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APRIL 2017
THE ART OF
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SKATING THROUGH THE AGES T H E D I C K B U T TO N C O L L E C T I O N
APRIL 1 - DEC 31 View ice skating art ranging from 17th-century Dutch paintings to 20th-century sculpture. Costumes, photographs, antique skates and much more – all from the collection of two-time Olympic Champion and figure skating legend Dick Button.
The exhibition is sponsored in part by The Clark Foundation, The Tianaderrah Foundation, Fenimore Asset Management & FAM Funds, and NYCM Insurance. Support also provided by a Market NY grant through I LOVE NY/NewYork State’s Division of Tourism as a part of the Regional Economic Development Council awards.
Felix Kupsch (1883/5-1969), Maxi Herber (c.1930), bronze. Collection of Dick Button.
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Happiness is...
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by Sharry L. Whitney
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contents 6 10 13 14 16 24 25 27 30 32 35 38 40 41 50 54 60 64 67 73 74 75
Oneida County Historical Society ADK Journal MV Astronomy Club Rose Quartz Stand in Herkimer Family Fun at Skate-A-While MV Classical Downtown Utica Gallery Guide Riverside Diner in Marcy MV Nature, April On the Farm with Suzie MV Gardens & Recipes Toby & Riggie Matt Perry’s Nature Walking Trails Restaurant Guide Antiques Guide Herkimer Co. Historical Society Tales from Shawangunk, Part 31 MV Comics Live & Local Music Scene Advertiser Directory
Sometimes, we seem to be having too much fun with this magazine. We love reading the stories our writers comes up with and we love hearing from readers who read them. We enjoy the Facebook posts and photos people send us, especially the ones of their kids reading the magazine. We also enjoy brainstorming about ways to make the magazine better, like our new “Find Riggie” and Facebook contests. Our inbox and mailbox are flooded every month with entries, many with notes telling us how much fun they are having figuring out the riddle. My favorite part is getting to call/message the winners after the drawing to tell them they’ve won. And then I get to call the advertisers chosen by the winners to tell them they’ve won, too! What fun! Lance and I have so many ideas that there never seems to be enough time. Maybe I’m just excited because the days are longer, the sun is shining, Denise and Peggy’s seeds are germinating, and Suzie Jones has a new puppy. Yes, this is just too much fun! •
MOHAWK VALLEY LIVING MAGAZINE APRIL 2017 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 © 2017. 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.
Our mascot Riggie is roaming around the magazine again and is hiding in the advertising areas. Next to him will be a letter. Find all the Riggies and rearrange the letters to answer this month’s trivia question. Send in your answer by the 15th of the month of this issue and be entered to win a $250 Gift Certificate to any advertiser you see in our magazine!
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This month’s riddle: Now that spring has finally sprung, baking this sweet treat New has begun! Hartford An Italian tradition filled with fun! Off to East Utica to get me some!
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One entry per household per month. Mail a postcard or letter with answer to address or enter by email. (Address on this page to right in credits).
Last month’s answer: Full Sugar Moon. The Iroquois name for March’s full moon was named for the sweet sap that flows from the maple trees in spring. Iroquois origin lore explains that the 13 segments on a turtle’s shell represent the 13 full moons in the year. Congratulations to our winner Gloria Hazzard of Stratford, NY. She is spending her $250 at Pohlig’s (Lovenheim’s) in Little Falls to buy a new rug for her living room!
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Francis Kernan One of Utica’s most
prominent politicians By Lou Parrotta, Historian, City of Utica
Last month, a parade took place honoring the Irish heritage of Utica. That parade could just as easily be held in honor of the service given to our city and country by one of our area’s most prominent historical Irishmen, Francis Kernan, also known as one of the “Utica Trio” that included such other luminaries as Horatio Seymour and Roscoe Conkling. Kernan was the son of Irish immigrants William Kernan, who hailed from County Cavan, Ireland, and Rosanna Stubbs, who was born in Dublin. William, known as “The General,” was militarily and civically involved. From his time as an ensign in the state militia to his appointment as a delegate to the New York State Constitutional Convention of 1846, William was probably where Francis learned to give of himself to serving the public. “The General” earned his nickname after his service in the War of 1812. Though not seeing any battles, he did serve, and after the war was brevetted to a higher rank by Gov. DeWitt Clinton to the post of Brigadier General of the First Brigade of Infantry of the State in 1825. Rosanna was very well-off, as her family was among the more prominent merchants in Dublin. Well-educated, she and her family became friends with Elizabeth Ann Seton while they were living in New York City. Seton, America’s first native-born saint, urged Rosanna to join her in the founding of the Sisters of Charity. Obviously, this persuasion did not take hold.
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William and Rosanna resided in Tyrone, N.Y, which was in the western part of the state in today’s Schuyler County. Francis was born in 1816. He attended public school in New York, but little is known about how much he learned. At age 17, Francis entered Georgetown College. In those days, the college admitted two types of students– those receiving higher education and those prepping for it. All information available indicates that he was an industrious and able student. Kernan did not finish his collegiate career. Instead, he returned home to study law. There were three ways in those days to attain a law degree: 1) studying on one’s own; 2) working in the office of a clerk of the court of record; or 3) serving in the office of a reputable lawyer as an apprentice. The third option was the most common path chosen by aspiring lawyers. Kernan chose the third path. He studied under his brother-in-law Edward Quin in today’s Watkins Glen for three years, then relocated to Utica where he would form a working relationship with noted lawyer Joshua A. Spencer. There is no record of Francis’ admission to the bar, but it occurred about 1837, and Spencer offered Kernan a partnership in the law firm if he would remain in Utica. He accepted. Kernan was united in marriage to Hannah Avery Devereux, of the well-known and highly respected Devereux family, on May 23, 1843. It was truly a gala affair in which nearly 1,500 guests attended. The wedding reception lasted two days, and the guests consumed a 170-pound cake and thirty gallons of ice cream amidst tub after tub of lemonade. The Kernans lived up to their Roman Catholic upbringing and followed the Bible’s passage to be fruitful and multiply as they produced 10 children–seven boys and three girls. Their first home
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was located on Kent Street. Kernan’s career took off shortly after his marriage. Between 1843 and 1853, the Spencer-Kernan law firm dissolved its partnership and Francis formed a new one with his sister’s husband, George Edward Quin, who ironically possessed the same last name of the brother-in-law he originally read law under. Kernan’s public service career began in 1854 when the Governor of New York appointed him as state reporter for the Court of Appeals–the court of last resort. He was now a constitutional officer of the state and his reports have been cited hundreds of times over the years, including one in some 480 cases. Kernan’s reputation in the legal world was growing by leaps and bounds. He earned press coverage as the lawyer for Rhoda Loomis, the matriarch of the notorious Loomis Gang that ran roughshod over the Mohawk Valley, and by defending Cornelius Vanderbilt’s New York Central Railroad in a crash lawsuit. He was asked to run for a position on the New York State Court of Appeals but declined, and in August 1878 he joined Utica lawyers Ward Hunt Jr., William J. Bacon, and Roscoe Conkling in Saratoga Springs with other lawyers around the country to form the American Bar Association. He served as President of the New York Branch in 1882. A lifelong Democrat, Kernan was a member of the Barnburners–a branch of the Democratic Party loyal to Martin Van Buren, a lieutenant of former President Andrew Jackson. According to the Kernan biography, written wonderfully by Karen Clemens Kernan and John Devereux Kernan, “Barnburners earned respect for their philosophy of living within one’s means,” and have a desire to “rid (the government) of some financial abuses.” (Kernan p. 58) As he
was entering party politics, Kernan held his first elected position, that of school commissioner. His career in politics was off and running. In 1860, Kernan declined a nomination to challenge Roscoe Conkling, the incumbent, for a seat in the United States House of Representatives. Instead, he decided to take on former Utica Mayor Gen. James McQuade in a race for the New York State Assembly. He defeated McQuade by a mere 200 votes. When the 1862 election rolled around, Kernan changed his position and sought the area’s seat in Congress. He defeated the incumbent Conkling, his former law student, by about 3,000 votes. Despite losing re-election two years later, he was not done in elective politics. In 1872, Kernan was the Democratic and Liberal Party’s candidate for Governor of New York. While he lost to John A. Dix, he secured more votes than his opponent in all areas but New York City and Brooklyn. In March 1875, Kernan was elected to the United States Senate. (At that time, the citizens of a state did not vote on their U.S. senators; the state legislatures did.) During his six-year term, he served on the famed 1877 Electoral Commission that had the unenviable task of selecting the winner of the 1876 presidential election between Rutherford B. Hayes and Samuel J. Tilden, neither of whom had secured enough Electoral College votes to secure the presidency. He also was a member of the powerful judiciary committee during his tenure. New York’s two U.S. senators at that time were from Utica, the other being Roscoe Conkling, who won his seat in 1867. An interesting fact, too, is that while Kernan served in the Senate, he was reunited with five men who at one time all worked with him toiling on his father’s farm well before the Civil
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War. These senators included Chafee and Teller of Colorado, Beck of Kentucky, Cameron of Wisconsin, and McPherson of New Jersey. Other positions held by Kernan included serving as a regent on the New York State Board of Regents; a manager of the State’s Lunatic Asylum; a director and eventual president of the Oneida County Bank; and the aforementioned school commissioner position in the Utica City School System, along with Edmund A. Wetmore and J. Watson Williams. He was a parishioner of Historic Old St. John’s Church (then just known as St. John’s) and he served that congregation as a church trustee. Kernan passed away on Sept. 7, 1892, at his home on Chancellor Square. As one of the country’s most prominent Roman Catholic politicians who “never shrank from the defense of Catholic rights and prerogatives,” his funeral became an august requiem befitting a man whose devout faith guided him throughout his life. The funeral took place in St. John’s Church and was presided over by the first Bishop of the Syracuse Diocese, Bishop Patrick Anthony Ludden. Also on the altar to concelebrate the Mass was Bishop Bernard John McQuaid, the Rochester Diocese’s first bishop. The prelates were joined on the altar by 22 priests from across the state and five deacons. Kernan is entombed in St. Agnes Cemetery on Mohawk Street in Utica. The marble altar at St. John’s was given in Francis’ memory by his son Nicholas. According to one of the numerous obituaries published throughout the state remembering his long life of service, Francis Kernan’s “democracy was pure, his devotion unswerving and he always championed a cause he thought just.” Furthermore, “(h)is advice was always welcome and he was often called to participate in the councils of his party. … No taint or breath of suspicion ever rested upon (him)… in his political life. …” •
Chancellor Square, adjacent to Kernan’s home
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adirondack journal The only companions along the entire trail from Heart Lake leading to the MacIntyre Range were a few Dark-eyed Juncos.
hiking Iroquois Peak
A photo from my second climb of Iroquois.
Story and Photos by Gary VanRiper
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I’ve hiked Iroquois Peak three times. Iroquois is the eighth highest peak in the Adirondacks at 4,840 feet, the 12th I summited in my quest to become a 46er, and the first I ever did solo. I arrived at the Heart Lake trailhead at 6:20 a.m. and met a short, slight woman from Pennsylvania who asked me to photograph her at the register. She confessed something about a mid-life crisis and had determined to hike the Adirondack’s highest peak–Mount Marcy–also solo. She had little to no experience hiking in the wilderness, so I prayed for her as she and her huge pack disappeared in the near darkness. It was the last day of a summer vacation, but dates don’t necessarily mean a whole lot at those higher elevations. The calendar said August, but the thermometer the night before in Lake Placid said 34 degrees. And on a frigid windswept summit just after dawn? Let’s just say I was glad I have always obeyed those signs on the ascent that advise hikers to be prepared for what can be a sudden and severe weather change. The route I took this first time to Iroquois first required an ascent up and over one of Iroquois’ neighbors and the second highest peak in the Adirondacks at 5,114 feet, Algonquin Peak, and then a slight bump over Boundary Peak.
We took a wrong turn at Boundary Peak and followed the yellow arrow down. Looking closely at the arrow you can see someone drew another arrow pointing back toward the Iroquois herd path!
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Descending Algonquin southwest toward Iroquois with daughter Sarah Birmingham and friend Jack Coleman on my second climb of Iroquois.
Brisk air filling the lungs and keeping the body temperature cool made the ascent up Iroquois’ highest neighbor really comfortable. It was just two hours to the junction with Wright Peak and the only companions along the trail the entire way were several Dark-eyed Juncos. From the junction, the final .9-mile push placed me all alone on the summit of Algonquin at 9:05 a.m. It was just above the tree line when the fleece came out of the pack to deal with the powerful and frigid wind–and how grateful I was for the tight elastic band that helped keep my hat from blowing off to Canada! Resting on the windblown summit with one of the peak’s giant boulders as a windbreak and enjoying the magnificent views, a second hiker appeared, a student from SUNY Geneseo. Just the two of us had beaten the summit steward to the top that morning. We decided to head for Iroquois together. The young man led and we descended Algonquin southwest to cross over Boundary Peak to reach our targeted destination. We would have arrived on the Iroquois summit sooner if it had not been for a wrong turn off Boundary. A yellow trail marker pointed left and we took it. We began to descend rather quickly and it didn’t take long to realize something was wrong. We made our way back up and found that we had completely missed a herd path actually leading over to Iroquois that was hidden under thick foliage. Once on it, it was easy enough to follow, albeit it wet and slick with mud. Only once did I sink into the mud up to my calf!
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From there it did not take long to make the open summit of Iroquois that, like Algonquin, had amazing views in every direction, including a spectacular look at Wallface, number 71 among the Adirondack’s 100 highest. It was in the relative solitude of those moments scanning the horizon that I learned from the student that his dad was a 46er, and had taken him up nearby Mt. Jo when he was 5 years old. With its own commanding view of the high peaks region, his dad hoped the view and experience would inspire him to want to climb more. It did. Iroquois that morning was number 16 on his way to the 46. Last summer my wife and I took four grandchildren ages 5 to 12 years up Mt Jo. And much for the same reason. • 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
Enjoying the early morning solitude on Iroquois Peak.
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What IS That? by carol higgins
One of the fun things about astronomy is that there’s always something new to see and learn. It’s challenging if you are just getting started. For example, have you looked up at the night sky and noticed something bright or a fuzzy patch and wondered…what IS that? Well, you’re not alone. Like most beginners, I only knew a few of the most popular constellations, such as the “Big Dipper” (Ursa Major) and Cassiopeia, and didn’t know a planet from a star or a galaxy from a nebula. So what’s a good first step? Begin with a map–otherwise known as a star chart. Every night the constellations, planets, and stars slowly move across the sky, and you can easily see the difference in just a few hours. From season to season the difference is significant. Why? Because our planet is spinning (it only takes 24 hours to make one complete rotation), and it is also making its yearly orbit around the Sun–traveling through space at about 67,000 miles per hour. To learn what’s in the sky each month, one of the most popular star charts is “The Evening Sky Map” from the www.Skymaps. com website. Each month Skymaps provides a customized, two-page document you can download and print for free. Choose the chart for the Northern Hemisphere. On the left of the first page is a “Sky Calendar” listing the dates of special observing opportunities like meteor showers, and notable events for the moon, planets, and various objects. On the right is a star chart showing the month’s constellations, planets, brightest stars, nebulas, gal-
axies, and more. Like road maps, North, South, East, and West are marked. To use the chart, you will have to rotate it. If you’re facing East, rotate the chart so “East” is at the bottom. Objects at the center of the chart are directly over your head (the Hanny’s Voorwerp. Imageare Credit: NASA,other ESA, W.tools Keel, Galaxy Zoo Team There many available in“zenith”) while objects at the cluding planispheres, websites, and books, edge of the chart are near the horizon. On the left of page two are observing tips such as NightWatch, and Astronomy, and and a glossary of terms. On the right is a list Sky & Telescope magazines. For more inof objects you can see with your eyes, some formation, go to our website, www.mvas-ny. with binoculars, and others need a telescope. org, and select Resources, or visit our FaceNext to each object is its constellation (for book page. example, supergiant star Betelgeuse is in In April, planets Mars and bright Jupiter Orion) and a description of the object. Think will be visible after sundown, and the Lyrid of the list as a scavenger hunt, because every meteor shower peaks April 22. So, print the object is on the star chart. It’s a fun challenge Skymaps April star chart and begin your fun for the whole family, and the following adventure exploring the night sky. month you’ll get a new set of objects to find. Wishing you clear skies! • Here are a few observing tips. First, turn off outside lights and give your eyes about 15 minutes to adapt to darkness. Just as it is difficult to see when you first enter a darkened movie theater after being outside on a sunny day, the same is true when you’ve been in the house then go outside at night. Second, use a flashlight with a red bulb or lens because the white light from a regular flashlight or your cell phone ruins your “night vision.” Third, put your Skymaps star chart in a plastic sleeve to keep dew from ruining the paper. And lastly, dress warmly, even on a summer night.
Join MVAS at Barton-Brown Observatory in Waterville 8:15pm on Sat. April 1st for an evening of stargazing. Dress warmly.
Geological Treasures, Collectibles, Gifts & More!
Easter Breads • Gourmet Cupcakes Sugar Cookies • French Macarons Large Selection of Easter Candy!
Wed-Sat 10-6, Sun 12-6
105 Mohawk Street, Herkimer
catering & custom orders!
New Hartford Shopping Center • (315) 794-6019 Monday 12-6, Tuesday-Friday 9-6, Saturday 9-5, Closed Sunday
Local wine, gifts, and more! 400 Academy Street Prospect, NY 13435
Tues-Thurs: 12-5, Sat 12-5, Closed Sun, Mon, Fri
E
Call (315) 868-5199
315-205-4045
ProspectFallsWinery@gmail.com Facebook.com/ProspectFallsWinery @WineB4Wildrness “Wine Before Wilderness”
13
The Everyday Adventures of Mohawk Valley Girl
The Rose QuArtz Stand in herkimer
I really enjoy looking through gem stores. I’m fascinated by the variety of stones, all the colors and shapes. Recently, I heard about a new store in Herkimer, The Rose Quartz Stand. It’s not a new business; it has been participating in gem and mineral shows for years, but last year the owners, George and Sandra Drobot, opened a retail store at on Mohawk St. in Herkimer. They offer geological treasures, collectibles, gifts, and more. You can shop their store online, but I personally enjoy to shop in person. The local gem shows aren’t until July and August, so I was happy to visit the retail store. The walls are pink–so appropriate for a place called Rose Quartz. A big table covered with stones, both tumbled and rough, dominates the room while beautiful shelves line the walls. It is hard to see everything on one time around, so I walked around the place two or three times. And made plans to return and do so again. In addition to stones, there are fossils, crystals, and jewelry. I particularly admired some finger puppets. I may have to go back and get a few of those to entertain my nephew (and myself!). The first time I was there, I could not resist purchasing a string of rose quartz. Yes, yes, I already have a lot of jewelry, but this one is unlike any necklace I have owned. And I love pink. I also found a nice present for Steven, two love birds carved out of stone. Perhaps they are not actually love birds (I’m no ornithologist), but it looks as if they are kissing. I thought that made it an excellent gift for my husband. I brought Steven with me on my next visit, and he enjoyed it just as much as I did. I pointed out to him some fossil fish I had admired when I was there before. “They are actual fossils,” I told him, knowing this because I had asked before. “I guess if they weren’t that would be some damn intricate carving.” Fossils have always fascinated me. I also love the geodes, of which the Rose Quartz Stand has a variety. Our visit was close to Steven’s birthday, and he collects frogs, so when we saw some stone frogs on lily pads, I wanted to buy him one. Then I fell in love with a little stone dinosaur. The price was so reasonable, I said we should get both
Owner of The Rose Quartz Stand, Sandra Drobot
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14
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Energy Healing & Wellness Using ancient healing traditions and modern science to help you feel better physically, emotionally, and spiritually.
Amanda Wallis
Alternative Energy Healer
(315) 527-3042
www.infinitytreehealing.com
infinitytreehealing@gmail.com 34 Oxford Rd., New Hartford
so the dinosaur can keep the frog company (yes, that is the sort of silly reason I have for doing things). I greatly enjoyed my visits to the Rose Quartz Stand. I will be happy to go there again when I’m looking for an unusual gift, or when I’m out shopping with friends who like a distinctive, interesting store. •
Upcoming local diamond and gem events:
3rd Annual Herkimer Diamond Days
Friday and Saturday, August 4 & 5, 2017, N. Main St., Herkimer www.jennsplaza.net/Herkimer-Diamond-Days.php
Herkimer Diamond Gem Show & Festival 2017 July 22nd & 23rd 2017, Herkimer Co. Fairgrounds, Frankfort www.herkgemshow.com
Rose Quartz Stand
105 Mohawk Street, Herkimer Open Tues-Thurs, Sat: 12-5pm, Sun: 12-4pm, Closed Mon and Fri. (315) 868-5199 www.therosequartzstand.com 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
Fascinating fossils
Limited Edition Santos collection
Every detail of the Santos collection reflects the fine art of shoemaking. From genuine wood soles to tanned leather uppers, these handmade Brazilian sandals exhibit unique style and tell a fascinating origin story.
Bus Trip!
Thursday, May 4th
Located at the Shoppes at the Finish Line Mon: 9:30-8, Tues - Fri: 9:30-5 Sat: 10-4
Visit 3 amazing quilt shops! Enjoy lunch, demos, pattern & kit, all included!
Call for details! (315) 735-5328
NEW HARTFORD SHOPPING CENTER 797.0025
Mohawk Valley road trip
Get Moving at
SkateA-While
Why walk when you can skate? Skate-A-While Roller Rink, located in Rome, NY, is the area’s only roller skating rink. It was built in 1976 by the father of the current owners, Deborah and Earl Harris. He built the 68 ft. x 117 ft. hard wood maple floor skating arena because of his love and passion for roller skating.
in Rome
Photos and captions by Melinda Karastury Hours and admittance fee includes roller skates. * Cash Only * Wednesday 7-9pm: $6 Friday 8-10pm: $8 Saturday 1:30-4:00pm & 8-10:30pm: $8 Sunday 1:30-4pm: $8 Wednesday Evening (when open) 7-9pm: $7
Skate-A-While 220 Ridge Street, Rome
Call to book a birthday party (during public skating sessions) or a private party (minimum 40 or more people.) Call (315) 337-8744 (315) 339-0651 Earl Harris or email skateawhile@yahoo.com Roller skating promotes exercise and fun for all ages and skill level.
The team at Skate-A-While is ready to get your geared up and out on the floor. Back row left to right; Earl Harris, Leigh Haman, Elisabeth Hayes, James Smith Front Row left to right; Jainna Murphy, Cristy Gillespie
Since 1928
See us for your favorite treats!
Now in new location
CONSIGNMENT SHOPPE
Wedding & specialty cakes, Italian pastries, miniatures, and cookies. Also serving coffee, cappuccino, espresso, lattes, and pastries in our dining room. Manager - Jared Alesia, pastry chef C.I.A. Martin Alesia, cake decorator
33
(315) 896-2050
667 Bleecker Street, Utica (315) 724-8032
16
Quality pre-owned ladies, junior, & plus size clothing, shoes, handbags, jewelry & household items.
Open Mon: 8-3, closed Tues, Wed-Sun: 8-5
8024 Route 12, Barneveld
Pohl’s Feed • 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
Spring
Shop Hop! April 7-9 10-5
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
Alana Karastury finds her footing quickly and zooms around the skating rink. She enjoys hours of exhilarating exercise and fabulous fun!
Rebecca Palmer is all smiles as she finishes tying her roller skates. She is ready to enter the skating rink for the first time since childhood.
Leigh Haman assists first time roller skater Jonah Palmer and gives him some great pointers on how to skate on 8 wheels.
Isaiah Palmer, also a first time roller skater, pushes himself and perseveres and finds his groove on the roller skates.
Do you have a student loan mess? Get local, honest, reliable help! Go to
www.StudentLoanLawOffices.com 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!
Sign up for a FREE ten minute telephone consultation. Learn if you are doing everything you can about your student loan debt!
This is Attorney Advertising. We are a Debt Relief Agency. Š 2016 Laura Courage
50 YEARS, 50 WORKS, 50 REASONS
MAURICE
SENDAK THE MEMORIAL
E X H I B I T I O N
APRIL 1 - MAY 14 See highlights from Maurice Sendak’s 60-year-long career, including original illustrations from Where the Wild Things Are, Little Bear, In the Night Kitchen, and others.
5798 ROUTE 80
COOPERSTOWN, NY
OPENING APRIL 1 • HOURS: TUES-SUN, 10AM - 4PM
F E N I M O R E1A R T M U S E1:36 U M PM . O RPage G Pulse LMR ad Rev 3.75x5_Layout 5/21/2014 1
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Rental information and reservations call 315-570-6548 www.mohawkltd.com/lmr
My husband, Rob, and I hold hands as we skate around the arena. It’s a nostalgic afternoon and a throwback to our younger days when roller skating was all the rage.
The skating rink is a swirl of skaters and lights. When you needa break, there are booths and tables to enjoy a snack, like nachos and Slush Puppies.
The colors of spring are in full bloom!
Specializing in Weddings & Banquets
A fun look! Coming and going!
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
Friday night dinners featuring our famous fresh haddock fish fry!
Soft, colorful spring scarves!
Full menu available - Serving every Friday 4-8:30
16 Erie St. Yorkville, NY 13495 (315) 736-9359 www.clubmonarch.net
Tues. - Sat.: 11am-5pm Thurs ‘til 6pm Closed: Sun. & Mon
(315) 853-5299 11 W. Park Row, Clinton thevillagecrossing.com
CNY Junior Roller Derby is always looking for new team members. Contact president Amie Buzby at: amie.buzby@cnyjrd.org or check out the website: www.CNYJRD.org or Facebook.
Skate-A-While is home to the local junior roller derby team, The Frostbites. It is the only junior derby team in Central New York with ages ranging from ages 7 to 17.
CNY Junior Roller Derby team, The Frostbites- Top left: Coach Bitter (Head Coach), Toxin, Blizzard of Oz (President), Dora, Lizzard, Bambi, Command Blocker, Sixela, Rainbow Bite, Golden Hammer, Shakira Shakira, Thumper (Team Captain), Natatude, Coach Hotcakes From Left kneeling: Viper, The Evil One, Purrfect Chaos, Sparkle, Cool Cakes, Cheetah, Eclipse, Tiny Tornado; Bottom from Left: Bluejay and Banana.
Largest in-stock wall covering store in the Valley!
Classy Carriers!
Go Team!
Bling!
NFL Apparel • Gourmet Treats
Special orders available • Price Match Guarantee
2642 Genesee St., Utica
(The old Tropical Grotto) 315-790-5931 20
www.Geminipetsandthings.com
SZAREK’S Hanging Baskets Hydroponic Heirloom Tomatoes Vegetable Plants Fall Mums 7446 E. South St., Clinton 315.853.5901
COMING SOON! 259 GENESEE STREET, UTICA, NEW YORK
FOR TIX & INFO call (315) 724-4000 or visit thestanley.org THE STANLEY pRESENTS
ORLEANS and special guest THE TODD HOBIN BAND Fri | May 19 | 8 pm
GARRO DRUGS 704 Bleecker Street, Utica NY 315.732.6915
PRESCRIPTIONS • COMPOUNDING DURABLE MEDICAL EQUIPMENT FREE Prescription Pick Up & Delivery 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
M&T BANK pRESENTS
FINE FOOD + CRAFT BEER pAIRING DINNER
BROADWAY UTICA pRESENTS
RENT 20th
ANNIVERSARY TOUR
Wed | Apr 26 | 7:30 pm Thurs | Apr 27 | 7:30 pm
Sun | April 2 | 4 pm VSTAR pROMOTIONS pRESENTS
BROADWAY UTICA pRESENTS
SESAME STREET LIVE!
DIRTY DANCING
MAKE A NEW FRIEND
Tues | May 30 | 7:30 pm Wed | May 31 | 7:30 pm
Tue | April 11 | 3 pm & 6:30 pm
TCM & BEST ENTERTAINMENT pRESENT
OCB pRESENTS
OCB THE UpRISING Sat | April 15 | 8:30 am & 3 pm
THE THREE TENORS
Starring (WHO CAN’T SING) to Sat | June 17 | 7:30 pm Vic DiBitet
FINGER LAKES MEAT PROJECT
Find your farmer!
Perfect. www.meatsuite.com
Weddings. Events.
A PROJECT OF CORNELL COOPERATIVE EXTENSION OF TOMPKINS AND STEUBEN COUNTIES
MEATSUITE.COM is a free online tool designed to help you easily find locally produced, high quality meats in bulk. Find farmers in Broome, Cayuga, Chemung, Cortland, Tioga, Tompkins, Seneca, Schuyler and Steuben Counties (NY). Connect directly with your farmer to purchase the full suite of great local meats.
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
After some great exercise at the rink, we decide to “keep our healthy on” and enjoy lunch at Brenda’s Natural Foods.
Brenda’s Natural Foods and Café is an independent and locally owned natural health food store located at 236 West Dominick St., Rome. It offers farm to table foods seasonally from Henry’s farm located in Verona. The cafe provides lunch and dinner prepared by chef Sarah Tope. Dine in or take out. All items are made and prepared to order. Call ahead for pick up. (315) 337-0437
We enjoy refreshing Boylan’s Soda while waiting for lunch. I order Brenda’s famous black bean burger on a salad. It is famous for good reason, it is delectable! Alana orders a family favorite sandwich “The Rachel” with turkey, Swiss, sauerkraut, and dressing on a panini. Rob is craving a tuna salad melt. We are delighted that all the sandwiches are served on locally baked fresh Heidelberg Bread from Herkimer. •
IRONWOODFurniture Jelly Cupboards, Bookcases, Hutches, Tables, Baker’s Racks, Benches, Coffee/End Tables, Hoosiers & much more!
10Re%claiOmFeodFd
o Barn-W ! 7686 Route 5, Clinton (315) 853-7300 Furniture 22
Open Mon -Sat: 10am-5pm www.ironwoodcny.com
Hop to it and order your Cassata and Easter bread today!
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
arts event
Mary Kuchera
Mary Kuchera has been creating beautiful pysanky eggs for over 80 years, but that’s just a short time in the ancient tradition of Ukrainian egg decorating. The practice dates back to the 5th-3rd millennium BC in Eastern Europe. Using the traditional batik method, Mary creates patterns by writing in beeswax with a special tool that she heats over a flame. She adds layer upon layer of wax, sealing the colored dyes beneath. Once all the layers are completed, she heats the egg and gently wipes away the wax to reveal, like magic, a beautiful pysanky egg!
Special event: Mary Kuchera’s
Pysanky Eggs
at Fusion Art Gallery Saturday, April 8 10am-5pm
Building Better Pools for over 50 Years! Mary Kuchera shows off one of her prized Ukrainian eggs, an ostrich egg that took her 45 hours to create.
It doesn’t matter what happens between the starting line & the finish line. All that matters is that you CROSS BOTH!
Trusted for over 30 years. 4490 Commercial Drive, New Hartford (315) 736-9237 Mon-Sat: 10am-7pm, Sun: 12-5pm www.the-sneaker-store.com
Now that’s A LOT of HAPPY Customers!
Using a special tool (kistka) that is heated over a flame, Mary Kuchera draws intricate patterns with molten beeswax. When the layers of wax are removed, a beautiful pysanky egg is revealed..
Visit the Virtual Pool Builder at www.geratypools.com
234 South Caroline St., Herkimer 315-866-4030 • www.geratypools.com
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classical mv
Charles Schneider Name: Charles Schneider Instruments: piano, violin, viola; orchestra conductor Hometown: Albert Lea, MN; Current: Frankfort, NY Age when began music: 4 Education: Began piano study with Sadie Bliss Cox in Albert Lea; 1956-1960: studied piano with Julian Bern at Cornell College, and Irwin Freundlich at Juilliard. Attended Cornell College in Iowa, where he received his B.M. and his B.M.E.; 1960-1961: studied piano at the Juilliard School of Music in New York; 1970-1971: studied opera and symphonic conducting in Master Classes with Igor Markevitch in Monte Carlo and with Herbert Blomstedt, Music Director of the Copenhagen Radio Orchestra and the Gewandhaus Orchestra in Dresden, East Germany; 1971-1972: studied with Franco Ferrara in Siena and Rome, Italy Current employment/position: Music Director of Clinton Symphony Orchestra of the Mohawk Valley; Catskill Symphony, Oneonta; Schenectady Symphony Orchestra; Schenectady; current sabbatical replacement Conductor at Skidmore College Orchestra. Collaborations (current/past): Co-founder of Catskill Conservatory with (Carleton Clay); Founding Music Director of Glimmerglass Opera (with Peter Macris, Founder) In cooperation with
My dad told me, “Don’t let anyone outwork you.” That has been my inspiration and guide through my life. As an artist, my goal is to educate and inspire audiences to understand and enjoy all styles of music. Music fills your soul. I believe that I serve God by serving people through my music.
Photo: Patrick Dodson/Daily Gazette photographer
MVCC
MOHA WK VALLEY COM MUNITY CO LLEGE
Girls in STEM Expo 9 a.m. - 2 p.m. Saturday, April 8 Alumni College Center A day for girls in grades 9-12 to explore the sciences. $10 admission includes lunch and prizes. If you have questions, email wise@mvcc.edu.
Register at mvcc.edu/cced or call 315.792.5330
24
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
downtown utica
what’s up downtown by michelle truett
ESTABLISHED BUSINESS
Bagg’s Square Café
Melinda Thomas took over ownership of Bagg’s Melinda Thomas is ready to serve you. Square Café in January 2015 after having worked there since 2013. With a 20-year background in customer service, she found a new love for culinary and for making people unique menu items that can’t be found elsewhere. Bagg’s Square Cafe is located at 421 Broad St. in the historic Bagg’s Square neighborhood. The interior has a modern feel with exposed beams, gorgeous plank flooring, and sleek black tables and chairs. You order and pay right at the counter and then can take a seat and the staff will bring your order to you. They fulfill to-go orders as well. You can grab breakfast, lunch, or just a coffee or desserts on the fly. It’s a great space for business lunches—there’s free Wi-Fi, spacious tables, and you’re always sure to run into someone you know! Their menu features artisan sandwiches, burgers, and salads. A big seller is their chicken club sandwich, as is their signature chopped Greek salad (which just might have the potential of making it on the list of Utica’s famous dishes!). The pastry selection is Bagg’s Square Café’s signature always tempting as well—scones, brownies, seven-layer bars, and more—and they serve chopped Greek salad Utica Coffee Roasting Company coffee. They also deliver and cater, so if your office is crunched for time or you’re having a special event, give them a call! Hours are Monday to Friday from 7 am-2pm and Saturdays 9am-1pm.
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!)
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)
er w o fl rals tu
a
Book by Local Artist!
Sun N
Background photo by Matt Ossowski
421 Broad St., Utica • (315) 790-5724
foods
Feed your body, nurture your soul.
Quality Products for 21 years!
Open Mon: 10-5, Tues-Fri: 10-6 8024 Route 12, Barneveld 896-2820
25
RELOCATING TO DOWNTOWN
Christine’s Cookie Shoppe 171 Genesee St., Utica • (315) 601-5702
Coming in April to downtown—cookies and milk! Christine’s Cookie Shoppe is opening in a newly renovated 2,000-square-foot space on the first floor of 171 Genesee St., just in time to celebrate their fifth anniversary. Christine Meeker started the business in 2012 offering four types of Italian cookies that were based on family recipes. Today, she has a creative array of cookies, including the most popular: vanilla butter cream blossoms, the cannoli cookie, and the BFF Cookie (with hazelnut filling), along with the “I Love Utica” cookie and a “coldnoli” frozen treat that will make an appearance this summer. If you’re eating in at the boutique, you can order milk that comes in a nostalgia glass bottle with a striped straw. A perfect afterChristine Meeker is moving her shoppe to downtown noon snack! The shop itself is a beautiful space that features a full kitchen, a kids’ party area, a consultation area for weddings and events, a full shipping area, and the cookie boutique in the front that boasts a large cookie display case, seating, and a quaint “living room area.” If you need a ready-to-go option for a quick gift or to take treats to a meeting, they have signature black-and-white-striped packaging ready for you. Christine will continue her very successful cookie catering from the new downtown location as well, taking orders for showers, parties, weddings, and more. Hours for Christine’s Cookie Shoppe will be Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday: 11:30am-6pm. and Saturdays from 11:30am-4pm. Keep an eye out for gluten-free Thursdays and BFF Fridays. Find them on Facebook and Instagram to keep up to date.
Find out more on Facebook: “Downtown Utica”
Expanded Desserts Fri & Sat Evenings!
Cream Eggs Bunnies Easter Oreos Rice KrispieTreats
Handmade Artisan Chocolates & Desserts Coffees & Teas-Special Events Catering Where family happens
Welcome to a
Lifetime of Memories
Swan Pools & Spas
132 E. Main St Ilion NY, 13357 (315) 895-4321
132 E. Main Street,POOLS Ilion 3989 Oneida St., Washington Mills SWAN (315) 895-4321 (315) 982-9760 www.swanpool.net
3989 Oneida St New Hartford NY, 13413 (315) 982-9760
An exciting new line at...
3-Month Layaway Financing
(90 days deferred Interest)
4662 Commercial Drive, New Hartford • 315-736-0662
252 Genesee St, Utica
(315) 765-6084
Open Wed 11-6, Thurs 11-8, Fri & Sat 11-10 Follow us on Instagram @Sweetescape252
Featuring The Clothing Boutique Baby Boutique Country Style Curtains
Retirement Sale! Mon-Sat: 9:30am-5:30pm; Sun: 12-5pm
29 S. Main St., Sherburne, NY • (607) 674-9440
april
GAllery Guide
Detail of a pastel painting by artist Contance Watkins. There is an opening for her exhibit on Thursday, April 6th from 5:30-7:30pm at Fusion Art Gallery in Rome
Animal Prints, Drawings, and Paintings by American Artist Paul Bransom
Small Works April 8-May 27, 2017 Reception: Sat., April 8, 4-7pm
Through June 11, 2017
Renowned illustrator Paul Bransom was known as the “Dean of Animal Artists” for his detailed and sensitive renderings of the animal kingdom.
Exhibit featuring the artwork of members of the Broad Street Gallery: Julia and David Will, Karen Burns, Johanna Lerwick, Lynn Plata and Wells Horton.
Arkell Museum
Broad Street Gallery
20 Broad Street, Hamilton, NY (315) 825-5235 www.hamiltoncenterforthearts.com
2 Erie Boulevard, Canajoharie, NY (518) 673-2314 www.arkellmuseum.org
Davana Robedee, Keith Jones, Annual TeenART Exhibit
10 x 10 x 100 April 8 - 30, 2017 Opening: Sat., April 8, 5-7pm
Through April 29, 2017
Earlville Opera House
Local artwork for sale. All works are 10” x 10” and all priced at $100
18 East Main Street, Earlville, NY (315) 691-3550 www.earlvilleoperahouse.com
Cherry Branch Gallery
25 Main Street, Cherry Valley, NY (607) 264-9530 www.cherrybranchgallery.com
eflections Full Moon R Art Center
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
Full Mo
on
Reflect io Full Moon Art Cen Reflections ter 80 Main
Street
Cam ART CEN TdeEn, R NY 133 16 (315)82 80 Main St. Camden 0-4269
(315) 820-4269 jwillson3@yahoo.com
315-822-0010
Corner of Rte. 8 & 20, Bridgewater
et 80 Main Stre 13316 Camden, NY 9 (315)820-426
Cabinetry by Shiloh, Aspect & Waypoint
ery Art Gallsses Art Cla op Gift Sh
27
50 Years, 50 Works, 50 Reasons, Maurice Sendak: The Memorial Exhibition
Constance Watkins, Pastels March 1 - 31, 2017 Reception: Thursday, April 6, 6-8pm
April 1–May 14, 2017
Commemorative exhibition will include original illustrations; set design and costume sketches; animation reels; posters; sculpture; and more.
Fusion Art Gallery
8584 Turin Rd, Rome, NY (315) 338-5712 photoshoppeofrome.com
Fenimore Art Museum
5798 Highway 80, Cooperstown, NY (607) 547-1400 www.fenimoreartmuseum.org
Modules, Specimens, and Improvisations April 4 - May 6, 2017 Reception: Sunday, April 9, 4-6pm
Special event at Fusion Art Gallery! Mary Kuchera Ukrainian Pysanky Easter Egg Display Saturday, April 8, 10am-5pm See page 23 for more pysanky!
Artist Rosalyn Richards investigates the inner structures of forms from nature and the hidden dimensions of natural processes.
Kirkland Art Center
9 1/2 East Park Row, Clinton, NY (315) 853-8871 www.kacny.org
Call for Entry
2017 Central Adirondack Art Show Drop off dates: April 21, 22, 24 & 25, 10am-4pm open to all artists 16 and up working in any media
for full prospectus www.viewarts.org
Dressed to the Nines: Williams-Proctor Fashions
Sculptor, Patrick Vedder
April 14 - September 3, 2017
April 15 - May 20, 2017 Reception: Saturday, April 15, 2-4pm
An exhibition of the surviving Williams-Proctor clothing— from the mourning outfit worn by Rachel Williams when her sister Grace died to to beautiful wedding dresses and opulent evening gowns worn by the Williams sisters.
Mohawk Valley Center for the Arts 401 Canal Place, Little Falls, NY (315) 823-0808 www.mohawkvalleyarts.org
Munson Williams Proctor Arts Institute 310 Genesee Street, Utica, NY (315) 797-0000 www.mwpai.org
Collages and Assemblages by Anastasia Osolin
Anthony Rabasca, Charles Golden, and the Recycled Art Challenge
April 1-May 28, 2017
April 20 - May 24, 2017 Reception: Thursday, April 20, 6pm-7:30pm
The sculptures of architect Susan Cox who discovered the immediacy of exploring ideas of space, light, and memory in glass.
Rome Art & Community Center 308 West Bloomfield Street, Rome, NY (315) 336-1040 www.romeart.org
View
3273 Route 28, Old Forge, NY (315) 369-6411 www.viewarts.org
Having an art opening? Let us know. Email: mohawkvalleyliving@hotmail.com
Wine & Spirits Ilion
10 East Main St., Ilion • (315) 894-8142 Open Mon-Sat: 9-9, Sun: 12-5 • All credit cards accepted
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Well-Seasoned Firewood
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mohawk valley food
the
riverside diner in marcy story and photos by Jorge L. Hernández
Nothing hearkens back to 1950’s Americana than the good old-fashioned neighborhood diner. A long narrow room framed by the boundary of a countertop, with booths on the side, black-and-white linoleum. All that’s missing is the “I like Ike” memorabilia of yesteryear lining the walls. It’s a cultural icon of the post-war era, a precursor to the fast-food phenom that was to come. Welcome to the Riverside Diner, a seminal example of what food road shows like the Triple Ds of the Food Channel like to highlight. Tucked away at 9663 River Road—also known as Route 49—in Marcy, this neighborhood staple has served simple no-frills fare for generations at the same site. “My customers come from all over,” says Mike Killino, the diner’s current owner. “But it’s the people from Marcy who keep this place going.” Mike, of Marcy himself, has owned the diner for 10 years, keeping the name of the place that was there for decades before him. “We’ve had a busy week,” he says. “We were the only place open the day after the snowstorm, with people in and out and waiting in line all day. Luckily, my sister came in to help take care of the crowd.” What people line up for is the type of hearty breakfasts that are legendary in diners. Mike says the most popular are “The What”—two eggs any style over two hash brown patties, topped with bacon, sausage, and cheese, and served with toast—and the “Giambotta”—eggs, Italian sausage, peppers, onions, potatoes, greens, and mozzarella. He is certain to point out that “We spell giambotta the correct way—many places do not.” The breakfast version is a regional deconstruction and variation of the traditional hearty Italian stew of eggplant, zucchini, potato, and tomato. Besides the usual breakfast nourishments, Mike offers specials for lunch ranging from goulash (Mondays), mushroom stew (Tuesdays), meat loaf (Wednesdays), toss ups on Thursdays (usually hot covered turkey sandwiches, or chicken and biscuits, or pot roast), fish fry on Fridays, and baked ham (Saturdays) to go with the ham and eggs and breakfast platters. “It’s all home made,” he says.
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“Nothing’s pre-packaged.” It’s all about keeping the customers happy, the hard-working Mike notes. “You won’t hear the word ‘no’ around here too often,” he says. “If we have the ingredients, we’ll make it.” The week of this visit coinciding with St. Patrick’s Day and the snow storm Stella that socked the region means the special didn’t vary from the rib-sticking and heart-warming corned beef and cabbage. “We’ve already served close to 100 pounds of corned beef,” Mike says the day after St. Patrick’s Day. “And with the Utica parade next weekend, we will be topping that.” Mike fusses over which three entrees to offer for a photo-op before deciding on two breakfast entrees and the ever-popular corned beef. “I think we have one or two portions left for today,” he notes. With a decade of experience now under his belt honed by his previous work at local eateries like Bella Cucina and Castlewood Café, Mike says the Riverside Diner is right where he wants it to be. “Now I want to start bringing in everything new—new booths, for example,” he says. And further down the road? “I would like full-service outside eating during the summer,” he continues. “We already have a large crowd with the ice-cream service we started that already offers more than 35 soft flavors.” Hope Mike remembers that to keep the polish on the iconic image of a diner, he need not go further than keeping up on maintenance while keeping intact the time capsule slice of American culture. •
Riverside Diner
9663 River Road, Marcy • (315) 797-7709 Open 7 days, Sat-Thurs: 6am-2pm , Fri: 6am-8pm
You can get breakfast all day at Riverside Diner in Marcy
People come from miles around for breakfast, lunch, and Friday fish frys, but it’s the locals that keep Riverside hopping.
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Mohawk Valley Nature
the april forest
The Red Trillium is an early blooming species
story and photos by Matt Perry As I go out into the woods in April, I enter a world that is waking up from a deep winter slumber. Buds are swelling on the trees and they make a perceptible difference on the branches of the forest canopy. As sap begins to flow upward, the almost uniform gray and brown tones of tree branches give way to subtle color changes. Muted red and yellow hues tint the tree tops as the buds and bark are invigorated by infusions of sugary sap. Perhaps such a subtle difference in hues would be lost on someone who seldom visits the forest, but for regular woodland sojourners, the difference is stark. Also, the forest’s “wall-to-wall” carpet, which is comprised of the previous season’s cast-off leaves, is becoming disrupted as perennial plants eagerly push through the compressed leaf litter with an intense burst of energy. Some flow-
Dutchman’s Breeches is related to Wild Bleeding Heart
ers grow right up through old leaves and may become bound and contorted for their efforts, while most others easily lift a patch of litter like a trap door on a hinge. Some of the understory plants develop rapidly and rafts of diminutive flowers soon create a patchwork of coverage. In some places, the wide lily-like leaves of the Wild Leek create a dense ground cover, and in a few forest recesses they resemble sturdy blades of grass. The leeks won’t bloom for a few months yet, which is not the case with most other woodland wildflowers. The majority, like the Smooth Yellow Violets and Longspurred Violets, are only too eager to rise up and show their colors The Red Trillium’s maroon-colored blossom faces toward the ground and, so in order to get a good look at it or to get a photograph, one needs to get down to its level. With Trilliums everything comes in threes. Most obvious are the three leaf-like bracts, three sepals, and three petals. The White Trilliums look particularly luxurious, especially when growing in the shadow of a large moss-covered tree trunk. White Trilliums are
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normally the most common trillium species in our woods, although our resident Whitetailed Deer enjoy sampling them a bit too much. This means that sometimes we only see a bitten-off trillium stem where the flower should be. Toadshade Trillium doesn’t seem to make as good a salad for deer, and so it is most often allowed to grow unmolested in our woods. Dutchman’s Breeches and Squirrel Corn are related to the more showy Bleeding Heart plants that have become a staple in cultivated shade gardens. These wild dicentras are smaller and produce finer lattice-like foliage and they put out small whitish or cream-colored blooms. Though the flowers of these two local natives are easy to distinguish from each other, the foliage by itself presents a challenge. In years when there are no blossoms, we are content to refer to the plants we find as “dicentra species,” and not worry so much about which one we are seeing. Bird migration is well underway in the April woods, although the majority of songbirds that migrate up from the tropics
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will not arrive until May. Some, like the Palm Warbler, Louisiana Waterthrush, and Myrtle Warbler, are notoriously impatient and they begin to show up around the middle of the month. Last April, the first Palm Warbler arrived precisely on the 15th, and on that morning a bright male was seen foraging for insects on and near the ground. This is unusual behavior for a species normally considered to be a canopy-dwelling insectivore. However, when the temperatures are low and insects are active only at ground levels, what else is a bird to do. While the bird moved about on the ground and on low branches I was able to properly admire his yellow and chestnut plumage. Another recent arrival from the south, the Hermit Thrush is much more adept at hunting on the ground level for its quarry. We usually see them traveling around the woods in small flocks of three to six birds. On cooler days, they gather in the wooded gorge and forage for insects and other invertebrates that lurk beneath the leaf litter. Their mode of hunting is not
dissimilar to that of the thrush family’s most familiar emissary: the American Robin. Both species, when foraging, make short dashes, abruptly stop, cock their heads, and plunge their bills into the soil. On occasion, the Hermit Thrush will also hold one foot up and quiver it over the ground. My explanation for this odd behavior is that the bird is trying to goad insect prey into revealing themselves. The motion of the thrush’s toes vibrating on the leaves and/ or soil may simulate rain or some Large-flowered Bellwort blooms in April and May other force from which the insects naturally try to flee. When give his territorial call each time he heard they do, the thrush scoops them an emergency vehicle’s siren go off. He up and swallows them whole. April is the month in which some of would also answer back to my imperour owls begin their breeding cycle. Since sonation of his call, although his lack of Barred Owls are sometimes active during investigation of his “rival” told me that the day and are not particularly shy, they I wasn’t really fooling him. When comare the species we most frequently come pared to the Great Horned Owl’s similar upon at the nature preserve. A few years hooting pattern, the Barred Owl’s typical call, which is often described as sounding ago we had one Barred Owl that would
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like the phrase, “Who cooks for you, who cooks for you all,” is slower and each note is more carefully enunciated. The sounds produced by dueling Barred Owls are among the strangest and most extreme of all wildlife vocalizations. I’m certain their frenzied calling has caused a fair share of fright in people traveling through the woods at night. I suspect they may even be responsible for some erroneous Sasquatch reports. Indeed, to my ear the sound of arguing Barred Owls conjures up a vision of crazed-monkeys. A couple will give loud guttural trills in a manic counterpoint. It’s pretty much impossible to represent it with words and I won’t hazard an attempt here. As April comes to a close, at least in a normal year, the Serviceberry and Pin Cherry Trees reach peak bloom at the forest edges. Next, the wild apple trees will have their turn and the flood of migrant songbirds really begin pouring into the region. This traditionally happens in May, which for bird people is the most anticipated month of the entire year-and that will be the subject of next month’s nature column. •
The Palm Warbler was foraging near the ground
Hermit Thrushes arrive in April
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On the farm with Suzie
puppy love by Suzie Jones
There is no feeling in the world quite like it—that flurry of excitement and affection for all things small. If you are an animal person like me, you just have to hold one when you see baby kittens or roly-poly puppies. Your heart flutters a little bit at the sights and sounds of little peeping chicks at the hardware store. (I have literally thousands of baby chicks on my farm throughout the year, yet you’ll find me checking on the babies in their tanks at Tractor Supply each and every time!) I’d much rather visit the calves in their hutches than the dairy cows when I visit our neighbors’ dairy farms. And baby goats? Heart-melters if you ask me! Funnily enough, human babies are not my thing…but newborn critters get me every time, without fail. Even if you aren’t an animal person, you’ve no doubt heard the phrase “puppy love.” Maybe—hopefully—you’ve even felt those early, delightful feelings of infatuation. It’s the “crush” that precedes real love; the stuff that makes our hearts skip a beat. I am absolutely in puppy love right now. We recently purchased an 8-week-old Great Pyrenees puppy. Her name is Aimee and I love her to pieces! Aimee does all the things that
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adorable little puppies do, including chewing on everything she can get her jaws around and “kissing” your face if you let her. She is fluffy and adorable in every single way possible. But, as young and cute and fluffy as she is today, Aimee will someday be an indispensable and significant part of our farm. Aimee is to be a working guardian dog. She has been bred to naturally bond with her home environment and her extended “family,” and her genetics will drive her to fend off anything that is foreign to that environment. That means she will guard our goats, sheep, and chickens from predators. She will bark at anything she perceives to be a threat to her home. As the result of hundreds of years of breeding, she will instinctively “mark” her territory as her own, signaling to any newcomers that Aimee is in charge. I can’t teach her any of this; she is well-equipped for the job whether she knows it or not. But there are many things I must teach her. At this stage, most puppies simply want to play, eat, and sleep. One can’t expect much from an animal so young. In fact, I really can’t expect her to take her place as a guardian for at least another year or more. But there are behaviors I am already modeling for young Aimee. For example, although she sleeps in the barn at night, she is never alone in the goat and sheep pen. At this point, the much-larger moms are too defensive of their babies and do not trust the white fluff ball in their midst. They will butt her if she gets too close. Of course, I want Aimee to develop a healthy relationship with her flock, so whenever I have work to be done with the goats and sheep, I take Aimee with me. I show her how to give a wide berth to the larger animals. She is at my side when I bottle-feed
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hungry lambs and kid goats, which gives me the chance to correct her if she tries to play rough with the babies. Correcting her at this stage is easy enough—I simply have to mimic an Alpha dog. I will firmly but gently push her down with my hand and maybe even roll her, telling her sternly “leave it.” The same goes for feeding time. As far as she is concerned, I am the Alpha and can touch her food. She can depend on me to feed her and she should never be food-defensive. So far, she seems to understand. I am also already teaching her that there is serious work to be done on the farm. Every day, I take her on my round of stock chores. She gladly follows right at my heels and I praise her for it. There is no playing during chores; we get things done efficiently and straight away. It is only after our rounds are done that we can take a break for play time—it is a nice reward for both of us! There are other things that I simply have to control, so that nature can take its course. By keeping Aimee in the barn, near the animals she is meant to guard, I am helping her create a bond with them. Bonding with my husband, our daughters, and me is fine, but bonding with the sheep and goats is far more important and must come first. She is not to come into the house or to “hang out” anywhere else. Aimee is the fourth guardian puppy we have had on our farm over the years, and this rule has always been the hardest to keep. As much as I love baby puppies, I have an even greater love for the adult working dog. That is why I find the phrase “puppy love” so apt: While it signifies the beginnings of a relationship, it also hints at the grander, more rewarding stages to come. It is the first step in what I hope to be a long partnership that will include lots of learning and maturing—for both the dog owner and dog. And as much as I am in “puppy love” with Aimee right now, I will love her even more as she matures into a working, contributing member of the farm. •
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 online: www.anotherjonesfamilyfarm.com
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mohawk valley Gardens
Craving the Green By Denise A. Szarek
Spring is in the air! Do you notice that you naturally crave lighter food and more greens this time of year? Greens are the food most missing from the modern diet. Nutritionally, greens are high in calcium, magnesium, iron, potassium, zinc, and Vitamins A, C, E, and K. They are crammed with fiber, chlorophyll, and many other micronutrients and phytochemicals. For the home gardener, April is the month when you are itching to get your hands in soil. But it’s still too cold, and here in the Mohawk Valley we might even have some lingering snow on the ground. Well, I have a solution for those itchy hands and your craving to eat something green. In a word, microgreens! And they can be grown indoors and out and all year long! So, you might be asking, what the heck is a microgreen? Well, a microgreen is the tender shoot of a vegetable plant. These greens are tender, sweet, and extremely good for you. Just a simple example: microgreens from red cabbage seeds have 40 times more vitamin E and six times more vitamin C than fully grown red cabbage. Crazy, huh? We like microgreens to add to our salads, sandwiches, stir fries, and casseroles. The best part, they are so easy to grow. I promise you can do it. Even if you’ve killed stuff before. You can do it! So, what do you need to get started growing your own microgreens? Not much, really. Microgreen Seeds–Many seed compa-
nies offer special micro greens seed mixes that are a great option for first-timers. They have a nice variety of tastes, textures, and nutrition. I really like the micro greens mixes from Johnny’s Selected Seeds. Choose organic seed and new this year Johnny’s is offering seeds certified free from e-coli and salmonella for sprouting that can be used for growing larger microgreens. If you don’t want to go the mix route, cilantro, dwarf grey peas, kale, spinach, radishes, basil, and beets are great seeds to start with. Soil–The heart of any garden is its soil, and microgreens are no exception. Choosing the proper soil to grow microgreens in is vital. Apart from a few elements acquired from the atmosphere, plants draw all of their nutrition from the soil and water. While a seed-starting medium will work, we experimented several different soils to grow in. The soil we use is labeled “organic” with ingredients such as earthworm castings, bat guano, compost etc. Use the highest quality soil you can afford; you will enjoy strong, even growth, and an increased yield. We suggest taking time to go to your local nursery or horticultural store and spending some time looking at the available options. Tray–You’ll need something to grow your microgreens in. We use regular seed-starting trays—available at most garden stores—but, honestly, you can use pretty much anything. These greens aren’t going to stay in them for long, so it doesn’t have to be anything special, even a baking dish will
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work! You will also need a tray press to make sure your seeds make good contact with the soil, a sturdy piece of cardboard cut to the inside dimensions of you tray will work, but may disintegrate over time. The best thing we’ve found is another tray—most of your seed-starting trays are stackable, so they work just fine for this job. Lighting–There are two ways to go about lighting—natural and artificial. For natural light all you need is a sunny window for indoor growing and a balcony, porch, or patio for outside lighting. Piece of cake! Unless, like us, you have a cat, then your warm trays of soil become a nice warm bed or, worse yet, a kitty bathroom. So, we do our microgreens under a plain old florescent light in a kitty-proof room. Get the cheapest light you can find; you don’t need to go hightech full-spectrum grow lights. You might get a little more growth and yield but, in my opinion, not enough to warrant the price. Covering–You will need to cover your seeds for germination. We don’t use soil for this. You will need a roll of paper towels. Just remember to purchase unbleached natural paper towels; you don’t want to be watering bleach and other chemicals onto your germinating seeds and soil. Water–Invest in a cheap spray bottle. Let’s get this planting party started. First, you are going to wet your soil; you want it damp to the touch. When you take a handful it makes a ball, but you cannot wring
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water out of it. Next, fill your tray with soil. Since these plants aren’t going to be in there very long (9-12 days), they won’t develop a very intricate root system, which means you don’t need a lot of soil, about two inches worth should be more than enough. Next, broadcast your seeds across the surface of the soil. No need to worry about getting it perfectly even or spaced out equally. You want to put a pretty thick coating down. Unlike when you’re growing a full, adult plant you don’t have to worry about overcrowding with microgreens. As you can see as you get more adept at growing microgreens you will soon go from buying packets of seeds to buying ¼ pounds of seeds. Now, take another seed tray or your cardboard and press the seeds firmly against the soil. Remove the tray or cardboard, and cover with a paper towel. Finally, mist the paper towel well and place in your sunny spot. Or if you are using the grow light place them directly under the light. You actually want the light to be almost touching the tray. If you are trying to start your seeds in a particularly cool place, you may want to think about either cranking up the heat for a few days while the seeds germinate or use a seed-starting mat. You can invest in a good mat from the garden store or just use an old electric blanket under the tray; a heating pad works, too. And then you wait. A few times a day, give the tray a good spritzing of water. When you see the seeds start to sprout remove the paper towels. If you notice your seeds germinating in an uneven pattern, especially in a window, rotate the tray. After about three days you’ll see some seeds germinating. You’ll see two little circular leaves pop up—those are called the cotyledon—they are the extra food reserves for the seed to keep germinating. A few days later, you’ll see even more seed germinating and then the true leaves start to show. These are the ones that actually start looking like the plants you are used to, just small versions. Then after a little over a week, you’ll have a full tray of beautiful microgreens. You can choose to harvest any time after the true leaves show up. We usually time ours to cut on the 10th day, when the greens are about two inches tall. To harvest your greens, simply cut them with a pair of sharp scissors. We then do a 3-4 wash cycles on the greens, making sure they are fully submerged in cold water each time. Next, spread them out on a clean towel or dry them in a salad spinner. To store, I wrap them in paper towels and place in an airtight container in the fridge. If you are really on top of things you will have multiple trays going at the same time. We’ve found that starting a tray a week apart ends up working out well for us—it takes about a week to get through the harvest from one tray. See, you can grow your own food, I promise. Happy growing! So, now you have a beautiful tray of microgreens. What do you do with them? I use this recipe and interchange the greens, but it works especially well with pea shoots. It also works well with foraged spring greens–that’s another story–like ramps or stinging nettles. •
MVL RECIPES
Pea Shoots and Ricotta Rice Cakes By Denise Szarek
1 large bunch of pea shoots, chopped 2 cups cooked brown rice ½ cup almond flour ½ cup ricotta cheese 2 eggs ¼ small red onion, finely chopped 1 T. fresh mint, optional (since I’m allergic to mint I leave this out, but it pairs so well with the greens) 1 tsp. lemon zest ½ tsp. salt Fresh ground black pepper, to taste In a mixing bowl, combine the pea shoots, cooked rice, almond flour, ricotta cheese, eggs, red onion, mint, lemon zest, and salt and pepper. Stir well to combine. Pre-heat a cast iron pan on stove over medium heat. Using a 1/3 cup measuring scoop form eight cakes with the rice mix. Fry the cakes in a little butter or coconut oil for a couple of minutes on each side until they are nice and golden. Serve with a side dish of your choice and a good squeeze of lemon juice. These pair well with steamed or grilled asparagus or with baked ham. Enjoy!
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The Veery is in the thrush family 41
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The Northern Cardinal is one of our finest singers
The male Rose-breasted Grosbeak
The Mohawk Valley hosts many birds that can be considered virtuoso singers. Those that immediately come to mind are the Baltimore Oriole, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, and Northern Cardinal–all of which are as flamboyant in plumage as they are in voice. The strong, clear-throated tones these species produce epitomize what most of us would consider beautiful birdsong. Joining this core of talent in the songbird chorus are some that are not as ornate in plumage, but just as able in song. These include the Brown Thrasher, Winter Wren, and Louisiana Wa-
terthrush. The songs of these species are not as familiar to most of us since the singers have more exclusive habitat needs and are not common backyard visitors. They typically require more of an effort to seek them out. Different habitat types have their own singing stars. The species I’ve mentioned so far mainly hale from forests and overgrown pastures, but there are other notable singers that reside in wetlands and grasslands. Some of this region’s wetlands are home to the Pied-billed Grebe, whose breeding call has
been compared to over-the-top, hysterical laughter. And from the cattail beds of the floodplain come the plaintive call of a highly secretive bird called a Sora. The Sora is a robin-sized species of rail. Its call sounds almost as if the bird is repeatedly playing its name on a clarinet. Due to modern cultivation practices by farmers, the Mohawk Valley’s fields and pastures are no longer reliable places to find grassland birds. This means that the greatest singers of the grasslands are now relegated to only a few isolated spots. The complex, bubbling song of the
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Bobolink is perhaps the most emblematic of the grassland dwellers. Its cheerfulness is countered by the mournful and slurred whistle of the Eastern Meadowlark. Among the rarest of the region’s grassland birds is the Upland Sandpiper, which gives a loud empathic call that sounds in part like it’s being produced by a slide whistle. The sandpiper’s song often begins with an ascending chatter and ends with a single drawn-out note that slowly descends in pitch. There is indeed no lack of intriguing bird songs that are capable of hooking an ear and reeling in the imagination. Long before I became adept at telling one bird species’ voice from another, I recall having my attention stolen away by certain bird melodies. One late afternoon in June, many years ago and when I was still a teenager, I was lured away from a gathering of friends by a siren’s song emanating from the forest. That day, we were exploring the outskirts of Deerfield and a ramshackle house of a man he referred to as “Pirate Jack.” I got out of the car and Fritz led me around to the back of the house, where we found Jack quietly conspiring with two of his pirate friends. At first glance Jack looked straight-laced and seemed an unlikely pirate, while his friends looked like they
could’ve easily been cast as hit men in a the early evening as it would have been in 1940’s gangster movie. They were sitting the early morning, but it was June, and back around a table up on a high porch that over- then even a small ensemble was enough to looked a wooded yard. The yard was stud- overwhelm my untrained ear. It was hard ded with dead appliances and a few wrecked for me to discern individual singers, but one cars. You could say that the elevated porch songster did stand out. It produced a sound looked something like the bow of a ship jutting out over the yard. I The Louisiana Waterthrush sings in suppose it was wooded ravines slightly like a pirate ship. Jack and his friends had a pellet gun, which they used to take turns firing away at the cars and other junk in the yard. I sat back and allowed the sounds of the woods beyond the yard and beyond the antics of the pirates to permeate my brain. The chorus of birdsong is not as intense in
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The bubbling sound of the Bobolink is heard in open meadows
similar to what a pair of untuned wooden flutes might make if they were harmonizing their way down a musical scale. The spiraling-down effect was sublime and I was amazed that I had never noticed the song before. There was no other choice; I had to see that bird. I found myself asking Pirate Jack if I could explore the woods behind the house and he replied with what I took as an
affirmative shoulder shrug. With that, I nodded to Fritz and headed out to find the source of the siren’s song. The pirates didn’t hold their fire as I disembarked from the porch, and so I was compelled to quickly hoof-it out of the range of the pellet gun. Directly behind Jack’s backyard was a wide open field. It obviously hadn’t been used for crops in a few years and there were groves of bushes and young trees rising from the landscape. They stood out like islands on an otherwise grassy savannah. The focus of my quest was still singing, but I had some trouble pinpointing its exact location. Sounds that are lower in pitch tend to be harder to zero-in on than those of higher pitch, and although this song was not tremendously low, it was low when compared to most other bird songs. At least I could tell
that it was emanating from the edge of the forest. I was by no means an experienced birder at that time and I lacked their most indispensable tool–namely a pair of binoculars. This put me at a great disadvantage and in order to see the bird and identify it, I would have to get extremely close. As inexperienced as I was, I knew that I had to approach this creature slowly and quietly or risk it falling silent and/or retreating deeper into the woods. Pushing through the trackless field I caught my pant leg on some rose brambles and when I looked down to unhook myself, I saw that the nest of some small bird was anchored tight to the heart of the rose stems. The nest was barely an inch above ground level and it held four perfect eggs. The eggs had a greenish ground color but were heavily mottled with brown splotches. I suspected that this was the nest of some kind of sparrow, but I didn’t know for sure. Low-nesting birds often place their nests at the heart of a prickly bramble in order to discourage nest predators from pilfering the contents. The whole time I was examining the nest, the unidentified bird continued to sing. As I got closer I could hear more of the subtle details of the melody. The bird was simultaneously producing two tones, and in effect, was harmonizing with itself. This bird had
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to be some kind of thrush. Even at that time I knew that forest-living thrushes were able to produce more than one tone at a time and were famous for their hauntingly beautiful phrases. I crept slowly to the edge of the woods and from there I scanned the surrounding branches–high and low. I couldn’t see anything at first, but then finally I made out a small form perched about 15 feet up on an outer branch of a Sugar Maple tree. Was that the bird? It appeared to be about the size and shape of an Eastern Bluebird, but the best I could determine was that it had a ruddy brown back and was very light on the underside. It was a Veery, which was indeed a member of the thrush clan. At that time I had previously only seen the species in identification guides and so I was especially pleased. In retrospect, I’m amazed the Veery continued singing while I was in such close proximity. Almost invariably, if I get too close to a singing Veery, they switch to giving their single-note alarm calls and/or move out of range. Since I had made it to the woods, I decided to do a little more exploring. The Veery continued his serenade as I walked into the deep shade provided by mature Eastern Hemlock, American Beech and Sugar Maple trees. Only 30 feet into the for-
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est, the ground abruptly gave way to a large gorge. I mean, it wasn’t the Grand Canyon or anything like that, but it was large enough to hold three of the ravines that coursed through my own neighborhood. I had never before visited a true tropical rain forest, but in my imagination, one would sound something like that gorge on a late spring day so long ago. At the time, I was not adept at identifying all the individual bird songs that made up the woodland chorus. In other words, I could hear the symphony but had trouble distinguishing the different instruments that comprised it. It was early evening and I knew I had to get back. I was sure that Fritz wouldn’t have left without me but I think I would have sooner walked home than prevail upon a pirate for a ride. I abandoned my exploration and began hurrying back through the field, but I vowed to return to that gorge someday to unravel its
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mysteries. That was a promise I completely forgot about for the next 14 years. When I did make a return visit to that gorge it was by pure happenstance. On an evening in early summer, I was visiting a friend of mine who had recently moved into a farmhouse in Deerfield. It turned out that it was located just down the street from Pirate’s Jack’s place. Honestly, at the time, I didn’t even remember where Jack’s property
A Common Yellowthroat sings from the brushy island
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was, whether it was in Deerfield or Timbuktu. Interestingly, the memory of my previous visit returned only upon hearing the song of the Veery. Suddenly, it all came back to me. I made my apologies to my friend and headed out into the field behind the house (by then all of my friends were used to being thrown over for impromptu bird adventures). At this point in time the Veery’s spiraling tones had become quite familiar to me. I had encountered the species in many of the forested areas throughout the region, but this place was special since it was where I was first properly introduced to the singer. The field between the house and the back woods was even more grown-in now than it had been a decade and a half before. The small groves of bushes and saplings had developed into something akin to wooded islands and it seemed each one had its own bird sentry vocalizing from its margins. A sleek Brown Thrasher was giving flat “smack” calls from the nearest little enclave. A Field Sparrow and a Common Yellowthroat issued dueling breeding songs from another. No doubt, by this time in the season, all were tending to nests. A Blue-winged Warbler also gave its two-noted buzzy song, and I could easily pick him out as he stood at the apex of an American Elm sapling (I had my binoculars
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this time). The sun was soon to be setting in the West and the plumage of the warbler’s upper body showed as dandelion yellow in the orange-tinted light. A distinctive black eye-line intersected his yellow face and his grayish wings were adorned with a pair of glowing white wing-bars. With each note, his head bent far back, his beak fully gaped, and his tail quivered. Instead of lingering and trying to see one
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of the other species I was hearing in the field, I pressed on through the dense jungle of Goldenrod stems and toward the edge of the forest and the source of the Veery’s song. From behind the vale of the forest I could hear the songs of at least four other Veerys. A few seemed to be singing in counterpoint with each other, which for me created a mesmerizing effect. By the time I reached the wooded edge, the closest Veery had stopped
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singing. He retreated back into the woods and switched to making harsh calls. His shrill alarm calls elicited similar responses from the other Veerys in the gorge, and soon a wave of warning calls replaced the spiraling songs. The woods were dark, but the songbird chorus made it seem lively and inviting. At this point my uncharted path intersected an ATV trail and I followed it down a ramp-like ridge that gently descended to the bottom of the gorge. Twice along the way, a Veery darted past me. Its reddish-brown body plumage was a blur, but was distinctive enough to identify the bird. I thought I had to be close to a nest in order to elicit such a dramatic response, but soon other birdsongs reverberating through the gorge distracted me from the activities of the Veerys. The incredible and complex warble of a Winter Wren was the most insistent music in the gorge. Each wren song lasts from six to ten seconds, but contains countless notes. When performed with its natural rapidity, the
The Scarlet Tanager’s voice is a prominent one in the songbird chorus
song seems to tumble and babble not unlike the forest creek that the bird is so inextricably linked to. The breeding grounds for Winter Wrens typically consist of cool wooded ravines or woodland swamps. They like to tuck their nests into the tangled root balls of overturned trees that occur close to the water. The body plumage of Winter Wren is very dark brown and their tail is cocked over their back at a severe angle. They are tiny birds, but their activity levels reveal a disproportionate amount of energy as they lunge about in short, quick flights. In their dash-like flights they always remain close to the forest floor and usually within a few yards of the water as they adeptly scoop up spiders and insects that they spot with their keen eyesight. I thought I must be close to a nest because one of the wrens had stopped singing and had switched to giving volleys of sharp alarm calls. As I walked along the wide creek bed I
was treated to another one of my favorite bird tunes. This would be the song of the Louisiana Waterthrush. Its melody begins with three sweeping whistles and ends with a drop in pitch and a haphazard jumble of notes. Like the Winter Wren, the Waterthrush is rarely found far from water, although they are more exclusively found along forested creeks than the wren. At this point I began to step more carefully. The Waterthrush places its nest close to the ground and right alongside creeks, and the last thing I wanted to do was tread on a nest. For the bird, such a placement is always a gamble since it makes the nest particularly vulnerable to sudden rising water, which can be a consequence of a heavy rain storm. Judging by where the sound was coming from, I could tell that the Waterthrush was traveling up and down the gorge. Perhaps he was still in the process of finding a mate, or maybe he was just defending his piece of territory from any interlopers
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The Veery sang from the forest’s edge
that might come prospecting. The bird managed to pass by me three times without being seen. Probably the least expected bird I found in the gorge that day was a Canada Warbler. This is a particularly handsome species with a bluish-gray back and a bright yellow chest. On his breast the male shows markings in the form of a well-defined black “necklace.” The white eye-ring and yellow line above his bill make it look like he is wearing spectacles. This warbler’s song is very distinctive and hard to mistake for any other species, with the possible exception of the Common Yellowthroat, and that would apply only to the rhythmic triple (or quadruple) note pattern given at the beginning of the song. To me, it always sounds like the Canada Warbler’s song; it first plays forward and then backward and that has always served as a good way to remember it. The song was coming from a little island of brushy habitat in the center of the creek bed. There the ground rose and the stream carved out channels on either side. The Canada Warbler prefers to breed in brushy areas or amongst
a thick grove of saplings, but in many instances that younger growth must be closely contained within the context of a larger forest. This spot seemed to fit the bill nicely and, sure enough, I glimpsed the male Canada Warbler skulking through the tangle of saplings and vines, most likely in search of its insect prey. Hours simply fly by when you are on a bird mission and my second visit to the big gorge was no exception. After I enjoyed my short visit with the Canada Warbler, I started back, following roughly the same route I took in. A few of the Veerys had started to sing again by that point, but to me their songs had blended back into the birdsong chorus and I wasn’t concentrating on them. That changed when a bird flushed up from the side of the path in front of me. It was a Veery and it was flying up from its nest! It was immediately clear to me that I had just found my pirate booty for the day. The nest was on the ground and close to the base of a White Pine. Evidently, the Veery didn’t travel far to get its building supplies since the nest was constructed largely of long White Pine needles. The real jewels, though were the four greenish-blue eggs that rested in the bottom of the nest. Obviously, the incubation phase of this nesting attempt was still underway, so I didn’t linger. Instead, I created a mental map in my mind and once again vowed to return to that place. With luck, the Veery nestlings would hatch and I would get to witness the species’ breeding behavior in more depth. In that particular time period, I was traveling to many different habitats in the Mohawk Valley and the Adirondacks. As a
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146 County Highway 35A, Portlandville, NY
Largest in-stock wall covering store in the Valley!
consequence, my brain contained hundreds of similar time-sensitive maps of nest sites; and, yes, to me they were all treasure maps, most of which I would never use. As it turned out, I never made it back to the big gorge in time to see how the Veery family made out with their nest. In fact, one year later when I finally made a return visit to that remarkable place, I found that everything had changed. Only a quarter of the bird species that made up that original impressive songbird chorus remained. What had happened? Did the pirates finally make a raid and loot the bird diversity from the recesses of the gorge? In a way, yes. The gorge had been looted, but it was looted for its lumber and not directly for its birds. In this case, it was a different breed of pirate responsible for the plundering. I’ve learned again and again during the course of my wanderings that wildlife habitat is a very delicate thing and healthy, mature, forested habitat is one of the rarest and most sensitive types. The act of removing half of the mature trees from the big gorge effectively destroyed its ability to host species that require unbroken forest land for their breeding. Of course, this is a big subject and one that I will return to in future articles. Post-logging, the Veery was among the bird species that still remained in the gorge. And so once again, I was able to close my eyes and take in the bird’s ethereal melody. This time, though, it sounded more like a requiem–a tribute to the lost natural treasure that once graced that place. • 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’s short nature videos can be viewed on the web. Look for Spring Farm CARES Nature Sanctuary on Facebook.
mv springtime 2017
walking trails
The Canalway Trail is a network of approximately 300 miles of trails that utilize the towpaths of currently active and historic sections of the canal system and also the adjoining abandoned railroad beds. There are many parking areas from which you can reach the trail. These are some of our favorite access points (and great picnic spots, too):
Lock 20 State Canal Park
Walk over the lock to access the trail. Look for the 28th season of the Betsy the Barge Concert Series starting in June! 9050 River Rd., Marcy, NY GPS 43.142651, -75.288877
Ilion Marina Ron and his dog Lily, from North Utica, enjoy walking the trails at SUNYIT. They also gather ramps for Ron’s wife’s homemade wild leek soup.
Spring is a great time to take a walk, especially to get a sense of the topography around us before all the shrubs, weeds, ferns, and trees leaf out and mask the terrain. It’s also a time of great activity and sound–the snow melt it raging through the creek beds, and the birds—that have recently migrating back from the tropics—are calling for mates. And, after the long, cold March we had this year, we can all use a few more active miles under our belts! There are some great advantages living in the Mohawk Valley. The canal system that was the life blood of New York State in the 1800s now offers us miles of multiple-use trails, and the many local college campuses have beautifully maintained paths open to the public.
Only $15 per night
Barney’s Angels Small Dog Sitters
(315) 525-3330 Reese Rd., Frankfort
50
Home Environment Clean, Safe Friendly & Spacious Daily FB videos www.barneysangelsdogsitters.com
FAITH PROPERTIES Diane Lockwood Cell: 315-717-5379 315-735-2222 ext. 6660 • 2306 Genesee St., Utica
$199,900
5478 Route 28, Newport
Nicely maintained, 3bd/2bth, great office, hot tub, a/g pool, patio, gazebo, 2 car gar.
Now featuring Voss’ at the Dock Side Cafe. 190 Central Ave., Ilion, NY www.ilionny.com/recreation GPS 43.020472, -75.030567
The Fort Herkimer Church Route 5S German Flatts, NY www.fortherkimerchurch.org GPS 43.017679, -74.954932
Lock 17 and Moss Island
New York State’s highest lock and access over the lock to Moss Island where you might see some rock climbers. Lock parking area located 0.4 miles south of Route 5 on Route 169, Little Falls, NY GPS 43.037683, -74.845035
The Herkimer Home Historic Site
0.4 miles north of Route 5S on Route 169, Little Falls, NY www.nysparks.com/historic-sites/14/details.aspx GPS 43.025497, -74.820488 An interactive map of the Canalway Trail can be found on the Parks & Trails New York website: www.ptny.org/bikecanal/map
ns 3 Generatio e th g in Serv lley! Mohawk Va
Nursery Open by Appointment Only
CLASSIC GARDENS
Complete Landscape Services & Nursery • Planting design & installation • Spring and Fall Cleanup • Pruning, Edging, and Mulching • Lawn Installation and Renovation
www.acetisclassicgardens.com 47 Clinton Rd (Rt 12B) • New Hartford
• Walls and Water Gardens • Walks and Patio Installation • Mulch Delivery or Pick-Up • Lawn Mowing
(315) 735-2206
Students come, and students go, but we “locals” get to take advantage of the beautiful college campus trails year round!
Lloyd and Carol Bull Nature Center at HCCC
This outdoor laboratory for science classes is open for the enjoyment of the public, too. The interpretive trail explains the different components of a natural ecosystem. The area includes a farm pond with a picnic area under pines, several black walnut plantations, and a bluebird trail. Along the way are several benches and shelters “for quiet contemplation.” Drive to the western end of the campus and turn left past the soccer fields. The trail starts behind the soccer fields or you can park by the tennis courts and take the trail from there and pass by a small pond.
Herkimer County Community College 100 Reservoir Rd., Herkimer, NY GPS 43.035168, -75.013630
Roemer Fitness Trail at SUNYIT
For a fun walk, with the bonus view over the campus, take a stroll around the Roemer Fitness Trail. The mile-long nature trail has exercise stations and benches along the route and takes you along two man-made ponds and a ravine. There is also a 5 mile hiking/cross country trail.
SUNY Institute of Technology, 5701 Horatio St., Utica, NY
Parking off of Residential Dr. at the Soccer Field & Trails Parking Lot GPS 43.141344, -75.228458
Harry Lang Cross-Country and Fitness Trails at Colgate University Miles of maintained intertwining wilderness trails for walking, hiking, running or skiing. The trails intersect with the Darwin Thinking Path, a nature walk that offers views and “a quiet setting for contemplation and reconnecting with the natural world.”
Root Glen at Hamilton College
Colgate University
Spring is a magical time to take a walk around Root Glen. Red shale paths lead you through the woods and over bridges that criss-cross above the creek. The gardens were started over 150 years when Oren Root first planted trees, shrubs, and flowers around “The Homestead.” Don’t miss the peonies in bloom mid-May to June.
13 Oak Drive, Hamilton, NY Park at end of Chapel House Rd. GPS 42.813222, -75.537791
Root Glen, Hamilton College
Located behind Madison Lane Apartments
Insider Tip: Look for flowering Peony in May and early June: www.hamilton.edu/ news/story/peaking-peonies
198 College Hill Rd., Clinton, NY Parking at Elihu Root House, College Hill Rd. directly across from Campus Road GPS 43.049492, -75.404971 www.hamilton.edu/arboretum
Personal, Business & Life Insurance Planning From a local company established in 1866
Turnbull
INSURANCE SERVICE
600 French Road, New Hartford • 315.735.9201 www.turnbull-insurance.com
Secret path!
The little known Madison Lane Walking Path and Wetland Area is a short, pleasant, and easy flat stroll beneath a small evergreen forest, around a wetland pond, across a meadow, and through an old apple orchard. Only about a 1/4 mile in length. Madison Lane, Hamilton, NY. Turn into first parking lot on left. Trailhead is at the far end. GPS 42.830953, -75.543781
We ship anywhere!
• Maple syrup • Maple cream • Maple sugar • Maple drops • Extra dark cooking syrup • Maple popcorn • Maple herbal and bag tea • Maple BBQ sauce
• Granulated maple sugar • Maple mustard • Maple lollipops • Maple cotton candy • Maple vinegar • Large variety of pancake mixes
382 State Highway 28, Richfield Springs
Open 9-5 daily • (315) 858-0368 • www.inglesmapleproducts.com
Photo courtesy: Scott Healy, NYS DEC
Rome Sand Plains
Near 4750 Hogsback Rd., Rome, NY GPS 43.229471, -75.568218 www.dec.ny.gov/outdoor/8080.html
For a different terrain, take a walk through the Rome Sand Plains Resource Management Area. Encompassing about 16,000 acres, it is one of only a few inland pine barrens left in the country. The trails take you through pine barrens, hardwood forests, meadows, and wetlands, and over high sand dunes and low peat bogs. When we were given a tour of the plains we learned about the effort to reestablish wild blue lupine. Insider Tip: Keep a look out for blue lupine in bloom in May. The flower is essential to the survival of the endangered Frosted Elfin butterfly (above). The Wood Creek Trail is an easy 1/2 mile trail over the crest of a sand dune. The Sand Dune Trail starts at a former sand mining pit and gives you the opportunity to see what a sand dune looks like in cross-section. Wood Creek flows through part of the Sand Plains and was an important transportation route for the Iroquois and the early settlers. Look for informational signs about the formation of the sand plains and early use of the creek.
For the child in all of us. We offer candy, coffee & desserts!
Handmade Easter Chocolates Gift Baskets Easter Breads
531 Varick St., Utica 765-6463 M-F 8-5:30, Sat 8-4, Sun 8-2, Closed Tues www.facebook.com/sosweetcandycafe
Maple Lane Roofing Professional metal and shingle roofing New Roofing and Re-Roofing
Serving the Valley and Greater Utica area
Be assured the boss is on the job!
Call Reuben Blank (315) 823-0812
F.T. Proctor Park
Considered the “crown jewel” of Utica’s parks, F.T. Proctor Park was originally designed by Olmsted Brothers Landscape Architects known for designing Central Park in New York City. Other features have been added over the years, including a lily pond, bathhouses, a butterfly garden, and stone staircases. Starch Factory Creek flows through the park. Insider tip: Walk like a Utican! There seems to be an unspoken “rule” that the promenade around the park should move in a counterclockwise direction.
Corner of Culver and Rutger Utica, NY GPS 43.085695, -75.196187
Another local resource for trail ideas: www.trampntrail.org
Fort Schuyler Trading Co. Coffee Roaster - tea & herb shop Maple Syrup & Sugar, Raw Honey, Beeswax Candles, Essential Oils, Handmade Soap, Natural Skin Care Products, Organic Cotton Twill
Custom Printing & Embroidery T-Shirts, Jackets, Hats, Polo Shirts, Sweatshirts, Hoodies, Tote Bags, Fleece Blankets, Dance & Spirit Wear, Cheerleading & Team Unifoms
Natural Stone Tile & Slabs Granite, Limestone, Marble, Onyx, Quartzite, Slate, Travertine North Utica Shopping Center Phone: 315-733-1043
Mon - Friday: 10 AM - 6:00 PM Sat & Sun: 10:00 AM - 3:00 PM
MUCH
MORE A
Than
The Empire State Carousel
MUSEUM Open for THE SEASON!
Discover the past through theatrical reenactments, hands-on activities, and some good ol’ fun!
Spring: open Tues-Sun, 10-4 (closed Mon) Summer: open daily, 10-5
5775 ROUTE 80, COOPERSTOWN, NY The Cardiff Giant
The Children's Barnyard
FARMERSMUSEUM.ORG
I
50 YEARS, 50 WORKS, 50 REASONS
MAURICE
SENDAK THE MEMORIAL
E X H I B I T I O N
APRIL 1 - MAY 14 See highlights from Maurice Sendak’s 60-year-long career, including original illustrations from Where the Wild Things Are, Little Bear, In the Night Kitchen, and others.
5798 ROUTE 80 COOPERSTOWN, NY OPENING APRIL 1 • HOURS: TUES-SUN, 10AM - 4PM
F E N I M O R E A RT M U S E U M .O R G
© Maurice Sendak: All Rights Reserved.
Diner Hop Adirondack Diner • Apple Betty’s • Charlie’s Place Freddy’s Diner • Suzi’s Place • Riverside Diner • Wendy’s Diner
Itching to get out of the house after a long winter? Start a weekly diner hop and check out our area’s finer diners! In fact, we’ll get you started, just “Like” our Diner Hop post on our Facebook page (deadline is Sat., April 8th) and you could win a $175 Diner Hop package, a $25 gift certificate to every one of our 7 MVL diners!
Vernon’s
Apple Betty Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner
HOME STYLE COOKING
•Daily breakfast
Friday Fish Fry!
& luncheon specials •Ask about our family bowling special!
Nothing’s finer than...
Freddy’s Diner
Catering
Breakfast Served All Day!
Route 5, Vernon
Full breakfast, lunch, and dinner menu
Open: Mon-Thurs: 6am-3pm, Fri: 6am-8:30pm Sat: 6am-2pm, Sun: 7am-2pm
8125 Rt.12, Barneveld, NY
Catering and Banquet Facilities (up to 100)
101 Ford St., Boonville (315) 942-4359
www.applebettys.com • (315) 829-4875 • (315) 725-3856
(315) 896-2871 Open early everyday!
Open Wed, Thurs, Sun: 8-8, Fri & Sat: 8-9:30
9663 River Rd., Marcy
Where good friends Meet to Eat! Enjoy breakfast or a quick lunch!
Serving all your favorite homemade comfort foods! Breakfast Served All Day! Take Out & Delivery!
8170 Seneca Tpke., Clinton (315) 732-3631 Mon-Fri 6am-2pm, Sat & Sun 6am-1pm
ENTER TO WIN a $175 Diner Hop! Just “Like” our Diner Hop post on Facebook by April 8th!
“Home cookin’ at it’s finest!”
797-7709
Mushroom Stew • Chicken & Biscuits Meatloaf, Goulash & More!
Mon.-Thur. 6am-4pm, Fri. 6am-8pm Sat. and Sun. 6am-2pm
1/2 lb. Juicy Angus Burgers!
Fri. Fish Fry 11:30am-8pm
Voted 2nd best Fish Fry!
Daily Lunch Specials Serving breakfast and lunch daily
6798 State Rt. 20, Bouckville
(315) 893-4044 • Open Mon-Sat 6-2, Sun 6-Noon
54
Fresh Haddock • Giambotta
1717 Rte 8, Cassville (315) 839-5000
Mon-Thurs: 6-2, Fri: 6-8, Sat: 6-1, Sun: 6-12 (breakfast)
CLINTON
the mvl
1
Primo Pizza #
restaurant
at the Kettle
guide
315-381-3231
The Most Unique Upside Down Pizza You Ever Tasted!
Weekday Specials Celebratining Tues- 20” X-Large Cheese Pizza . . . . $9.95 7 Years Cheese Pizza & 20 Wings . . . $15.95 Clinton! Wed-Small Thurs- 2 Large Cheese Pizzas . . . . . $16.95
MVL Ad_Layout 1 7/8/15 3:05 PM Page 1 COLD BROOK
(Toppings 2.25 ea, X-Cheese 2.95)
Specialty Rolls
2755 State Rt 8, Cold Brook, NY 13324 • 826-5050
EARLVILLE
Mon. 4 - 9pm • Tues. Closed • Wed. - Sun. 12 Noon - 9pm Great Food • Great Spirits • Great Times
Life is Good at The Ohio Tavern!
Sausage . . . . . . . . 10.95 Spinach . . . . . . . . . 9.95 Antipasto . . . . . . . 11.95 Sausage & Greens . . . 12.95 Eggplant . . . . . . . . 10.95 Local delivery after 4
+Tax / Toppings Extra
Every Day Specials
Sm. Cheese & 20 wings. . . $17.95 Lg. Cheese & 20 wings. . . . $21.95 Lg. Cheese & 25 wings. . . . $24.95 Lg. Cheese & 40 wings. . . . $31.95 Lg. Cheese & 50 wings. . . . $35.95 (plus tax. celery, blue cheese, toppings extra)
Tues-Thurs: 11am-9pm, Fri & Sat: 11am-10pm, Sun: 1pm-8pm
7756 State Route 5, Clinton Located inside Spaghetti Kettle www.primopizza1.com
EARLVILLE
Corner
22 years in business!
Cafe III
Serving Breakfast and Lunch M-F: 7am-2:30pm
Hershey’s Ice Cream
FREE WI-FI
Breakfast•Lunch Dinner•Ice Cream
1 North Main St., Earlville
(315) 691-7076 • 7 days a week: 8-8
Seafood & more!
Let me create a culinary experience for you!
Prime Rib Special every Thursday $13.95 “At home” dinners our specialty!
by Chef Dominick Scalise
(315) 866-7669 122 W. Albany St., Herkimer
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
forestport
WIGWAM TAVERN
NY 28, Forestport 315-392-4811
Celebrating 30 Years! Serving healthy and delicious salads, grilled sandwiches, and homemade soups.
Heidelberg Bread & Café Find/Friend us on Facebook and check out our daily specials and upcoming events!
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
55
Herkimer
little falls
Lee Center
Great food served in a relaxing atmosphere.
RESTAURANT & BAR Casual American Cuisine
good food, good wine, good friends, good times 123 Mohawk St., Herkimer • 866-1746 www.jamosrestaurantandbar.com Now Open 7 days! Sun-Thurs: 11-9, Fri: 11-11, Sat: 11-9
Quality Food - Fresh Ingredients Relaxing Atmosphere Offering Daily Specials! 5345 Lee Center-Taberg Rd., Lee Center
Wed 3-9, Thurs 12-9, Fri & Sat 11:30-9, Sun 11:30-8, Closed Mon & Tues
www.gonecoastalrestaurant.com
American Family Fare! Open Daily 7am-3pm
facebook.com/CopperMooseAleHouse
Homemade comfort foods Full menu available til 2am!
823-3290
Breakfast, Lunch, Homemade Soups & Sandwiches and our delicious Desserts Including our Famous Cream Puffs! Canal Place, Little Falls Next to Showcase Antiques
518 East Main Street, Little Falls (315) 508-5156
Open Mon-Thurs 4-10, Fri & Sat 4-11, closed Sun
new hartford
MADISON
little falls
27 draft beers on tap featuring many NY state craft beers.
Catering & Banquets too! (315)533-7229
22 beers on tap, specializing in NY State craft beers!
Breakfast • Lunch • Dinner Take-out • Catering
7239 Route 20, Madison
www.quacksvillageinn.com (315) 893-1806 Sun, Tues-Thurs: 6:30am-7pm, Fri & Sat: 6:30am-8pm
Voted “Best of the Best” for fish frys & wings! 10 Clinton Rd., New Hartford • (315) 732-9733 Mon-Sat: 10am-2am, Sun: 12pm-2am www.killabrewsaloon.com
Experience the taste of Naples! Craft Beer & Wine Available!
Specializing in Authentic Neopolitan Pizza! Using only the highest quality ingredients! Pizzas only take 90 seconds in our 800+ oven!
Also look for our Food Truck!
Truck available for on-site catering! Book for the season now!
8636 Seneca Turnpike, New Hartford • (315) 864-3728 Mon-Sat: 11am-9pm, Closed Sundays Menu online at: mangiamacrina.letseat.at
S
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! 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
new hartford
P h So Te An Ui Rc Ai aN nT R E Enjoy authentic Lebanese Cuisine Full Buffet & Salad Bar served Mon-Fri 11:30-2:30 Wednesday Night Buffet 4:30-8:30 Serving Lunch & Dinner Mon-Sat
Full Menu Available Mon-Thurs 11:30-9pm, Fri & Sat 11:30-10pm
FrenchRoad, Road, New New Hartford 733-2709 623623 French Hartford(315) (315) 733-2709
Locally Owned & Operated
“We are your home town pizzeria!”
past 5 years! Voted #1 pizza for
(315) 736-4549 • Open 7 days a week • 4462 Commercial Dr., New Hartford www.tonyspizzeriaanddeli.com
Catering Available • Homemade Desserts Every Day
www.raspberriescafeutica.com • Facebook: Raspberries Rome / Raspberries Utica • Kids Menu Available
1700 North James St., Rome (315) 336-1111 Breakfast & Lunch daily 7am-3pm
2634 Genesee St., South Utica (315) 724-6795 Breakfast & Lunch daily 7am-3pm Dinner Wed - Sat 5pm-10pm
Oneida
4784 Commercial Dr., New Hartford (315) 736-1363 Breakfast & Lunch daily 7am-3pm
Oriskany Falls
Specializing in the area’s only coal-fired pizza oven!
MARIO’S PIZZERIA 30 YEARS OF EXCELLENCE!
Homemade, Hand-tossed
Pizza! Calzones • Wings
Live Music! Customizable catering for any size event!
eat in or take out
Chesterfield’s
tuscan oven 2184 Glenwood Plaza, Oneida (315) 361-9900 Mon-Thurs: 11-9, Fri 7 Sat: 11-10, Sun: 12-8
You don’t have to go to Philly for a great Philly! Just head to Oriskany Falls to Mario’s!
t Ask abouiz za p y il our da ials! spec
Full Italian dinner menu! friday fish fry
Cold subs/Hot tunnels
184 N. Main St., Oriskany Falls
(315) 821-7288 Tues-Sat: 11-10, Sun: 11-9
ROME
Brenda’s Natural Foods Something Good & a Lot of It!
salisbury
The Country Store with More!
www.brendasnaturalfoods.com
Natural Food Cafe Now Open! 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
www.countrystoreny.com
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
utica
simple. fresh. delicious. breakfast • lunch • espresso • pastries • cakes
Champagne Brunch
Banquets
Weddings
8524 Fish Hatchery Rd, Rome, NY 13440 315-533-7710 www.deltalakeinn.com
Weekend Specials! Haddock Specials
Prime Rib Every Sat. Night!
Wood Fired za! Brick Oven Piz t Take Ou y! & Deliver
Authentic Homemade Pasta Available! 5 Signature Sauces To Create Your Own Entree!
(315) 33PIZZA
615 Erie Blvd. W., Rome Open M-Thurs 11-9, Fri & Sat 11-10, Sun 12-8
DiCastro’s BRICK OVEN
pre-order until 3/10, then all items will be in stock for grab-n-go on 3/15
Bunnie Macarons!
Signature Cakes, Grab-n-go cakes, Cookies, In-house Macarons, Pastries & Cheese Cakes
53 Franklin Square, Utica • (315) 790-5747 Cafe Hours: Mon-Thurs 7-8, Fri & Sat 7-10, Sun 8-1
Newly Expanded Bakery! 52 Seneca St, Utica • (the back of Bite Cafe) Bakery Hours: Mon-Sat 8-6, Sun 8-1
sharon springs
bitebakeryandcafe.com T
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
58
Easter Themed Cupcakes Mini Bunnie Cakes Italian Cassata Available for
#downtownutica
Hurry to Bite Bakery before the Easter Bunny scoops up all the adorable Bunnie Macarons!
utica Now serving wine & beer!
Save room for dessert at Mi Casa!
Creaciones del Caribe
1st Floor Breakfast, Lunch, “Grab-and-Go!” Deliveries, 8am-2pm Take Out & Catering!
(Creations of the Caribbean) Fresh & all natural ingredients
Check out our weekly specials on facebook and at www.rososcafe.com
Luisa Martinez - chef
Open: Mon-Fri 9-2 185 Genesee St 2nd Floor, Utica
1315 Genesee Street, Utica
(315) 864-3057 Open Mon & Tue 10am-10pm, Thurs-Sun 10am-2am, Closed Wed
Washington Mills
315 735-7676
Famous for our Tenderloin Steak sandwich!
Shop Our Great Selection Of Ready To Cook Meals!!
Still Time To Place Easter Orders: Italian Ham Pie, Cassata, Easter Bread And More!!
A l l Of Our Cook i e s, “Pust i e s”A nd B ak e d Goods A re A l l Handmade , A l way s Fre sh, Ne v e r Froze n!! Have An Upcoming Party Or Event, Contact Us For All Of Your Catering Needs!!
Shop O ur L i ne Of P ast a, Sa uc e s, St art e r s And Re ady T o Cook Me al s; Ot he r L oc al P roduc t s T oo! !
-(315) 896-2173-
Open Monday -Through- Friday 8:00AM -To- 4:00PM -And- Saturday, April 15th, From 9:00AM -To- 3:00PM Visit Us Online For Our Complete Easter Holiday Hours!!
-www.sammyandanniefoods.com-
Homemade Pasta! Fresh and made to order!
Fish Fry Fridays! Contemporary American • Private Functions • Reservations Recommended
SERVING WINE AND BEER! LUNCH AND DINNER • CALL FOR DAILY SPECIALS
900 Culver Ave., Utica • 315-765-0271 • Open Tues-Sat 4:30-9pm www.willowsofutica.com
westmoreland
ASK ABOUT OUR CATERING MENU • Banquet Room (Seats up to 35) Open at 11am, Saturday open at 4pm, closed Sunday & Monday
3963 Oneida St., Washington Mills • (315) 864-8149
Yorkville 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.
Serving lunch and dinner 7 days a week. Open til 2am 7362 East Main Street, Westmoreland (315) 853-1351
KARAM’S Middle Eastern Bakery & Restaurant 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
59
mv living
antique shopping guide Munnsville
Antiques Guide Spotlight on
Between Us Sisters
Bouckville
Canal House Antiques
Odd & Old
Valandrea’s Madison
Victorian
Rose
ANTIQUE GALLERY
The Gallery Antiques at Pinebrick
Earlville Jewett’s Cheese
Sherburne
BlackCat
ANTIQUES
Corner
See The Man
Cafe III
If you “seek antiques,” it’s a great time to get out of the house and explore the greater Bouckville area! There’s a Spring Shop Hop April 7-9, 10am-5pm. Look for the “Spring Shop Hop” starburst in the participating antique dealers’ ads below. Take a break from antiquing and enjoy breakfast or lunch at Suzi’s Place in Bouckville or the famous Quack’s Village Inn in Madison. On a sunny day you can walk or bike the Chenango Canal Trail. Spring is an exciting time to visit local waterfalls like picturesque Stockbridge Falls in Munnsville or head south to Sherburne to see the breathtaking Rexford Falls. 60
Celebrating our 18th year in business!
BlackCat
ANTIQUES
Attic Addicts The Queen’s Closet
A little bit country, a little bit primitive!
Consignment at its Finest!
Pristine, Practical, and Priced Right!
Specializing in estate sales, large and small.
Clothing Jewelry Household Items Furniture
Conducted with respect and dignity. We take the pressure out of estate liquidation, moving, or downsizing.
Mon-Fri: 10am-5pm Sat: 10:30am-3pm
Call for a consultation:
New consignment by appointment only
(315) 736-9160
22 Oriskany Blvd., Yorkville (315) 736-9160 www.thequeenclosetatticaddicts.com
Your destination for furniture, hand stenciled signs, vintage clothing, warm glow candles, silk arrangements & more! Spring
Shop Hop!
Spring is Here! Open April 1st
April 7-9 10-5
10242 Route 12N, Remsen
Open Daily 10-5 • (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
Spring
SIMPLY SPRING APRIL 1st & 2nd
Shop Hop! April 7-9 10-5
Canal House Antiques Multi-Dealer Shop
Specializing in antique furniture, glassware, jewelry, books, linens, and primitive rug hooking accessories
(315) 893-7737
April hours: Thurs-Mon: 10-4
6737 Route 20, Bouckville
www.canalhouseantiques.biz
Spring April 7-9 10-5
6768 Route 20, Bouckville (315) 893-7676 www.depotantiquegallery.com
2017 Show Dates: June 2 & 3 and August 14-20
ANTIQUE GALLERY Open Apr-Oct: 10-5 daily; Nov-Dec: 10-4 daily Jan-Mar: Fri & Sat only 10-4
The Gallery Antiques at Pinebrick A multi-dealer shop specializing in advertising, petroliana, lamps, glass, furniture & quality smalls.
Look for our 1960s Texaco sign! (315) 893-7752
6790 Rte 20, Bouckville
www.thegallerycoop.com
Antiques, collectibles, rare, weird, and unusual. Always accepting your old treasures
7505 Rte 5, Kirkland • 315-725-0360 (intersection of Route 5 and Route 233)
Facebook: Cool Stuff Consignment Shop Hours: Tuesday - Sunday 10am - 4pm
Foothills Mercantile
Shop Hop!
Our lovely gallery offers a full range of antiques, fine furniture, and vintage collectibles!
Cool Stuff Consignment Shop
The BIG RED BARN filled to the rafters with antiques and vintage pieces, collectibles, glassware, furniture, accessories, and dealer supplies in all price ranges.
Over 30 Vendors!
Open 6 days: 10-5:30 , closed Tues. 8124 Route 12, Barneveld (315) 896-2681
Little Falls
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Antique Center More than 50 vendors on 2 floors!
Spring
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Canal Place, Little Falls Open Every Day 10-5 315-823-4309 www.littlefallsantiquecenter.com
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HAPPY EASTER PARTY!
Over 160 Vendor booths and display cases!
Come join the fun! Come meet the Easter Bunny in person, who will be signing autographs and singing KARAOKE! GIANT BAKE SALE, KARAOKE BAND, GIANT EASTER BUNNY!
SATURDAY, APRIL 8th!
100 E. Main St., Mohawk (Thruway Exit 30)
(315) 219-5044 www.mohawkantiquesmall.com
MOHAWK ANTIQUES MALL
Main Street Gift Shoppe Newport’s Best Kept Secret for Country Primitive Furnishings!
Old Century Paint, Irvings Lighting, Curtains, Furniture, Spring Decor. & More! 7431 Main St Rt. 28 Newport, NY
OPEN: Wed thru Sat 11:30am til 8pm 315 845-8835 www.mainstreetristorante.com Check out our popular Ristorante on site!
Now Open!
Odd & Old Trade Co. Auction Hall & Co-op
Clean outs, Consignment, Buy, Trade, Sell! Open 7 days a week, 10-5
5251 Main St., Munnsville NY
(315) 404-4969 or (315) 495-7099
Picker’s Dynasty
Estate Sales & Content Liquidation
Mon, Wed-Sat: 10-5, Sun: 11:30-4:30 Closed Tuesdays
NEWPORT MARKETPLACE Top Notch Garden Center 7583 Main St., Newport, NY (315) 845-8822
OVER 54 VENDORS! NEW ITEMS ARRIVING DAILY! antiques • vintage • re-purposed handcrafted items • unique gifts • honey • cheese • holistic & local food store • muck boots kombucha on tap • grass fed beef & pork • garden accessories
FOR THOSE WHO CRAVE THE UNIQUE! Open Mon-Fri 9-6, Sat & Sun 9-5 • Visit us on Facebook!
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
ESTATE & HOUSE SALES APPRAISALS ALWAYS BUYING
THE POTTING SHED ANTIQUES
ALL U.S. COINS WANTED
ALSO BUYING YOUR UNWANTED OR BROKEN JEWELRY
Visit my eclectic spaces located at Little Falls Antique Center & Mohawk Antiques Mall CALL: (315) 527-5707 • www.pickersdynasty.com
Inventory and our Estate Sale Schedule online: www.thepottingshedantiques.com
315-736-5214
Don & Nancy Hartman, 52 Oriskany Blvd., Whitesboro (Next to Kinney’s)
Antique & Unique! Spring
Buy • Sell • Trade
Shop Hop! April 7-9 10-5
See The Man 54 N. Main St., Sherburne (607) 316-8463 • Open Wed-Sun
uuuuuuuuuuu 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 DON’T “Spring Clean” u u u Without US! u u u DON’T just “Trash It” u u We buy OLD STUFF! u u Open 7 days 10-5 u u www.showcaseantiquesofcny.com u uuuuuuuuuuu
SHOWCASE Antiques of CNY
ernon Variety Shoppes Antique & Variety Shoppes
5349 Route 5, Vernon (315) 829-2105 Open 10-5 every day
Victorian
315-893-1786
Shop Hop!
Thurs-Tues: 10-5, Closed Wed
April 7-9
10-5
3371 Maple Ave., Bouckville www.victorianrosevintage.com
Spring
Shop Hop! April 7-9 10-5
Antiques, Shabby Chic, Recycled Furniture, Accessories, and more!
Painted and Repurposed
Open Thurs, Fri, & Sat: 10am-5pm
6831 Indian Opening Rd., Bouckville
16 Schuyler St., Boonville (315) 709-7686
Vintage & Antique Furniture Open Fri, Sat & Sun 10-4 (315) 893-7162
Weeden’ s Mini Mall 100 Shops Located under One Roof
Located 4 miles North of Sylvan beach 8056 Route 13, Blossvale (315) 245-0458 Open 10-5 every day
A Multi Dealer Shop
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Terri’s Treasures
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337 Genesee St., Utica (315) 738-1333 www.vintagefurn.com
Come Spend the Day With Us! Route 233 Westmoreland, NY 1/4 mile North of NYS Thruway Exit 32 www.westmorelandantiquecenter.com
Sitting Pretty
Colorful benches at Valandrea’s Venture in Bouckville, one of the antique shops participating in the Spring Shop Hop April 7-9
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Herkimer county historical society
Herkimer Co. During WWI Part 4: liberty loan bonds By Susan Perkins, Town of Manheim Historian
Liberty Loan Bonds—the idea of the Secretary of the Treasury William Gibbs McAdoo—were sold in the United States to support the allied cause in World War I. Subscribing to the bonds became a symbol of patriotic duty in the United States and introduced the idea of financial securities to many citizens for the first time. The bonds were sold with the promise to pay the money back with interest on a certain date. The Liberty Loan Bonds allowed Americans on the home front to feel they were making a valuable contribution to the war effort. The third Liberty Loan Bonds were issued in April 1918 and to help promote the idea of Liberty Loan Bonds and to encourage participation, the Liberty Loan Coach and the Liberty Ball were created. They traveled from Buffalo, N.Y., to New York City starting on April 6, 1918, and were expected to arrive in Albany on April 24th. The Liberty Coach was made in Paris in 1893 for a cost of $2,500 for James Gordon Bennett Jr. (1841-1918), publisher of the New York Herald. On the coach, there was room for the driver, guard, 11 passengers on top and four inside the coach. The horses that pulled the coach had belonged to Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt (1877-1915). Vanderbilt was aboard the Lusitania on his way to England to go to the International Horse Breeders Association meeting, when it was torpedoed by a German submarine. On the back of the coach was the
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Liberty Ball in Frankfort. The Liberty Loan Coach and the Liberty Ball traveled from Buffalo to New York City during a campaign to hasten the sale of Liberty Loan Bonds.
word “Liberty” and beneath it “Buffalo to New York.” Posters on the sides gave a description of the purpose of the trip. An American flag flew from the rear of the coach. Officials from the communities along the route accompanied it and meetings were held so Liberty Bonds could be purchased. It visited 84 cities and towns in New York State. The Liberty Ball was made of metal painted red, white and blue and was seven feet in diameter. The mayors of Herkimer and Little Falls and the village presidents of Frankfort, Ilion and Mohawk, N.Y., all greeted the arrival of the Liberty Coach and Liberty Ball in their communities. The first stop in Herkimer County was on April 18, 1918, in Frankfort. The Herkimer County Historical Society is fortunate to have photographic postcards depicting this event. Marching in the parade were employees from Pratt Chuck Fork & Hoe Company, which made pitchforks the employees were carrying in the parade. Two of the workers carried a banner that read “These Forks Are Going to France to Help Prod the Huns Back to Their Own Dung Heap.” The Acme Road Machinery Company employees paraded Liberty Parade contingent of Acme Road Machinery with one of their water tanks displaying Company employees, with one of their water tanks. the words “To Drown the Kaiser.” The schools in Frankfort were closed so the school children could march at the end of the parade carrying American flags and singing patriotic songs. The next day, April 19, the Liberty Coach and Liberty Ball went to Ilion. The ball was pushed there by Boy Scouts from Frankfort and taken over at the Frankfort-Ilion line by Ilion Boy Scouts, who then pushed the ball down West Main Street. Lunch was held at the Hotel Osgood in Ilion. After lunch, dignitaries took an auto ride through the Ilion Gorge and visited part of the Remington Arms Plant. The parade took place that afternoon with the Liberty Loan Committee,
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Ilion Board of Trade, village trustees, high school students, Boys Scouts, and Camp Fire Girls participating. The ball was then pushed to the Ilion-Mohawk line by the Ilion Boy Scouts and met there by the Mohawk Boy Scouts, who pushed it through Mohawk. A committee of citizens met the coach at the Ilion-Mohawk line. At Fulmer Creek Bridge, schoolchildren and members of the Red Cross joined the parade. The coach stopped at the corner of Main and Otsego Streets, where speeches were given.
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Mohawk Street A Herkimer War Chest Association was formed in December 19, 1917 in Herkimer to collect pledges from residents to purchase Liberty Loan Bonds. An appeal letter was written and the Boy Scouts of Herkimer folded 4,000 letters that were sent to the citizens of Herkimer who were asked to pledge a weekly amount to the War Chest Campaign. Each person that pledged was given a button that said, “Herkimer War Chest.” It had an eagle standing on top of a chest. A big parade was held on New Year’s Day to signify the opening the Herkimer War Chest Campaign. The Otsego Farmer dated Jan. 11, 1918, reported that the Herkimer War Chest Association was assured $1,578.68 each week during the duration of the war. “No slackers ... everybody do their part.” Money came in and by Sept. 13, 1918 it was reported that if you had not paid your pledge by then your name would be listed in the September 16th village newspaper. Herkimer’s War Chest closed on Feb. 21, 1918, with 2,700 residents having paid their pledge in full; 2,014 paid their pledge in part; and 250 never paid their pledge. •
An opening reception for the World War I exhibit will be held April 26, 2017 at the Herkimer County Historical Society from 5 to 7 p.m. Afterward, a program will be given by Cheryl Pula titled “The Lost Battalion” based on the American regiment caught behind enemy lines in the Argonne Forest. The Herkimer County Historical Society is located at 400 N. Main Street in Herkimer. Sue Perkins is the Executive Director of the Herkimer County Historical Society and historian for the town of Manheim.
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Shawangunk nature preserve, cold brook Peggy’s kitchen with her new stove, 1994. Water is fetched by bucket
TALES FROM
SHAWANGUNK Chapter 31
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 and also her childhood memories growing up in Westmoreland.
April 1st 1994 My favorite part of Easter is dressing up in a new spring outfit. Of course, when I was a kid, I also looked forward to the basket the Easter Bunny left at the foot of my bed. There’d be my own little box of raisins, a couple of comics, an egg we decorated ourselves, and a toy. Maybe a little kite! Hats were big. Mom often made her own hat to match her homemade dress and coat. She did a lot of sewing, and we found it annoying when we wanted to watch TV. Whenev-
er her foot pushed the pedal on her sewing machine upstairs, the TV would fuzz out downstairs. (“Mom! We’re trying to watch The Lone Ranger!”) I like to sew, too, and make up patterns based on clothes I like. Today I cut up old wool garments from a rummage sale to make a braided rug for the Children’s Cottage. My neck muscles get tight from all that cutting. I start tomatoes, celery, and flowers inside. It’s a little intimidating to plant seeds; they’re like children, so tiny, so precious, and so important! It’s the beginning of a big commitment. What if I over-water, under-water, don’t provide enough light or heat, etc.? But they’ve sprouted and are doing wonderfully on the shelves I built, hanging in front of the south windows on chains.
The snow has finally melted enough to walk to the big beaver pond at sunset. The first time I hear the call of one of our returning migratory birds, or awakening frogs, my heart melts. It’s like the voice of a dear friend who has come home after a long absence. I pass through little pockets of warm air that hint of spring breezes that will gently waken our winter-weary wilder lands. What’s that strange whirring, whistling sound near the mossy meadow? Ah, I remember: It’s the rapid beat of the wings of the wood cock as he ascends as high as he can, far into the unfathomable heavens toward Venus that hangs serenely suspended, silently gleaming between alabaster clouds. He reaches the pinnacle of flight and song, and then silently glides back to the spot where he started.
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New green leaves on the quaking aspen are experiencing their first tremor of life in the windy tree tops, creating a gentle rustle, so different from the starkness of winter wind whistling around bare branches. I don’t hear the hermit thrush yet; any day now, its ethereal music will echo throughout the woods, soaring to heights out of our hearing range. Near the pond, a few red-winged blackbirds cluck and sing, “Tisk, tisk, wheeee!” from among the pussy willows where downy catkins, soft as kittens, are ready to fledge. An American bittern on the far side of the pond makes a percussive “Glub, glub! Glub, glub!” A few peepers tentatively call. It will be a couple of weeks before it’s warm enough for them all to waken, then what a sym-
Seedlings in trays enjoying the sun streaming in south window
We swept it off at first, wanting to cohabiphony there’ll be! It’s dark when I return to my little cottage tate peaceably, putting it in the garden for in the woods because gathering clouds are fertilizer, but eventually, it was overwhelmbeginning to obscure the starlight. Tim has ing. It stuck to our feet, got tracked into our fallen asleep, reading, and I decide to get an cottage, and created a stink. But how to evict extra bucket of water into the house for the a porcupine out of a 60-foot tree? I wasn’t about to climb up after night in case it rains. I don’t use a flashlight her! because I think my night vision is adequate after being out so long. But I’m startled by a strange rustle and shadowy scurry right in front of me on the stone steps down to the creek. Alert, and scared, I stop. A dark, round shape hurries past my feet. A porcupine! Jeepers! I almost tripped on it! From now on, I’d better bring a flashlight. Last fall Ms. Prickly moved into the big old hemlock on the path to the garden, spending the first part of the winter there, sleeping in swaying boughs 60 feet above the ground. She dined on the tender tips, but not enough to kill it, and the pruning actually helped decrease the shade the tree created in our garden. So we didn’t mind at first, but eventually, the pile of scat that cascaded through the branchPeggy dressed for es from her home high above Easter, 1954 started spilling into our path. R
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The Wood Cock has returned Last time I went up a tree with a porcupine in it, I got a handful of quills! We waited until we saw her ambling on the ground one day, then Tim secured a three-foot-wide band of aluminum flashing wrapped around the trunk. It looks terrible, but some brown spray paint helps! We hoped her claws couldn’t hold on to the smooth metal. And it worked! She had to find another tree for a winter roost, and there are heaps to choose from! In the morning, “V” formations of geese wake us up with their raucous calls. They speed by, only yards above us almost brushing the tree tops. We can hear the beat of their wings between calls. “This way! This way,” they sing. “Come over to the old beaver pond at Shawangunk for breakfast! We’ll have a short rest before continuing to the Adirondack mountain lakes. I know a lovely cove for raising a family.” It’s easy to imagine the consciousness of other creatures. I’m convinced we share similar awareness and needs, although they differ according to the shape we are created in. We are fellow travelers, staying at the
Peggy built this kitchen in 1974
Tim reads and writes by kerosene lamp Earth Inn for as long as we can, hoping for minimal trouble and pain. Soon, all of the North Country will resound with them, singing their little hearts out, crooning love songs for their mates, going about the important business of raising a family. Early 1990s We are planning to watch a movie we borrowed from the library and Tim falls while going up to get the VCR in the loft. He is on the floor, moaning in pain. I am very scared and feel like crying. But before I can
begin to consider how to deal with the situation, he’s sits up and says he’s OK! “I dislocated my shoulder,” he says. “Now, it’s popped back in.” He still looks pale, has some pain, and has to be careful of how he moves his arm, but insists that it’ll be fine. I tell him that I’ll split all the wood and feed the fire at night for a few days. Later this week, I install a new gas cook stove. I’ve never done this before and am quite intimidated, but I’m tired of cooking on stinky, sooty kerosene burners and really want a nice stove and oven. I did extra piano tuning jobs to pay for it. Tim helps carry it in. It’s hard on his shoulder, and I feel badly about that. But I do all the rest—pipe connections, sawing off the counter, moving cabinets, etc. How empowering it is to have accomplished this! I am able to bake four loaves of bread all at once! I’m so excited and pleased. Next day, I rebuild the shelves
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under the sink and put away all the stuff I’d shoved in the back room so the house would look neat for my piano student. Seems like there’s more counter space than before! I bought the stove in Holland Patent after going to a Garden Club meeting where everyone wore spring hats. Even Mom and sister Barb came. I never would have considered joining Garden Club, but Tim thought it would be a good way for me to get to know the local ladies and to let people realize that we’re not some cult group or survivalists living in the woods likely to cause a Waco or Jamestown incident. The problem is, I am very shy about speaking in front of people, and my weak voice compounds it. It’s a huge effort, and painful for me to simply say my name in front of a group, so I don’t know how much PR I can do. Still, it’s good for me to meet these wholesome women who are the heart and soul of our communities, encouraging gardening, beauty and ecology, sponsoring scholarships and taking care of their families, country, and community. I hear a Canadian harpist play at our coffee house at church and am totally enchanted! Although I watch her intently, I don’t realize until afterward that her left hand is
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prosthesis. It looks perfect, complete with engagement ring, and shaped so she can pluck one string at a time. The Peg’s sister Barb wears a hat rest of the made by our mother for Garden rich harClub (with Marion Jones of Poland) monies are filled in with her right hand. I’m inspired. Gee, if she can do it, maybe I can, too! She encourages me, and Tim is supportive. I find the harp shop and a beginner’s book she recommends. Tim helps me pick out a beautiful harp with lush carving on the sides, but I’m so excited, and nervous about spending so much money, I have a headache for two days. I promise myself to spend at least a few minutes practicing each night before I go to bed, no matter how tired I am, and I’m usually exhausted. Before I know it though, an hour has gone by; it’s so beautiful and so much fun! Eventually, Tim joins me on harmonica and guitar. He learned to play harmonica in his car when the kids were little, because the radio didn’t work, and it helped to keep them entertained. We start playing for church services and even do concerts. His grandfather the Rev. Hume and his wife, Golda, also performed duets together, singing hymns in church or outside of bars to dissuade men from going in and spending their precious paycheck needed by their families. During rehearsals, Tim and I have to negotiate how much we can say to each other. I tend to go into music director mode and want to make everything coordinated and perfect. Tim wants the freedom to interpret. He hates for me to say, “You have too m a n y buzzes” and can only tolGrandma Ethel Huck Renew and her sister Ruth erate me Huck Weston frolic in new hats in 1918, East Utica saying, “faster
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or slower, louder or softer.” Sometimes I get mad and kick him out of our duo, but eventually I forgive, because it’s hard to play duets alone! Performances are interesting experiences. One is at a fish hatchery in Ava, N.Y., where our host, Tom Tkachuk, raises native Atlantic salmon and brook trout for restocking central N.Y. waterways. He leads us over an ATV trail to a lovely wood where I find white wintergreen berries to nibble on. Just beyond, a rushing stream
flows directly under a tiny, unfinished cabin perched on the edge of a spectacular cliff by Fish Creek (which looks more like a river to me!) “We could have the concert here,” he suggests. It’s tiny, but openings for windows or screens on three sides give an incredible view of the gorge. He shows us an opening in the floor where you can look straight down on the 50-foot waterfall. “Where will the audience sit?” I inquire, backing away, nervously. “Oh, she’ll be here soon.” And so, we play for an audience of two, accompanied by the ambient resonance of falling water, as the veil of twilight gently embraces Fish Creek. We must quickly brush mosquitoes off between notes, and play with fingers sticky with humidity, but our audience loves it. And they get more and more enthusiastic about the beauty of our music as they enjoy the effects of their cocktails. I am completely lifted off my feet in the biggest bear hug ever from our host when we finish, and we are pleased to later learn
NEW BOOK!
Tales from Shawangunk by Peggy Spencer Behrendt 2016, 122 pages
This memoir is a compilation of the first two years of articles first published in Mohawk Valley Living magazine about how Shawangunk Nature Preserve began. Well documentated with pictures, these true stories describe days of adventure, struggle, commitment and comedy that are sure to entertain and inspire.
Available at Tom’s Natural Foods in Clinton, Peter’s Cornucopia in New Hartford, Brenda’s Natural Foods in Rome, Sunflower Naturals in Mapledale, and the Little Falls Food Co-op (all donations go directly to the Preserve)
that our Courting Concert for two is successful because he gets the girl, and we eventually return for a wedding (for another couple) at the romantic Waterfall Cottage. • 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.
www.shawangunknaturepreserve.com
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GENESEE JOE’S
live & local
April showers bring … people out of the house and into the clubs! I always tell people about how great local music is and ask them to go check out some live local music. I thought, “What if I asked some super fans about their love for the local scene?” I would ask them the basic questions: where, why, and who are your favorite local bands and venues? Here are some of their replies: One of the biggest fans of the group Showtime, Rhonda Starer says, “It’s a combination of the musicians’ passion for their craft and the music itself being channeled through their instruments. The only way I can sum up the way live music makes me feel is to say live music pulls me into a very “zen” space— living in the moment. There is so much musical talent in Central New York that I love many local bands. But my top three are Showtime, SBT (Showtime Blues Trio), and POORtIM. There are several great places around to go hear them. My top three faves are: Lukin’s on Varick Street in Utica, The Gig at Exit 33 at Turning Stone, and Shifty’s on Burnet Avenue in Syracuse. A guy who’s been into local music and has seen all the “greats” is Rick Boehlert: “I enjoy seeing the world class local talent that we have here in CNY. Having two younger guitar-playing brothers, live music is ‘normal’ to me. It affects me by allowing me to unwind and to socialize with my musical family.” Rick likes too many players to name a favorite but says he enjoys the MV Blues Society Jams. Marc Berns can be called a local “taper” because of his hours of local audio and video work. Marc says, “It’s interesting to watch live entertainment because it’s freer, more open, not controlled in a sterile environment, and more receptive to an audience. His favorite bands are Blueprints, Les Brers, King
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Kool, the Blarney Rebel Band, and the Paul Case Band. His favorite bar locations are Happy Sam’s, Utica Brews, Unity Hall, and the Stanley. Representing the hard rock and metal crowd is uber fan Mark Flagg. He says, “I go see live local bands because it makes me feel good and it helps me escape the everyday things like the stresses of life. Mark loves The Bomb and hits up 12 North and Silverado Inn as his favorite spots. Colleen Jackson has seen a lot of bands and recently returned to the area. She says, “Live music is performance art. It’s all about the organic, dynamic interaction, the performance, what happens between the artists and the audience, the experience of it in its dynamic interpretation. It’s about the symbiosis of the art and the patron. You feel an active part of the experience, and therein lies the gratification of live music. That experience is what it’s about for me.” She cites Sinners Ink, the Paul Case Band, the MV Blues Society Jams, Swamp Drivers, and Thunderwatt as her faves. There you have it from folks who love live local music. Now, please go check out some. News ’n’ Notes Look for Thunderwatt (yeah, my band) to return to CNY stages after our winter hiatus. The April shows include one at our favorite haunt, Lukin’s, on the 15th and a new venue for us, Nicole’s of Camden on Route 13 in Camden. Nicole’s hosts live music weekends and has a great bar and menu. • Listen to Genesee Joe live on 92.7FM, The DRIVE.
Advertiser Directory please support Our sponsors, they make this magazine possible Antiques Attic Addicts, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Back of the Barn, Remsen . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Black Cat Antiques, Earlville . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Butternut Barn, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . . 61 Canal House Antiques, Bouckville . . . . . . 61 Cool Stuff Consignment, Clinton . . . . . . . . 61 The Depot Antiques, Bouckville . . . . . . . . 61 Foothills Mercantile, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . 61 Fort Schuyler Trading Company, Utica . . . . . 52 Gallery Antiques at Pinebrick, Bouckville . . . 61 Little Falls Antique Center, Little Falls . . . . 61 Mohawk Antiques Mall, Mohawk . . . . . . . . . 62 Newport Marketplace, Newport . . . . . . . . . . 62 Odd & Old Trade Co., Munnsville . . . . . . . 62 The Online Exchange, Dolgeville . . . . . . . . . 62 Picker’s Dynasty, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . 62 The Potting Shed Antiques, Whitesboro . . . 62 See the Man Antiques & Collectibles, Sherburne . . 63 Showcase Antiques, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . 63 Terri’s Treasures, Boonville . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Valadrea’s Venture, Bouckville . . . . . . . . . 63 Vernon Variety Shoppes, Vernon . . . . . . . . . 63 Victorian Rose, Bouckville . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Vintage Furnishings & Collectibles, Utica . . . 63 Weeden’s Mini Mall, Blossvale . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Westmoreland Antique Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Apartment Rentals Apartment Connection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Art Classes & Supplies Full Moon Art Center, Camden . . . . . . . . 27 Art Galleries Full Moon Art Center, Camden . . . . . . . . . 27 Fusion Art Gallery, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 View, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Art and Picture Framing Fusion Art Gallery, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Fynmore Studios, New Hartford/Boonville . . 35 Artists and Art Studios Frank Page . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 Attorneys Antonowicz Group, Rome/Utica . . . . . . . . . . 39 Harris-Courage & Grady . . . . . . . . . . . 14, 17 Authors Local Grumpy Tomatoes, Autumn Kuhn . . . . . . 25 Auto Dealerships Steet-Ponte Auto Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 Automotive Repair Clinton Collision, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Precision Unlimited, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . 77 Automotive, Custom Fabrication Custom Fab, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Awards & Engraving Speedy Awards, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . 46 Bakeries, Pastry, and Candy Shops Bagel Grove, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Caruso’s Cafe, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Florentine Pastry Shop, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 16 The Friendly Bake Shop, Frankfort . . . . . . 29 Heidelberg Baking Company, Herkimer . . . 55 Juliano’s Greenhouses & Market, Schuyler . . 12 Karam’s Middle East Bakery, Yorkville . . . . 59 Lizzy’s Cupcakery, New Hartford . . . . . . . 13 So Sweet Candy Cafe, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Star Bakery, Whitesboro and Utica . . . . . . . . 10 Sweet Escape Chocolate Lounge, Utica . . . 26
Wicked Sweets, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Bike Shops Dick’s Wheel Shop, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . 68 Books Berry Hill Book Shop, Deansboro . . . . . . . 29 Bowling Adirondack Diner and Lanes, Barneveld . . 54 State Bowl with Cosmic Bowling, Ilion . . . . . 7 Brewery Woodland Hop Farm & Fermentation, Utica . . 10 Cabinets and Kitchens Custom Woodcraft, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . . 70 Knotty By Nature, Bridgewater . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Camping and Hiking Supply Plan B, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 Catering Club Monarch, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Dominick’s Deli & Catering, Herkimer . . . . . 55 Gone Coastal, Lee Center . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Knuckleheads Brewhouse, Westmoreland . . . 59 Maria’s Pasta Shop, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 RoSo’s Cafe & Catering, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Cheese (see Produce) Child Care Child Care Council, 1-888-814-KIDS . . . . . 18 Clothing The Queen’s Closet, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . 61 The Village Crossing, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Walk-in Closet, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
SZAREK’S Hanging Baskets Hydroponic Heirloom Tomatoes Vegetable Plants Fall Mums 7446 E. South St., Clinton 315.853.5901
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Coffee and Coffee Shops Fort Schuyler Trading Company, Utica . . . . . 52 Community Organization Mohawk Valley Food Action . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Consignment The Online Exchange, Dolgeville . . . . . . . . 62 The Queen’s Closet, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Walk-in Closet, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Child Care Child Care Council, 1-888-814-KIDS . . . . . 18 CSAs (Community Supported Agriculture) Hughes Farm CSA, Deansboro . . . . . . . . 34 Szarek Greenhouses, Clinton . . . . . . . . . 20 Debt Management/Student Loan Consultation Harris-Courage & Grady . . . . . . . . . . . 14, 17 Delis Olde Kountry Market, Vernon . . . . . . . . . 42 LaFamiglia Bosonne’s Sausage, Utica . . . . . 38 Dentistry Neighborhood Family Dentistry, Utica . . . . 9 Diners Adirondack Diner and Lanes, Barneveld . . 54 Apple Betty, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Charlie’s Place, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Freddy’s Diner, Boonville . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Riverside Diner, Marcy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .54 Suzi’s Place, Bouckville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Wendy’s Diner, Cassville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Dog Sitting Barney’s Angels, Frankfort . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 Estate Sales Attic Addicts, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61 Picker’s Dynasty, Little Falls and Mohawk . . 62 The Potting Shed Antiques, Whitesboro . . . 62
Events, Entertainment, and Activities CNY Arts, www.cnyart.org . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Farmers’ Museum, Cooperstown . . . . . . . 53 Fenimore Art Museum, Cooperstown . . . 2, 53 Goodsell Museum, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . 10 Remington Arms Museum, Ilion . . . . . . . . 25 Rolling Antiquer’s Antique Auto Show . . . 9 Schambach Center, Hamilton College . . . . 71 The Stanley, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 View, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Farm Equipment Clinton Tractor, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Hobby Hill Farm Sales, Rome . . . . . . . . . . 66 White’s Farm Supply, Waterville/Canastota . . 80 Feed and Farm Needs Pohl’s Feed, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Fencing Williams Fence, Deansboro . . . . . . . . . . . 65 Financial Services Van Meter & Van Meter, Little Falls . . . . . . 15 Firewood and Wood Pellets Firewood delivered . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Lincoln Davies, Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Fitness & Gyms Curves, Herkimer and Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Flooring D & D Carpets, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Lincoln Davies, Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Florists Clinton Florist, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 Village Florals, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Funeral Services Nunn & McGrath, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Prince-Boyd & Hyatt, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
Off-Center Records
Furniture Makers Custom Woodcraft, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . 70 Garden Centers and Greenhouses Casler Flower Farm, West Winfield . . . . . . . 47 Juliano’s Greenhouses & Market, Schuyler . . 12 Michael’s Greenhouses, Sauquoit . . . . . . . 46 Top Notch Garden Center, Newport . . . . . 62 Gift Shops/Shopping Between Us Sisters, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . . 45 Butternut Barn, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . . 61 Cat’s Meow, Sherburne . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Fusion Art Gallery, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Little Falls Antique Center, Little Falls . . . . 61 Main Street Gift Shoppe, Newport . . . . . . . . 62 Newport Marketplace, Newport . . . . . . . . . 62 Remington Country Store, Ilion . . . . . . . . . 25 Rose Quartz Stand, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . 13 Simply Primitives, Boonville . . . . . . . . . . . 64 White Begonia, Sherrill . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Golf Courses and Driving Range Brimfield Driving Range, Clinton . . . . . . . 43 Twin Ponds Golf & Country Club, NY Mills . . 21 Grocery/Convenience Stores The Country Store, Salisbury. . . . . . . . . . 58 Deansboro Superette, Deansboro . . . . . . . 35 Kountry Kupboard, Madison . . . . . . . . . . 68 Mohawk Village Market, Mohawk . . . . . . . 4 Olde Kountry Market, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . 42 Reilly’s Dairy, Inc., Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . . 78 Hardware/Farm & Home Lincoln Davies, Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Pohlig Enterprises, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Pohl’s Feed, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Poland Hardware, Poland . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
DEANSBORO SUPERETTE Since 1967
All things music - New & quality used Records, CDs, tapes, books, tees, memorabilia, guitars & accessories, drum accessories and more!
Home of the Monster Sub!
Middle Eastern Favorites!
We are YOUR Downtown Music Connection! Hours M-Sat 11-6 116 Bleecker St., Utica, NY 13501 315-738-7651
Furniture Ironwood Furniture, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . 22 Jeff ’s Amish Furniture, Jordanville . . . . . . . 37 John Froass & Sons, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . . 11
Humous, Kibbie, Falafel, Babaghanoush , Taboulie, Grape leaves, Spinach pies.
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Open 7 days a week! Rt 12B, Deansboro (315) 841-4377 www.deansborosuperette.com
Morgan’s Hardware, Waterville . . . . . . . . . . . 64 Turner Lumber, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Time for Me Day Spa, Clinton . . . . . . . . 65 Zensations, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33
Pharmacies Garro Drugs, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Hearing Consultants Hearing Health Hearing Centers, Rome . . . . . 42
Meats, locally raised (see Produce)
Photography Fusion Art/The Photo Shoppe, Rome . . . . . 29
Ice Cream B&F Milk, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Insurance Gates-Cole Insurance, New Hartford . . . . . 37 Farm Family Insurance, Boonville . . . . . . . 46 Marshall Agency, Ilion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 Turnbull Insurance, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 7 Interior Design/Custom Window Treatments The Added Touch Drapery, New Hartford . . . 39 Iron Work - Architectural & Ornamental Raulli’s Iron Works, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38 Jewelry Alison’s Jewelry & Repair, Utica . . . . . . . . 33 Fall Hill Beads & Gems, Little Falls . . . . . . 66 Goldmine Jewelers, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 26 Landscaping Aceti’s Classic Garden, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . 50 Lawn Mowers J.B.’s Small Engine Works, Utica . . . . . . . . 57 SD Power, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Lighting Mills Electrical Supply, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Liquor Stores and Wine Ilion Wine & Spirits, Ilion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Trenton Station Liquor & Wine, Barneveld . . . 70 Manufactured and Modular Home Builders Bono Brothers, Frankfort . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Maple Syrup (see Produce) Massage, Therapeutic
Media 92.7 The Drive WXUR, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 74 FOX33/WUTR . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Weekly Adirondack, Old Forge . . . . . . . . . . 10 WKAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 Monuments & Memorials Burdick & Enea Memorials, Clinton . . . . . . 31 Yorkville Memorials, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Motorcycle Speed/Service Center Natural Food Stores Brenda’s Natural Foods, Rome . . . . . . . . . . 58 Cooperstown Naturals, Cooperstown . . . . . 45 Peter’s Cornucopia, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 69 Sunflower Naturals, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . 25 Tom’s Natural Foods, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Novelties and Specialty Items Fort Schuyler Trading Company, Utica . . . . . 52 Optometrist Towpath Vision Care, Little Falls . . . . . . . 33 Paint and Painting Supplies Pohlig Enterprises, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Urbanik’s Paint & Wallpaper Co., Utica . . . . . 8 Painting, Interior/Exterior Dennis Polanowicz . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29 Pet Memorialization and Cremation Burdick & Enea Memorials, Clinton . . . . . . 31 Pet Services One Paw at a Time, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . 30 Pet Supplies Gemini Pets & Things, Utica . . . . . . . . 20
Physical Therapy Inertia PT, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Pizzerias DiCastro’s Brick Oven, Rome . . . . . . . . . Mangia Macrina’s Pizza, New Hartford . . Mario’s Pizza, Oriskany Falls . . . . . . . . . Primo Pizzeria, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . Tony’s Pizza, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . .
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58 56 57 55 57
Pools Geraty Pools, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Swan Pools, Ilion and New Hartford . . . . . . 26 Portable Toilets and Bathrooms Mohawk Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Primitives Between Us Sisters, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . 45 Butternut Barn, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . . 61 Main Street Gift Shop, Newport . . . . . . . . . 62 Simply Primitives, Boonville . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 Produce, Local Ben & Judy’s Sugarhouse, West Edmeston . . . . 46 Grassy Cow Dairy, Remsen . . . . . . . . . . 68 Ingles Maple, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . . 51 Jewett’s Cheese, Earlville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Jones Family Farm, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . 73 Meat Suite . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Meelan’s Meat Market, Clark Mills . . . . . . 33 Shaw’s Maple Products, Clinton . . . . . . . . . 48 Stoltzfus Family Dairy, Vernon Center . . . . 3 Sunnybrook Farm, Deansboro . . . . . . . . . 12 Three Village Cheese, Newport . . . . . . . . . . 17 Tibbits Maple, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . 48 WintersGrass Farm Raw Milk, Sauquoit . . . 73
NYS INSPECTIONS • OIL CHANGES • TUNE UPS • COLLISION WORK • AC
Watch Mohawk Valley Living Sundays on FOX33 7:30am & 11pm WUTR TV20 11:30am
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Celebrating Our 12th Year on TV!
Complete Collision and Mechanical Repair Since 1987
7509 Route 5 • Clinton, New York 13323 • Phone 315-853-8804
Quilt and Yarn Shops/Services Ron’s Scissors Sharpening, Sauquoit . . . . . . 6 Tiger Lily Quilt Co, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Real Estate Century 21, Art VanVechten, Utica . . . . . . 24 Coldwell-Banker, Newport . . . . . . . . . . . 50 Hunt Real Estate, Welcome Home Team . . . 33 Scenic Byway Realty, Richfield Springs . . . . 48 Record Stores Off-Center Records, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 Restaurants and Cafés Ann St. Deli, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Apple Betty, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Bagel Grove, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Bite Bakery and Cafe, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Black Cat, Sharon Springs . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Chesterfield’s Tuscan Oven, Oneida . . . . . . 57 The Corner Cafe, Earlville . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Copper Moose, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Club Monarch, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 The Country Store, Salisbury . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Delta Lake Inn, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58 DiCastro’s Brick Oven, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . 58 Dominick’s Deli, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Fat Cats, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Gone Coastal, Lee Center . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Heidelberg Baking Co., Herkimer . . . . . . . 55 Jamo’s Restaurant, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . 56 Karam’s Middle East Bakery, Yorkville . . . . 59 Killabrew, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . 56 Knuckleheads Brewhouse, Westmoreland . . 59 Main Street Ristorante, Newport . . . . . . . . 62 Mangia Macrina’s Pizza, New Hartford . . . 56 Mario’s Pizza, Oriskany Falls . . . . . . . . . . 57 Mi Casa, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Ohio Tavern, Cold Brook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Pho Ever Noodles, New Hartford . . . . . . . 56 Phoenician Restaurant, New Hartford . . . . 57 Quack’s Village Inn, Madison . . . . . . . . . 56 Raspberries Cafe, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57 Riverside Diner, Marcy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 RoSo’s Cafe & Catering, Utica . . . . . . . . . . 59 Sammy & Annie Foods, Utica . . . . . . . . . . 59 The Steak & Pickle, Washington Mills . . . . . 59 Wendy’s Diner, Cassville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Wigwam Tavern, Forestport . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 The Willows, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59
Specialty Wood Wightman Specialty Woods . . . . . . . . . . . . 49
Roofing Maple Lane Roofing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Mohawk Metals, Westmoreland . . . . . . . 11
Tree Services Turk Tree Service, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
Schools Herkimer BOCES LPN Program . . . . . . . . 9 Sheds and Storage Buildings Shafer & Sons, Westmoreland . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Tent Rentals Brownies Tent and Awnings, Clinton . . . . . 68 Towing Services Clinton Collision, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Towing Services Clinton Collision, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Travel Agencies The Cruise Wizards, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . 70 Websites Utica Remember When . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Shoes Ron’s Sharpening, Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Weddings and Banquets Club Monarch, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Twin Ponds Golf & Country Club, NY Mills . . 21 So Sweet Candy Cafe, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
Shoes Karaz Shoes, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 The Sneaker Store, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 23 The Village Crossing, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . 19
Wellness Infinity Tree Healing, New Hartford . . . . . 14
Small Engine Repair J.B.’s Small Engine Works, Utica . . . . . . . . 57 SD Power, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32 Snowmobiles/ATVs Hobby Hill Farm, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 Social Security Applications and Advice Antonowicz Group, Rome/Utica . . . . . . . . . 39
Rolling Antiquer’s Old Car Club 52nd Annual Antique Auto Show & Flea Market
May 27th Muscle Cars & Street Rods May 28th Antique Autos & Classic Cars 8 AM – 5 PM General admission $5
Children under 12 free! Motorcycles, Miltary Vehicles, Trucks, Tractors & Antique Engines Variety of Food & Beverage Vendors
Windows R.A. Dudrak, Holland Patent . . . . . . . . . . 14 Wineries Pail Shop Winery, Fly Creek . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Prospect Falls Winery, Prospect . . . . . . . . . 13 Yogurt Stoltzfus Family Dairy, Vernon Center . . . . 3
GROCERIES • GAS • CAR WASH • NYS REDEMPTION CENTER • DELI/PIZZA
Reilly’s Dairy, Inc. PLUS
SAUQUOIT SELF STORAGE!
Since 1942, when we delivered to you!
Chenango County Fairgrounds
168 East Main St, Norwich , NY 13815
Show Forms & more information: www.raocc.org
9553 Pinnacle Rd., Sauquoit (315) 737-5560
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3036 State Route 28 Herkimer, NY 13350 (315) 866-5080
5074 Commercial Drive Yorkville, NY 13495 (315) 736-3381
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5046 Commercial Drive Yorkville, NY 13495 (315) 736-8291
4991 Commercial Drive Yorkville, NY 13495 (315) 736-8241
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APRIL 8th • 9am-2pm • WATERVILLE, NY
White’s Farm Supply, Inc. Your Power Equipment Specialists
Canastota
4154 Route 31 (315) 697-2214
Lowville
8207 Route 26 (315) 376-0300
Waterville
962 Route 12 (315) 841-4181
*20% *20% down, down, 0% A.P.R. 0% A.P.R. financing financing for up fortoup84tomonths 84 months on purchases on purchases of new of new Kubota Kubota BX Series BX Series equipment equipment is available is available to qualified to qualified www.whitesfarmsupply.com purchasers purchasers fromfrom participating participating dealers’ dealers’ in-stock in-stock inventory inventory through through 5/31/2017. 5/31/2017. Example: Example: An 84-month An 84-month monthly monthly installment installment repayment repayment termterm at*20% 0% at A.P.R. 0% A.P.R. requires requires 84 payments 84 payments of $11.90 of $11.90 per $1,000 per $1,000 financed. financed. 0% A.P.R. 0% A.P.R. interest interest is available is available to customers to customers if no if dealer no dealer down, 0% A.P.R. financing for up to 84 months on purchases of new Kubota BX Series equipment is available to qualified documentation documentation preparation preparation fee isfeecharged. is charged. Dealer Dealer charge charge for document for document preparation preparation fee shall feeAn shall be84-month inbeaccordance in accordance with with statestate laws. laws. purchasers from participating dealers’ in-stock inventory through 5/31/2017. Example: monthly installment repayment Inclusion Inclusion of equipment equipment maypayments may result result in ofa in higher a higher blended A.P.R. A.P.R. 0% A.P.R. 0%0% A.P.R. and and low-rate low-rate financing financing maytomay not be notavailable be available with termofatineligible 0%ineligible A.P.R. requires 84 $11.90 perblended $1,000 financed. A.P.R. interest is available customers if no with dealer customer customer instant instant rebate rebate offers. offers. Financing is available is Dealer available through through Kubota Kubota Credit Credit Corporation, Corporation, U.S.A., U.S.A., 1000 Kubota Kubota Drive, Drive, Grapevine, Grapevine, documentation preparation feeFinancing is charged. charge for document preparation fee shall be in1000 accordance with state laws.TX TX 76051; 76051; subject subject credit to credit approval. approval. Some Some exceptions exceptions apply. Offer Offer expires expires 5/31/2017. 5/31/2017. See See us for usdetails for details on these on andbe and other other low-rate low-rate Inclusion oftoineligible equipment may result in aapply. higher blended A.P.R. 0% A.P.R. and low-rate financing maythese not available with options options or goortogoinstant www.kubota.com to www.kubota.com forFinancing more for more information. Optional equipment equipment mayCorporation, may be shown. be shown. customer rebate offers. isinformation. availableOptional through Kubota Credit U.S.A., 1000 Kubota Drive, Grapevine, TX 76051; subject to credit approval. Some exceptions apply. Offer expires 5/31/2017. See us for details on these and other low-rate options or go to www.kubota.com for more information. Optional equipment may be shown.
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