA inspected Beef, Pork, Chicken & Elk! 200 Crum Creek Rd. St. Johnsville • (518) 568-5476
All things music - New & quality used Records, CDs, tapes, books, tees, memorabilia, guitars & accessories, drum accessories and more!
We are YOUR Downtown Music Connection! Hours M-Sat 11-6 116 Bleecker St., Utica, NY 13501 315-738-7651
. . . . . . . Mills . . . .
M L Croad Insurance, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 Turnbull Insurance, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 7
www.utica-rememberwhen.com
www.crumcreekcsa.com
Local wine, gifts, and more! 400 Academy Street Prospect, NY 13435 Wed-Sat 10-6, Sun 12-6
315-205-4045
ProspectFallsWinery@gmail.com Facebook.com/ProspectFallsWinery @WineB4Wildrness “Wine Before Wilderness”
77
Sunflower Naturals, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . 70 Tom’s Natural Foods, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Optometrist Towpath Vision Care, Little Falls . . . . . . . 27 Painting Supplies Urbanik’s Paint & Wallpaper Co., Utica . . . . . 8 Painting, Interior/Exterior Dennis Polanowicz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Pet Memorialization and Cremation Burdick & Enea Memorials, Clinton . . . . . . 10 Pet Services Not Just Poodles Pet Salon, Whitesboro . . . . 16 One Paw at a Time, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . 23 Pharmacies Garro Drugs, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30 Photography Fusion Art/The Photo Shoppe, Rome . . . . . 35 Physical Therapy Inertia PT, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Pizzerias DiCastro’s Brick Oven, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Primo Pizzeria, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Plumbing Delta Plumbing, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75 Pools and Spas Geraty Pools & Spa, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . . . 46 Swan Pools & Spas, Ilion & New Hartford . . 41 Portable Toilets and Bathrooms Mohawk Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Primitives Between Us Sisters, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . 60 Butternut Barn, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . . 57 Main Street Gift Shop, Newport . . . . . . . . . 58 Produce, Local Ben & Judy’s Sugarhouse, West Edmeston . . . . 34 Clarkshire Farms, Mohawk . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 Cranberry Ridge Farm, Williamstown . . . . 27 Crum Creek CSA, St. Johnsville . . . . . . . . . 63 Grassy Cow Dairy, Remsen . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Hughes Farm, Deansboro . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70 Jewett’s Cheese, Earlville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Jones Family Farm, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . 42 Juliano’s Farm & Greenhouse, Schuyler . . . . . . 44 Oneida County Public Market, Utica . . . . . . 61 Shaw’s Maple Products, Clinton . . . . . . . . . 15 Stoltzfus Family Dairy, Vernon Center . . . . 23 Sunnybrook Farm, Deansboro . . . . . . . . . 72 Three Village Cheese, Newport . . . . . . . . . . 17 Tibbits Maple, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . 13
Twin Orchards, New Hartford . Wagner Farms, Rome . . . . . . Windy Hill Orchard, Cassville . WintersGrass Farm Raw Milk,
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Sauquoit .
. . . . . . .
. . . .
25 14 11 27
Quilt and Yarn Shops Heartworks Quilts & Fabrics, Fly Creek . . . 20 Stash Away Quilts, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Tiger Lily Quilt Co, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 Real Estate Century 21, Art VanVechten, Utica . . . Coldwell-Banker, Diane Lockwood . . . Bird’s Adirondack Real Estate, Old Forge Scenic Byway Realty, Richfield Springs .
. . . . . . . .
. . . .
35 21 65 47
Salons/Haircutters Heads R Turning Salon & Spa, Ilion . . . . . . 30 Shoes Karaz Shoes, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 The Village Crossing, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . 48 Small Engine Repair J.B.’s Small Engine Works, Utica . . . . . . . . 22 Soap Cranberry Ridge Goat Milk Soap . . . . . . . 27 Social Security Appilcations and Advice Antonowicz Group, Rome/Utica . . . . . . . . . 21
Record Stores Off-Center Records, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Specialty Wood Wightman Specialty Woods . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Restaurants and Cafés Ann St. Deli, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bagel Grove, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Bite, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Black Cat, Sharon Springs . . . . . . . . . . . . . Canal Side Inn, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . Chesterfield’s Tuscan Oven, Oneida . . . . . . Club Monarch, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Copper Moose Ale House, Little Falls . . . . The Country Store, Salisbury . . . . . . . . . . . Cucina Berto, Frankfort . . . . . . . . . . . . . Delta Lake Inn, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . DiCastro’s Brick Oven, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . Dominick’s Deli, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . . . Fat Cats, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Happy Sam’s Cocktail Lounge, Utica . . . . . Heidelberg Baking Co., Herkimer . . . . . . . Karam’s Middle East Bakery, Yorkville . . . . Kayuta Drive-In, Remsen . . . . . . . . . . . . . Knuckleheads Brewhouse, Westmoreland . . Lakeview Restaurant and Bar, Oneida . . . . Main Street Ristorante, Newport . . . . . . . . Mi Casa, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Mojo’s Cafe, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Ohio Tavern, Cold Brook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Origlio’s Wagon Wheel Restaurant, Oneida . . Papa Rick’s Snack Shack, Rome . . . . . . . . . Pho Ever Noodles, New Hartford . . . . . . . Phoenician Restaurant, New Hartford . . . . Piccolo Cafe, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Raspberries Cafe, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Riverside Diner, Marcy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Roly Poly, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . . RoSo’s Cafe & Catering, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . Sammy & Annie Foods, Utica . . . . . . . . . . The Knight Spot, Frankfort . . . . . . . . . . . Wendy’s Diner, Cassville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Wigwam Tavern, Forestport . . . . . . . . . . . . Voss’, Yorkville, Ilion, and Utica Zoo . . . . . .
Storage Sheds/Garages Shafer & Sons, Westmoreland . . . . . . . . . . . 15
52 56 56 56 52 54 72 53 55 52 55 55 52 52 53 52 56 55 56 54 58 56 56 51 54 55 53 53 53 54 53 53 56 56 52 55 51 56
Roofing and Siding Mohawk Metal Mfg Sales, Westmoreland . . . 46
The Crafty Ladies host a fundraiser for Making Strides Against Breast Cancer. There will be prizes, baked goods and handcrafted items by the Crafty Ladies!
Taxi Service Elite Taxi, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Tents and Awnings Brownie Tent & Awning, Clinton . . . . . . . 63 Towing Services Clinton Collision, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Travel Agencies The Cruise Wizards, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . 67 Veterinarians Adirondack Veterinary Service, Rome . . . . 28 CNY Veterinary Medical, Westmoreland . . 48 Marcy Veterinary Services, Marcy . . . . . . . 23 Websites Utica Remember When . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77 Weddings and Banquets Club Monarch, Yorkville . . . Overlook Mansion, Little Falls Twin Ponds Golf & Country Wicked Sweets, Yorkville . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Club, NY Mills . . . . . . . . . . . .
. . . .
72 33 38 45
Wellness and Alternative Health Therapy Heads R Turning Salon & Spa, Ilion . . . . . 30 Windows RA Dudrak, Holland Patent . . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Wineries Pail Shop Winery, Fly Creek . . . . . . . . . . . 68 Prospect Falls Winery, Prospect . . . . . . . . . . 9 Yogurt Stoltzfus Family Dairy, Vernon Center . . . . 23
NYS INSPECTIONS • OIL CHANGES • TUNE UPS • COLLISION WORK • AC
Complete Collision and Mechanical Repair Since 1987
Fri., Aug 19th, 12-5 • Sat., Aug 20th, 10-5 • Sun., Aug 21st, 12-5
The Laubenthal Residence, 7 Shelly Place, North Utica www. makingstrideswalk.org/utica or call 1.800.227.2345
For more information about the Craft Sale call Linda Laubenthal at 315-561-7271
7509 Route 5 • Clinton, New York 13323 • Phone 315-853-8804
Stop in today and see why it’s so easy to do business with Steet-Ponte! Steet-Ponte Chevrolet
Steet-Ponte Ford Lincoln Mazda
3036 State Route 28 Herkimer, NY 13350 (315) 866-5080
5074 Commercial Drive Yorkville, NY 13495 (315) 736-3381
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
Ready. Set. Save on Kubota’s Z700 Series Zero-Turn Mowers.
$
0 Down,
0% Financing for 48 Months
$ OR
A.P.R.
500
**
L3301
Customer Instant Rebate
on the purchase of a new Kubota Z700 Series zero-turn mower.
*
Kubota’s Standard L Series compact tractors are built for a lifetime of versatility. And right now, when you purchase a new Standard L Series tractor and two qualifying implements, you’ll Offers end 6/30/16. be taking advantage of a powerful combination of generous instant rebates, long-term 0% A.P.R. financing and six year limited powertrain warranty coverage!
Act Now! Offers End 7/31/16.
Established 1946
White’s Farm Supply, Inc. Celebrating 70 Years in Business!
Farm Supply, Inc.
Canastota
4154 Route 31 (315) 697-2214
Lowville
8207 Route 26 (315) 376-0300
Waterville
962 Route 12 (315) 841-4181
www.whitesfarmsupply.com Customer instant rebates of $1,500 are available on purchases of new Kubota L3301 equipment from participating dealers’ stock. Dealer subtracts rebate from dealer’s pre-rebate selling price on qualifying *$0 down, 0%1.purchases. A.P.R. financing forafterupcompleted to 48sale. months on purchases of new Kubota Z700 Series equipment is available to qualified purchasers from participating Rebate not0% available Some exceptions apply. Offer expires 2. $0 down, 0% A.P.R. financingBX for upSeries to 60 months on purchases is of new Kubota L (excluding L39/ *$0 down, A.P.R. financing for up to 72A months on 7/31/2016. purchases of new Kubota equipment available to qualified dealers’ in-stock inventory Example: 48-month installment repayment 0% A.P.R. requires $1,000 L45) Series Equipmentthrough is available to6/30/2016. qualified purchasers from participating dealers’ in-stockmonthly inventory through 7/31/2016. Example: A 60-monthterm monthlyatinstallment repayment term at 0% 48 A.P.R.payments requires 60 of $20.83 perkubota.com purchasers from participating dealers’ in-stock inventory through 9/30/2016. Dealer Participation Required. Example: A 72-month $16.67 per $1,000 financed. 0%to A.P.R. interest is available to customers no dealer documentation preparation fee is charged. charge for document shalldocument be in accordancepreparation fee shall financed. 0% payments A.P.R.ofinterest is available customers if no dealerif documentation preparation fee isDealer charged. Dealerpreparation chargefeefor installment term 0%blended A.P.R. payments of not $13.89 perwith$1,000 0%Financing A.P.R.isinterest is with monthly state laws. Inclusion of ineligiblerepayment equipment may result in aat higher A.P.R.requires 0% A.P.R. and72 low-rate financing may be available customer financed. instant rebate offers. available through be in accordance with state laws. Inclusion of ineligible equipmentcredit may resultfee inexceptions ais higher blended A.P.R. A.P.R. and preparation low-rate financing may not be available available to customers noBlvd., dealer documentation charged. charge0% document shall Kubota Credit Corporation, U.S.A., 3401 DelifAmo Torrance, CA 90503; subject to preparation approval. Some apply. OfferDealer expires 7/31/2016. Seefor us for details on these and other low-ratefee options or be in with customergoinstant rebateforwith offers. Financing is instant available Kubota Credit U.S.A., 3401 Del Blvd., Torrance, CA 90503; subject to credit toaccordance www.kubota.com morestate information. 3. Customer rebates ofthrough $1,500 are available on purchases ofCorporation, new Kubota with twoAmo qualifying new implements from participating laws. Inclusion of ineligible equipment may result in a L2501/L3301/L3901/L4701 higher blended A.P.R. 0% A.P.R. and low-rate financing © Kubota Tractor Corporation, 2016 dealers’ stock. Dealer from dealer’s pre-rebate selling price on qualifying purchases. Rebate available after completed sale. Some exceptions apply.or Offer 7/31/2016. 4. Six year3401 or for approval. Some exceptions apply.rebate Offer expires 6/30/2016. See us for details onnotthese and other low-rate options goexpires to www.kubota.com may not besubtracts available with customer instant rebate offers. Financing is available through Kubota Credit Corporation, U.S.A., Delmore information. 2,000 hour (whichever occurs first) limited powertrain warranty on new B, BX and L Series tractors, excluding B26, L39, L45 and L47 models. For non-commercial, home and residential use only. Eligible units **Customer instant of $500 are on cash or standard rateSome finance purchases of new Series See mowers participating dealers’ Amorebates Blvd., Torrance, CAavailable 90503; subject to credit approval. exceptions apply. OfferKubota expiresZ700 9/30/2016. us forfrom details on must be purchased and registered from dealer inventory beginning June 1, 2016 through July 31, 2016. Available to customers in 48 contiguous United States, Alaska and Hawaii. Only terms and conditions of stock. RebateKubota’s not available with 0%apply. A.P.R. or low-rate offersator after completed Dealer subtracts from dealer’s pre-rebate selling price on these and other low-rate or go tofinancing www.kubota.com for more information. equipment may be shown. standard Limited Warranty Foroptions warranty terms, see Kubota’s Limited Warranty www.kubota.com or authorizedsale. KubotaOptional Dealers. Optional equipment rebate may be shown. qualifying purchases. Some exceptions apply. Offer expires 6/30/2016. Optional equipment may be shown.
kubota.com
© Kubota Tractor Corporation, 2016