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GIVING THANKS EXPLORING THE ARTS, HISTORY AND CULTURE OF OUR REGION
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NOVEMBER 2020
EXHIBITIONS
PETE SOUZA: TWO PRESIDENTS, ONE PHOTOGRAPHER
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ON VIEW THROUGH DECEMBER 31, 2020 Two Presidents, One Photographer showcases fiftysix of Pete Souza’s photographs of two presidents from opposite ends of the political spectrum. This exhibit includes Souza’s favorite images of Presidents Obama and Reagan, providing us with candid moments that are windows into their humanity. What we see in Souza’s photographs are two Presidents who clearly honored the office they held, and genuinely respected the people they interacted with, no matter the circumstance. This exhibition was organized by art2art Circulating Exhibitions. (Detail) President Regan riding his horse. White House photographs by Pete Souza.
ALBRECHT DÜRER: MASTER PRINTS
CLOSES SOON!
ON VIEW THROUGH NOVEMBER 22 Find more than thirty woodblock prints and engravings by (or after) the German Renaissance master printmaker Albrecht Dürer (1471-1528). The artist was an extraordinary innovator who revolutionized the medium of printmaking in the late fifteenth century.
(Detail) Albrecht Dürer, German, 1471 – 1528, Christ Shown to the People from the Large Passion, c. 1497-1500, ink on paper, Museum Purchase. Reading Public Museum, Reading, Pennsylvania.
The exhibition is on loan from the Reading Museum of Art. Sponsored in part by The Clark Foundation, and Nellie and Robert Gipson.
Generous support for this project provided by
5798 ROUTE 80 | COOPERSTOWN, NY
Made possible with public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew M. Cuomo and the New York State Legislature.
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Ewe, I’m Getting Sentimental
contents 6 9 13 17 18 22 24 28 30 32 33 34 36 38 40 44 51 54 59 61 62
Oneida County History Center ADK Journal Family Traditions MV Community Market Restaurant Guide Local Photography Antiques Guide November in Nature MV Astronomy Club Local Comic Strip MV Crossword Ramon’s Bakery Herkimer County Historical Soc. Gallery Guide On The Farm with Suzie Matt Perry’s Nature MV Gardens & Recipes Tales from Shawangunk, Part 72 Advertiser Directory News & Notes Contest Answers
MOHAWK VALLEY LIVING MAGAZINE November 2020
PUBLISHERS Lance and Sharry Whitney EDITOR Sharry Whitney
by Sharry L. Whitney
DESIGN & LAYOUT Lance David Whitney
I never particularly cared for the expression, “Getting sentimental in old age,” but then maybe I just wasn’t old enough until now. This could be the reason I was so emotionally moved by our writers’ stories this month, or maybe I can file it under “Covid,” like many emotions of late. More likely it’s because they are wonderful stories. It started with Gary’s writing in response to a poem about Camden’s Forest Park. My emotional reaction to this made sense made sense—nature, poetry, my home town of Camden—of course that would get to me. Then I read Matt Perry’s part two of the Utica’s Peregrine Falcons story. Though I enjoyed reading about the trials and tribulations of the nestlings, it was the image of Matt and the dedicated falconwatch volunteers tracking the fledging birds through the city of Utica that touched my heart. Next, I was inspired by the story of Susan B. Anthony’s arrest for voting, but after that, I read Suzie’s article about the “Littlest Lamb” and it was over, I was officially dewy-eyed. Or should I say dEWEy-eyed? Nothing snaps you out of sentimentality like a bad pun. Or as my kids refer to them: “old people jokes.”
ASSISTANT EDITOR Shelley Malenowski ADVERTISING EXECUTIVE Susan Collea CONTRIBUTORS Peggy Spencer Behrendt, Carol Higgins, Suzie Jones, John Keller, Melinda Karastury, Rebecca McLain, Susan Perkins, Matt Perry, Cynthia Quackenbush, Denise Szarek, Gary VanRiper CONTACT US (315) 853-7133 30 Kellogg Street Clinton, NY 13323 www.MohawkValleyLiving.com mohawkvalleyliving@hotmail.com Mohawk Valley Living is a monthly magazine and television show that explore the area’s arts, culture, and heritage. Copyright © 2020. 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.
watch mvl every sunday! 7:30am and 11pm on wfxv 11:30am on WUTR 20
Riggie is roaming around and hiding in the advertising areas of the magazine. Next to him you’ll find a letter. Find all the Riggies and rearrange the letters to answer this riddle. Enter by the 15th of the month to be entered in a $100 shopping spree at 1 or between 2 of our advertisers! (Excluding media and banks) One entry per household per month. Mail to: Riggie’s Riddle, 30 Kellogg St., Clinton, NY 13323 or email: mohawkvalleyliving@hotmail.com NOTE: Please enter Riggie’s Riddle and crossword puzzle in separate emails.
This Iroquois heirloom from long ago is coming back to fill our bowls 9 letters, 2 words
See the answer and winner to last month’s riddle on page 62!
Mohawk Valley Living is brought to you by
Steet-Ponte autogroup
the Oneida County History center
Utica’s Ward Hunt and his Clash with Susan B. Anthony By Lou Parrotta
Susan B. Anthony was arrested on November 18, 1872 for voting
City of Utica Historian & History Center Volunteer
The City of Utica has had many prominent politicians and connections to key events in American history throughout its nearly 200-year existence. A fine example of this occurred in the late 1800s during the Women’s Suffrage Movement. Former Utican and sitting United States Supreme Court Associate Justice Ward Hunt clashed with, arguably, the face of the women’s right to vote effort, Susan B. Anthony in 1873. Hunt was also a former mayor, state assemblyman, and Commissioner of Appeals in New York State. Ward Hunt was a close ally of powerful United States Senator Roscoe Conkling, a fellow Utican, and without question, the leader of the Republican Party in New York State. Senator Conkling was also a close friend and confidant of President Ulysses S. Grant. Associate Justice Samuel Nelson resigned his seat in 1872, and Senator Conkling recommended Hunt to President Grant as a replacement. Grant concurred, nominated Hunt, and the United States Senate confirmed him to the bench on December 11, 1872. In that era of United States jurisprudence, Supreme Court Justices were required to “ride the circuit” to hear cases. Each Justice was assigned an area (circuit) in which to hear cases. It was on one of these circuit rides that Justice Hunt crossed paths with suffragist Susan B. Anthony. On November 1, 1872, in a barbershop in Rochester, New York, Anthony and her three sisters demanded to be allowed to register to vote under the 14th Amendment of the Constitution that guaranteed citizenship and the rights afforded to such citizens, and through an article of the New York
Utica Republican Ward Hunt crossed paths with Susan B. Anthony on his circuit ride
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State constitution that put no sex qualification on voting rights. After various legal threats made by Anthony to the three young, male registrars, it was decided to allow the women to properly register to vote. Outrage ensued as a total of fourteen women registered to vote that day. On November 5, 1872, Anthony and several of the newly registered women cast votes in the congressional race of that year. After voting, she proudly wrote to her dear friend and fellow suffragist, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, about her actions. That glee was short-lived as a warrant for her arrest was issued by US Commissioner William C. Storrs charging Anthony with casting a ballot “without a lawful right to vote,” and being in violation of the 1870 Enforcement Act. Anthony was arrested on November 18, 1872, and assigned a preliminary hearing in court on November 29th. After a few weeks of hearings and examination of witnesses, Storrs was convinced Anthony violated the law and scheduled a grand jury review for January. He set her bail, which she refused to pay, and he remanded her to the custody of a deputy marshal until the grand jury proceedings. Anthony was elated to be held, thinking this would be her ticket to the US Supreme Court for being held in violation of habeas corpus (being unlawfully detained). After some time passed, however, one of Anthony’s lawyers, Henry Selden, paid her bail. And even though she knew her path to the Supreme Court had dissipated as she wasn’t falsely imprisoned any longer, she readied herself for her trial on January 24, 1873. The trial moved from Monroe County to Canandaigua County due to overexposure as a result of Anthony’s continued stump speeches espousing her innocence and was rescheduled to June
Susan B. Anthony refused to pay the $100 fine imposed by Justice Hunt. He would not send her to jail though because he knew it could bring the case before the Supreme Court.
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17th. The trial opened with the newly seated Supreme Court Associate Justice Ward Hunt presiding. Several questionable actions by Justice Hunt occurred during the trial including his refusal to allow Anthony to take the stand as a witness on her own behalf, his taking out a paper with his opinion apparently pre-written declaring “The Fourteenth Amendment (gave) no right to a woman to vote and the voting by Miss Anthony was in violation of the law,” his stating of his belief that she was fully aware her act of voting was illegal and “subject to the penalty of the law,” and finally his direction to the jury to render a final “verdict of guilty” without deliberation. Anthony was finally allowed time to speak after the verdict was given by Justice Hunt, and she spent much time in a lengthy discourse denouncing his actions and why she was correct in casting a vote. Hunt tried to cut her off several times to no avail; she was going to say her piece. When Anthony finally sat down, Hunt made her rise again as he sentenced her to a fine of $100 plus court costs. Anthony refused payment, hoping to be returned to jail to try another attempt at a habeas corpus appeal. Hunt, who foresaw this move by Anthony, declared “Madam, the Court will not order you committed until the fine is paid.” She would not see the inside of a jail cell again as, true to her word, Anthony never paid her bail and therefore, was never locked up. •
Demonstrators hold a rally for women’s suffrage in Seneca Falls, NY, 1848
Oneida County History Center 1608 Genesee Street, Utica (315) 735-3642
Open Tues.-Fri. 10-4, Sat 10-2 www.oneidacountyhistory.org
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adirondack journal
Forest Park
Beauty Close to Home Story and Photos by Gary VanRiper
Seasons in transition in Camden’s Forest Park: “Within our midst a forest lives…”
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Is there anyone whose life has not been interrupted in a myriad of ways this calendar year? Most unusual for me is to have not hiked a single mountain. If that holds true with just two months to go before 2021 is ushered in, it will be nearly two decades before having finally missed a summit view of the Adirondacks! However, we are blessed to have in our small rural community a resource that has helped temper wilderness withdrawal for the months since what our youngest child calls ‘the sickness’ began. In June 1891, 62 acres were purchased in Camden, NY by the Cemetery Association for what the late local historian Roy Snyder noted was “for the public’s enjoyment as an addition to the cemetery.” 1 Over the years acres were added along with narrow drives and pavilions. Snyder also noted the Village of Camden took ownership of what had become known as Forest Park. Among the first members of the park commission was Lynden Simmons, of whom it is written, “campaigned, solicited, labored and almost lived for the park.” 2 3 Simmons is also author of the poem, Our Forest Park, excerpts of which follow. “Our Forest Park in beauty lies Beside our river flowing; Within our midst a forest lives Almost without our knowing.” That was true then and continues to be true today! We moved to Camden in the early 1980s, and it was several years before we knew this beautiful place even existed. And it is right inside the village limits! “Came Mom and Dad with all the kids’ Geared for a day of outing; Life’s cares and problems took their flight Storm out by joy and shouting.”
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FINE JEWELRY • JEWELRY REPAIR • GIFT ITEMS
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315 733-7676 Tues-Fri: 10:30-5, Sat: 10:30-1:30
What a blessing the park has been, especially during the earliest months of the lockdown. Multiple generations of the same household walking together (the children skipping and running) with plenty of room for physical distancing through the serene natural environment. Away from social media! Away from the news! “Our Forest breathes, our river lives, Both to us reporting That all the wildlife in their trust They are with care supporting.” Including us, and our mental, physical, and emotional wellbeing. “The wooded playground of the squirrels Gives birth to fragile flowers; And ferns to grace the wooded knolls Get nursed by summer showers.” I often left the paved loop to walk the various trails meandering through the hardwoods. There is where it felt the most like a quick traverse further north inside the Blue Line. Those acrobatic squirrels caused me to begin carrying my camera to catch their antics. And then came the wildflowers and unfolding of the ferns to capture as well. “Of peace and calm within their bounds The birds are ever singing That all life is by His dear hand; An eternal message bringing.” As late winter gave way to spring, there were also the migrating birds. Before the leaves pushed out in the canopy
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Szarek’s Succulent Shack
The shack is stocked with Oliver’s Organic Eggs, Kriemhild butter, Jones Family Farm cheeses and gelato, Shaw’s Maple products, Heartsease Hill honey, Kelly’s Jellies, as well as other specialty products. Fresh seasonal veggies and scones available on Saturdays.
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Taking holiday orders now! Seasonal Cupcakes & Cookies, Truffles, & More! 12 Erie St., Yorkville (315) 864-8124 • Tues-Fri: 9-4, *Sat: Open for order pickups only wickedsweets@hotmail.com • Find us on Facebook: Wicked Sweets by Alyssa
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Roosting Turkey Vultures were an unexpected surprise on a spontaneous bushwhack in a less travelled section of the park.
and understory they were easy to spot, and many were so cooperative and easy to photograph without having to stalk them. And then there was the morning deciding to leave the trails altogether – the short bushwhack leading to the surprise of a large gathering of roosting turkey vultures. They were everywhere in the trees, several dozen among them with their wings stretched wide open to the early morning sun. “…timeless Nature’s show is on; It has a daily booking: The glory of it all is ours If we but go a looking.” That is the closing stanza of Simmons’ poem. I have known this to be true for decades hiking, paddling, bushwhacking the vast Adirondack wilderness. But it has been nice to rediscover so many of the same wonders in our own backyard and be reminded it is just as true immediately outside the door. •
1, 2: Roy A Snyder in Camden Chronology, Second Ed., 1991, pages 232, 233 3: en Simmons, Our Forest Park, in Bridge Of Time, 1957, pages 103-106
Gary VanRiper is an author, photographer, and pastor at the Camden Wesleyan Church. He has written 19 children’s books with his son, Justin. Learn more at: www.adirondackkids.com
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Colorful hand-knits Infant Tag Alongs Original glassware
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Fun signs from Kym’s Pallet Custom orders too! Original paintings by Anita Fitzgerald
clothing and giftware for men, women, children and infants
Complimentary gift wrapping!
20 West Park Row, Clinton, NY 315.853.3650 www.kriziamartin.com Open: Mon-Sat 10-6, and Sundays after Thanksgiving
Hand-painted antiques Paintings, Photography, Drawings, Jewelry, Candles Fleece, Felted & Woven Garments, Knitwear, Wood Carving, Pottery, Baskets, Tinware, Lighting, Stained Glass, & much more!
Open 7 days a week at 1 College St, Clinton (315) 853-1453 Facebook: Artisans’ Corner of Clinton NY
Photo: Melinda Karastury
Family Traditions
Though many towns and villages won’t have their traditional strolls, they will be decorated for the holidays and businesses will be open .
Adirondack Christmas on Main Street Friday- Sunday, Nov. 27-29, 2020
Spend the weekend after Thanksgiving at the annual Adirondack Christmas on Main Street. Drive along the lights by the lake. Main Street, Old Forge & Inlet Schedule of events at: www.adkchristmasonmain.com
Shop Small in Clinton
Friday and Saturday, November 27 & 28
While the traditional stroll and parade will not be held this year, our businesses are open and welcome you. Horse & wagon rides both days 12-4pm. Purchase tickets in front of the Alexander Hamilton Institute. Please wear a face mask and maintain social distancing. 5K Jingle Jog starts at 8am on Saturday! Village of Clinton
Schedule of events at: www.clintonnychamber.org/shoppers-stroll-holiday.html
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Wild Weekends at the Utica Zoo
Victorian Yuletide
“Oh, Tannebaum, oh Tannebaum, how lovely are thy branches…” November 27, 2020 - January 3, 2021
Yuletide 2020 commemorates the tradition of Christmas trees, an iconic seasonal symbol that originated in Germany. Legend tells us that Martin Luther (1483-1546), German religious reformer, was walking home one winter’s night and was awestruck by the twinkling stars he saw through the branches of evergreen trees. To recapture the scene for his family, he took such a tree into his home and wired its branches with lighted candles.
Every Sunday in November, 1-3pm, free with admission!
From habitats to adaptations, every weekend we will be learning about something new. there will be different ambassador animals out for your family to meet!
MWPAI
310 Genesee St., Utica, NY • (315) 797-0000 • www.mwpai.org
November 1st – Rainforest Ramble November 8th – Wild Wetlands November 15th – Down in the Desert November 22nd – In Your Backyard November 29th – Grasslands
Christmas Trees!
Naturewood Knoll
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Open from November 27th - December 23rd
Displayed indoors or cut-your-own!
Visit our Christmas Gift Shop
Tree Farm
Open for trees and green items.
Massoud’s
A special visitor will be here Saturday, December 5th
(315) 737-5011 • 9716 Roberts Rd., Sauquoit
2408 St. Rt. 169, Little Falls (315) 823-1133 • Wed- Sun 10-6
TREE FARM
Open daily: Mon-Fri: 9-7, Sat & Sun: 9-6
The gift shop will not be open this year.
from 12:00-3:00 for outdoor/social distanced photos!
The Everyday Adventures of Mohawk Valley Girl
Mohawk Valley Community Market
Bibliophiles will love the used book shop, Jilted Books, at Mohawk Valley Community Market.
in herkimer
There is a new shopping destination on in Herkimer: Mohawk Valley Community Market. The anchor stores, Renewed & Rescued and Wakefield Furniture, have been in residence for a while. Recently, the market, which is housed in the former Munger’s Department Store on Main Street, has expanded into a vendor mall, including woodwork, books, decorations, honey, maple syrup, art, and more. I was encouraged to check out the new market by one of the vendors, my friend, Gil Schaeffer, of One of a Kind by GS. I admit, his space is one of my favorites. There were tables of different sizes and shapes, mirrors, shelves, and a display case for models. All of it was beautifully polished, beautifully put-together wood. Everything is handmade and unique. Moving around the vendor space, I also enjoyed looking through Jilted Books. I love books and I found it delightful to think they were looking for a good home. You can also find local honey and maple syrup. I admired a lot of local art and jewelry. Renewed & Rescued also carries locally-made jewelry and art. Their main claim to fame is their restored furniture. You can check out their Facebook page for before and after pictures of desks, dressers, tables, and more. When I was there, the owner told me there were currently twelve vendors in addition to Wakefield and Renewed & Rescued. However, six more were expected soon. That is the delightful thing about vendor malls: you can always find something new. •
Renewed & Rescued is one of the anchor stores at the martket. It features consignment items, jewelry and restored furniture.
The former Munger’s Department Store in Herkimer is the perfect home for Mohawk Valley Community Market vendor mall.
Mohawk Valley Community Market 140-142 N. Main St., Herkimer
Open 9am to 5pm Tuesday through Saturday 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
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alder creek
the mvl Alder Creek Inne restaurant guide Michael’s
Serving Lunch and Dinner Eat In or Take Out Welcome Snowmobilers! Where the 3 Trails Meet Rooms are Available
Warm up with French Onion Soup at Michael’s? Oui Oui!
11573 Rt. 12, Alder Creek • (315) 942-2200
Wed & Thurs 12-9, Fri & Sat 12-10, Sun 12-8, Closed Mon-Tues *Quick Draw now available!
cassville n Ope for r! ne Din
CLINTON
Friday Fish Fry: 11:30am-8pm
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Open 7 Days a Week • Open 6am-8pm or later, Serving Breakfast 6am-Noon
Where good friends Meet to Eat! Enjoy breakfast or a quick lunch!
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MVL Ad_Layout 1 7/8/15 3:05 PM Page 1
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Phoenician R E S TAU R A N T Please wear mask until you are seated. Call ahead for parties of 5-10.
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Rome
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past 5 years! Voted #1 pizza for
(315) 736-4549 • Open 7 days a week • 4462 Commercial Dr., New Hartford www.tonyspizzeriaanddeli.com
Salisbury
Open For Dine In & Take Out
Stay Healthy & Safe!
Thank You For Your Support!
Inside Dining Available Reservations Appreciated Due to Limited Seating!
(315) 33PIZZA
615 Erie Blvd. W., Rome
Open Thursday - Monday, 4pm-9 pm Sat & Sun 12pm-9pm Closed Tues & Wed
DiCastro’s BRICK OVEN
The Country Store with More! 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 19
Rome
Utica
Taking orders for Pies & Holiday Cookie Trays!
Offering Grab-n-Go meals, Salads, & Deli items!
1256 Albany St., Utica • 315-790-5200 Wed-Sun: 7am-2pm
Utica
Chili Dogs Hamburgers, BBQ Shakes & More!
Fish Frys on Wed, Thurs & Fri! Eat in or Take out
8524 Fish Hatchery Rd, Rome, NY 13440 315-533-7710
1401 Oriskany St. West, Utica (315) 724-0136 • Mon-Sat: 11am-8pm
Outside
Breakfast, Lunch, Seating & Grab-and-Go Deliveries, Available! Take Out & Catering! Check out our weekly specials on facebook and at www.rososcafe.com
Open: Monday-Friday: 8-2 185 Genesee St 2nd Floor, Utica
315 735-7676
-Open For Order Pickups Only*No Walk-Ins Please* Monday T hr ough Fr iday -9:00 A M To 1:00 PM-
C
Place Your Thanksgiving Orders; For Our, Jarred Products, Ready To Cook Meals, Handmade, Always Fresh, Never Frozen, Cookies And Pusties And More!! Shop Online, Or Call, To Order And Schedule A Pickup Date And Time!! Look For Our Christmas Ordering Information Coming Soon!!
-www.sammyandanniefoods.com20
Utica
Sheri’s
EASTSIDE DINER Breakfast • Lunch Homemade & Fresh Daily!
Since 1946
Breakfast Sandwiches Deli-Style Wraps/Sandwiches Salads, Soups & more!
Fresh breads daily • Baked goods • Italian specialties Pizza • Wings • Subs Online ordering & special orders available! 1024 Champlin Ave., Utica • (315) 765-0172
Open 7 days a week from 7am • www.rosatospizzacny.com • Follow us on Facebook!
Breakfast & Lunch Catering Available
Homemade Baked Goods & Multi-Color Bagels - a kid’s favorite!
Friday Fish Fry • Breakfast Served All Day
2199 Bleecker St., Utica (315) 790-5250 Open 7 Days a Week, 7am-2pm
Free Delivery(min. $25) • Family Owned & Operated!
219 N. Genesee St., Utica (315) 790-5353 • Open 7 Days a Week
Contemporary American • Indoor Dining Open • Reservations Only
900 Culver Ave., Utica • 315-765-0271 • Open Wed-Sat 4:30-8pm
We can’t wait to see you again!
All staff wearing masks, please wear yours until seated. Visit www.willowsofutica.com
Yorkville
Now Open! Regular Hours
KARAM’S Middle Eastern Bakery & Restaurant
Serving Lunch & Dinner Lunches Served Friday, Saturday & Sunday Happy Hour Daily 4-7, $2.50 Drafts & $2.75 Well Mixers Tuesday: $2.99 All-U-Can-Eat Spaghetti Wednesday: $7.99 Pasta Specials, 10 Boneless Wings $6.00 Thursday: $15.99 All-U-Can-Eat Chicken Riggies Take Out Sunday: .60¢ Wings at bar
Call us for your Holiday catering needs!
Available!
409 Oriskany Blvd., Whitesboro • (315) 736-7869 Catering & Banquet Facilities Available • www.69steakhouse.com
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
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localphotography photography club local Slowly approaching Lock 17 with the colorful Moss Island to the left, Little Falls by Cliff Oram
A fall sunrise from Roberts Road in the Town of Litchfield by Todd Walker
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local photography Pumpkin stand at the corners of Brace Rd. and Babcock Hill Road near Cedarville. Fall at its finest by Gabe Oram
The arched entrance to F.T. Proctor Park. The park is considered the crown jewel of the city of Utica’s park system. Located at the corner of Culver Ave. and Rutger Street by Cliff Oram The carousel at the Farmer’s Museum in Cooperstown by Gabe Oram
The tunnel under the tracks on Old Poland Road framed by the beautiful autumn colors. by Gabe Oram
Mohawk Valley Through the Lens Check out their popular Facebook page: www.facebook.com/MVTTL
At this time we are offering a limited in-store capacity of 2 people at a time Tues. & Fri. Calling ahead is a good idea as the covid situation is fluid. Curbside pickup and longarm quilting available on other days. Located at the Shoppes at the Finish Line Tues-Fri 10am-5pm, Sat 10am-1pm, Closed Sun & Mon
Be s e Wealfless. mas r a k!
IRONWOOD Furniture
Jelly Cupboards, Bookcases, Hutches, Tables, Baker’s Racks, Benches, Coffee/End Tables, Hoosiers & much more!
AMISH MADE
F F O 10% E-
STORDE! 7686 Route 5, Clinton (315) 853-7300 WI
Open Mon-Sat 10am-5pm www.ironwoodfurniturestore.com
mv living
antique shopping guide Madison-Bouckville Holiday Open House! November 13th, 14th, & 15th 10am-5pm Canal House Antiques The Gallery Antiques at Pinebrick The Gingham Patch Cider House Antiques Madison Inn Antiques Cobblestone Trading Company Turnpike Antiques The Depot
Valandrea’s Venture Victorian Rose Wellington Woods Whistle Post Antiques
For more info about the event go to: www.MadisonBouckville.com
Valandrea’s
Canal House Antiques
Whistle Post Antiques Madison
Victorian
The Gallery Antiques at Pinebrick
Rose
ANTIQUE GALLERY
Earlville Jewett’s Cheese
Sherburne
BlackCat
ANTIQUES
See The Man
Celebrating 22 years in business!
Attic Addicts The Queen’s Closet
Pristine, Practical, and Priced Right!
Specializing in estate sales, large and small.
Conducted with respect and dignity. We take the pressure out of estate liquidation, moving, or downsizing. Call for a consultation:
(315) 736-9160
Consignment at its Finest!
Clothing, Jewelry Household Items Furniture Open Mon-Fri: 11am-4pm Closed Sat & Sun New consignment by appointment only
22 Oriskany Blvd., Yorkville (315) 736-9160 Facebook: The Queens Closet & Attic Addicts
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The Queen’s Closet is brimming with fall and winter fashions! Many new coats and vests for this season. Come take a peek.
antiques make great gifts! Antiques & Art
Westmoreland Formerly of Barneveld
Now Open!
5475 State Rt 233, Westmoreland Artsy1Antiques@GMail.com
7000 Sq. ft Multi Dealer Store! Furniture: Victorian to Mid-Century Lots of Art! Architectural Salvage Primitives Records, Books, & Collectibles
Open Wed- Fri 10-6, Sat & Sun 10-4
BlackCat
Broad St. Flea Market
ANTIQUES & GIFTS A little bit country, a little bit primitive!
807 Broad St., Utica
Your destination for furniture, hand stenciled signs, vintage clothing, warm glow candles, silk arrangements & more!
(315) 941-0925 • Wed-Fri 10-5, Sat & Sun 10-4, Closed Mon & Tues
Multi Dealer Antique Shop
Primitives • Furniture • Artwork Smalls • Antique Accessories
14 East Main St. Earlville (315) 691-5721
Open Tues-Fri: 9-4, Sat: 9-2, Closed Sun & Mon
Richfield Springs, NY - Open By Request
Wed-Sat: 10-4, Sun: 11-3 • (315) 264-1755
4803 Rt. 31, Vernon
Indoor & Open Year Round!
Large selection of vendors & even larger variety of items!
Christ New products from handmade soy candles, lucky bamboo, CBD m & Holidaas products to incense,craft items, furniture & household items! Items! y Like Large selection of games($5), DVDs($1), & CDs(.50¢) Us! Inventory always changing-Stop in often! Vendor applications always accepted.
Canal House Hazel Mae’s Antiques Located in the Shoppes Multi-Dealer Shop
Specializing in antique furniture, glassware, jewelry, books, linens, and so much more.
at Johnny Appleseeds 3402 Old State Rd, Erieville Rug Hooking • Punch Needle Wool • Supplies • Classes
6737 Route 20, Bouckville (315) 893-7737 Thurs-Mon 10-5, closed Tues & Wed
ANTIQUE GALLERY
6768 Route 20, Bouckville (315) 893-7676 Open Apr-Oct: 10-5 daily; Nov-Dec: 10-4 daily January-March: Friday, Saturday, Sunday: 10-4 www.depotantiquegallery.com
Our lovely gallery offers a full range of antiques, fine furniture, and vintage collectibles! 25
Dawn Marie’s Treasures Clinton Holiday Stroll Nov 27 & 28
Vintage & New Gifts
Over 30 Vendors!
Foothills
13 College St., Clinton
Mercantile
(315) 796-9099 • Open 7 days a week, 10-6
It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas in Clinton and at Johnny Appleseed!
Sales! Sales! Sales!
Veterans Day, Black Friday & Small Business Saturday!
Open in Clinton every day: 10-6 & at Johnny Appleseeds Wed-Sun: 10-5 We have unique and unusual items that make it worth the trip!
Antiques,Vintage, Gifts & Furniture
Happy Shopping! Gift cards also available!
Follow us on Facebook! Looking for treasures?
The Gallery Antiques at Pinebrick
Family Finds
& Consignment Shop Furniture • Tools • Toys Antiques • Jewelry • Primitives Pictures & More!
4807 Lee Valley Rd, Taberg Open Wed, Fri, Sat 10-4 • (315) 709-7537 www.familyfindsandconsign.com
A multi-dealer shop specializing in advertising, petroliana, lamps, glass, furniture & quality smalls.
Look for our 1960s Texaco sign! (315) 893-7752
Little Falls
Open 7 Days: 10-5:30 • 8124 Route 12, Barneveld (315) 896-2681
MADISON INN ANTIQUES
H
FURNITURE • TOOLS • BOOKS • COLLECTIBLES GLASS • PRIMITIVE Space available! Call: 315 335-1689
7417 State Route 20, Madison 315-893-7639 Open Thursday-Sunday 10-5
Main Street Gift Shoppe
Antique Center
Newport’s Best Kept Secret for Primitive Gifts! Shoppe Open Sundays in Nov. 11:30am-3pm Special hours for our fine customers!
Primitive Country Christmas Reveal Sunday, Dec. 6th 10am-4pm
7431 Main St Rt. 28 Newport, NY OPEN: Wed-Sat 11:30am til 6pm
.
(315) 845-8835 www.mainstreetristorante.com
More than 50 vendors on 2 floors! Antiques • Art • Crafts Open 6 days a week, 10-5 Closed Tues
Shop for the Holidays Now!
Layaway & Gift Certificates Available!
All kinds of Unique Vendors under one roof. Artisans, Crafters, Antiques to Retro including Food Items.
Handicapped-accessible
315-823-4309 Thruway Exit 29A, 25 West Mill St., Little Falls www.littlefallsantiquecenter.com 26
We’re Worth the Trip…
Vendors Wanted!
142 North Main Street, Herkimer • 315-628-1506 or 315-219-9195 Like us on Facebook!
Open Tues-Fri:10-5, Sat & Sun: 10-2 www.MohawkValleyCommunityMarket.com
A Division of Herkimermall, LLC
Over 160 Vendor booths and display cases!
Visit our “Architecture & Salvage” area and discover many unique treasures! 100 E. Main St., Mohawk (Thruway Exit 30)
(315) 219-5044 www.mohawkantiquesmall.com
The Online Exchange, LLC We Can Help You Buy, Sell, & Trade Globally! Now an FFL dealer!
6338 St. Rt. 167, Dolgeville
(315) 429-5111
Registered user of ebay
MOHAWK ANTIQUES MALL Renewed & Rescued Quality Consignments & More
Consigners wanted! Household Items & Decor Refinished Furniture, Jewelry, Local Artisan Products 142 N. Main Street, Herkimer
(315) 628-1506 • Tues - Fri 10-5, Sat & Sun 10-2
Antique & Unique! Buy • Sell • Trade
Purchase any Antique Ornament from our 10’ tree & you could win a $25 gift card! Nov. 27-Dec. 24 5,000 square foot Multi-Dealer Store Best Variety Vintage Christmas
103 Showcases & 26 Display Booths
Showcase Antiques of CNY
375 Canal Place, Little Falls (315) 823-1177 Next door to Ann Street Deli Open Daily 10-5 • Handicap Accessible www.showcaseantiquesofcny.com
See The Man 54 N. Main St., Sherburne (607) 316-8463 • Open Wed-Sat 10-5
Victorian Rose Vintage Antiques & Collectibles Open Daily 10-5 315-893-1786 • 3371 Maple Ave., Bouckville www.victorianrosevintage.com
Mon, Wed-Sat: 10-5, Sun: 11:30-4:30 Closed Tuesdays
ESTATE & HOUSE SALES APPRAISALS ALWAYS BUYING
Holiday Open House 2020
Thurs-Sunday between Thanksgiving & Christmas We are following Covid guidelines. Masks required. To allow for social distancing we are extending our Open House sale. Mention this ad for the 50% off discount or download the coupon from: www.thepottingshedantiques.com
Vintage, Gold, & Sterling Silver Jewelry, Coins, Glass, China, Furniture, Americana, Advertising, Art, Lighting, and more! Bring Friends & Family Make Holiday Memories!
Keep your Holiday Tradition! Check out the collection of White’s Pottery at Showcase Antiques!
THE POTTING SHED ANTIQUES Mention this ad for
50% OFF EVERYTHING!* 11/27 thru 12/24
*except coins and gold jewelry
315-736-5214 Don & Nancy Hartman, 52 Oriskany Blvd., Whitesboro (Next to Kinney’s)
Weeden’ s Mini Mall
Annual Christmas Open House! November 14th & 15th , 10-5
8056 Route 13, Blossvale (Located 4 miles North of Sylvan Beach) (315) 245-0458 Open 10-5 every day
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MV NATURE Migrating Canada Geese
NATURE in NOVEMBER story and photos by Matt Perry Fall migration of birds is still underway in November. For the most part, much of the songbird migration is over but waterfowl (ducks, geese, and swans) continue to stream through the region – many of them heading south or east towards the Atlantic Ocean. Most obvious are the skeins of Canada Geese which, when the winds are right, can be heard calling as they pass overhead. Our local lakes, ponds, and wetlands fill up with less familiar duck species like Northern Pintail, Green-winged Teal, American Wigeon, and Ring-necked Duck. At some locations, it is possible to see up to a dozen more even lesser known species – like Ruddy Duck, White-winged Scoter, Long-tailed Duck, and Gadwall. Oneida Lake, the Utica Marsh, and Woodman Pond in Madison County are all great places to see some of these species. By November, many of the migrant raptor species have already gone south and out of our region – the Sharp-shinned Hawk, the Broadwinged Hawk, and Osprey are not typically seen in winter in the Mohawk Valley. However, a few winter specialties arrive to fill the void. They include Rough-legged Hawk and Snowy Owl. Some years, when their small rodent prey is scarce in Canada and the Arctic region, the
A light phase Rough-legged Hawk feeding on carrion
number of Rough-legged Hawks and Snowy Owls may become significant here. Conversely, in years when the food supply is ample up north, we may get few or none of those beautiful and enigmatic raptors. One of the most impressive raptors of all typically waits until November to migrate and that is the Golden Eagle. Increasingly they are being seen in the Mohawk Valley and in areas just to the south and north. A few of them stay from November through the winter season and into early spring. Most of the Golden Eagles that pass over us or spend the winter with us are coming from breeding grounds in Canada. Unlike the Bald Eagle, the Golden Eagle is not normally a fish eater. In fact, you are more likely to find one feeding on carrion (often a deer carcass) along with Bald Eagle’s and Common Ravens. Distinguishing a Golden Eagle from an immature Bald Eagle is not so difficult. Most immature Bald Eagles appear mottled brown and white, while the Golden Eagle is more uniformly dark with a lighter brown or golden head. Its white plumage is limited to a band on its tail and, with immature Golden Eagles, a small patch of white in the center of the underside of their wings. Of course, November is the time a lot of folks think about turkeys. I think about them too, but
Visit us 7 days a week at... The Eclectic Chic 21 Seneca Ave Oneida, NY 13421
Open Mon/Tues: 10-5 | Wed/Thur/Fri: 10-6 | Sat/Sun: 10-5
not as holiday menu items, more as fascinating inhabitants of our Central New York ecosystem. Their appearance and behavior make them stand out from all other animals of the fields, meadows, woodlots, and forests. Comparing them with other gallinaceous (terrestrial birds like pheasants and grouse) birds, they are more social and gregarious, and their activities can easily be monitored even by casual observers. When we see them in late fall, the flocks are often segregated – some comprised of the season’s young together with a few adult hens – one most likely being a parent. Another flock made up of adult Toms and another of immature males called “Jakes”. In fall, I occasionally encounter one or more of these flocks foraging on the ground in the forest beneath seed and nut producing trees. Their large, clawed toes allow them to scratch away at the leave litter to expose their food. After a flock works an area of the forest, the forest floor looks as if it has been haphazardly raked. Telltale triple scars in the dirt inform us what species did the raking. Bare ground exposed by Turkeys, will often be worked over again by flocks of wintering American Robins, American Crows, Dark-eyed Juncos, and other ground feeding songbirds. While foraging, a Turkey flock keeps a keen
Christmas Open House!
Weekends Nov 28-Dec 20 Sat 9-4, Sun 12-4 (or call for appt.)
www.benandjudyssugarhouse.com Available at: Peter’s Cornucopia, Twin Orchards, Stoltzfus Dairy 770 Beaver Creek Rd., West Edmeston • (315) 899-5864 • Find us on Facebook! 28
lookout for potential predators, and they are difficult to catch unaware. Their first instinct is to run away from danger – something they excel at since they possess strong and powerful legs. If the danger they perceive is acute, they will launch like rockets through the forest trees, often busting through the tree canopy amidst cracking sounds of twigs breaking. Their brief but powerful flights can bring them hundreds of yards away and out of danger. They will often make equally loud landings in the treetops and there will remain on high perches sometimes for a few hours. If it is late afternoon, they may remain roosting in place for the night. Seeing a flock interact with each other in an open meadow is often interesting. In the pre-breeding season, male turkeys are not often seen puffing themselves up, fanning their tails, or expanding their waddles as they do when competing for the attention of hens in the spring. Instead, they are as allies, or a brotherhood, seeking foraging places and pooling their awareness of potential danger to benefit the flock. Flocks comprising the previous summers poults (young Turkeys) and adult hens are usually the more entertaining ones to observe as the lightly supervised youngsters roughhouse with each other, give chase, and try to establish a pecking order. As winter approaches, the task of finding food becomes more complicated for these largely ground feeding birds, but somehow their ingenuity enables them to survive even the harshest winter. They will jump or fly into berry producing bushes or crabapple trees and they will strip sumac trees and grape vines of their fruit. While we walk through the November forests and fields and attempt to be aware of the nature around us, we also need to keep in mind that we are not alone in the habitat. This time of year, we are sharing the environment with deer hunters that may be concealed in blinds or tree stands. While they are most likely aware of your presence, it is best not to assume that is the case. Stay safe by wearing bright colors (like hunter’s orange) and try to stick to areas of high visibility whenever possible. •
Personal, Business & Life Insurance Planning From a local company established in 1866
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The first Snowy Owls often come in November
The Wild Turkey
American Wigeon and Green winged Teal
Over 30 years in Business
Lessons Repairs Layaway Rentals Sheet Music Lighting L SHOP LOCA AND SAVE BIG!
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8441 Seneca Turnpike, New Hartford www.bigapplemusic.net
We Will B Any Catalo eat g or M Order Pric ail e
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(6 Months Deferred Interest)
315-822-0010
Corner of Rte. 8 & 20, Bridgewater Showroom Open Tues 11-6, Wed-Sat 11-4 or by appt. www.knottybynature.com
Cabinetry by Shiloh, Aspect & Waypoint
4662 CommerCial Drive, New HartforD • 315-736-0662 www.thegoldminejewelers.com
Mohawk valley astronomical society
living in space by carol higgins
Reading statistics can be boring, but some facts and figures about space exploration are so unusual that they are quite fun to learn. For example, did you know that humans have been living in space every minute of every day since November 2, 2000? This month we celebrate the 20th anniversary of the day the first crew (Expedition 1) arrived for a four-month mission at the world’s foremost science laboratory and research facility – the International Space Station (ISS). Discussions and detailed planning for an Earth-orbiting station started at NASA in the mid-1980s, and space agencies in other countries were invited to participate. A strong coalition of 15 countries evolved to solve a daunting list of complex engineering challenges and work together to make the scientific collaboration a success: the United States, Russia, Japan, Canada, and the 11 countries in the European Space Agency. Today, the ISS continues to be an exceptional example of peaceful international cooperation. Expedition 1 launched October 31, 2000, from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, carrying three experienced space travelers: NASA’s William Shepherd, and Russian cosmonauts Yuri Gidzenko and Sergei Krikalev. Their Soyuz spacecraft docked November 2, and they got to work activating many of the station’s systems, unpacking supplies, and getting the station up and running in preparation for future crews and missions scheduled to expand the outpost. When they arrived, the ISS had three modules: Zarya, Unity, and Zvezda. Russia built
Zarya and launched it on November The International Space Station 20, 1998. Unity arrived a few weeks Image credit: NASA/Roscosmos later inside the cargo bay of Space Shuttle Endeavour, and the crew connected the two modules. Russia technology development, physical science, launched Zvezda on July 12, 2000, and it auand human research to find new treatments tonomously docked to Zarya. for cancer, osteoporosis, glaucoma, and oth Today, the space station is very different er diseases. So far almost 3,000 experiments compared to its initial configuration. The enhave been performed. tire structure is 357 feet across, the sizeHanny’s of a Voorwerp. Imagecurrent Credit: NASA, ESA,isW.NASA’s Keel, GalaxyDr. Zoo Team The crew Kate football field. It took 42 missions to deliver Rubins, and Russia’s Sergey Ryzhikov and new modules and components over several Sergey Kud-Sverchkov. They will be joined years, thanks to 27 space shuttles and five by NASA astronauts Michael Hopkins, VicRussian rocket launches. tor Glover, Shannon Walker, and Japan’s ISS has 16 pressurized modules and airSoichi Noguchi when SpaceX launches locks, and eight docking ports for visiting their Crew Dragon spacecraft scheduled for spacecraft that deliver new crew members mid-November. and supplies. The crew modules are the Sometimes the station’s orbit takes it over size of a six-room house and include living the Mohawk Valley as it circles our planet at quarters and high-tech research labs outfitted 17,500 miles per hour. Visit the NASA webwith advanced test equipment and test racks. site https://spotthestation.nasa.gov and enter Over 50 computers control and monitor varyour town for upcoming sighting opportuious systems, including a life support system nities. The invaluable research platform that that provides clean air and recycles about 93 you’ll see has led to many of the products percent of station wastewater. Four pairs of and technologies we use today, and there are huge solar arrays provide electrical power. people living on board right now! On average, crew members stay on board Wishing you clear skies and good health!• for six months. Their daily schedule is busy and filled with tasks ranging from a spacewalk, station maintenance, exercising two Join MVAS from 7:00 PM to 10:00 PM hours every day to minimize bone loss and on November 14 for stargazing at other problems associated with living in a weightless environment, and performing sciBarton-Brown Observatory ence experiments. The station offers a unique 206 White St., Waterville, NY. setting for research in many categories: including biology and biotechnology, Earth See the MVAS Facebook page for details. science, STEM collaborations with students,
GOODSELL MUSEUM Mills Electrical Supply Local Adirondack History Over 50 Years in Business Your Headquarters for All Your Electrical & Lighting Needs! • Electrical Supplies • Indoor/Outdoor Lighting • Commerical and Residential • New Contractors Welcome
315-337-5760 Open M-F 7-5 739 Erie Blvd West, Rome www.millselectricalsupplyny.com 30
2993 State 28 Old 2993Route State Route 28Forge, NY 13420
315-369-3838 Old Forge, NY 13420 www.WebbHistory.org 315-369-3838
www.webbhistory.org Open All Year All Year FREEOpen TO THE PUBLIC
currently closed, FREE TO THE PUBLIC Museum Hours: please refer to Tues – Sat, 10AM Museum Hours:– 3 PM website for more info Tues-Sat, 10am-3pm Headquarters of the
Town of Webb Historical Association
Headquarters of the Town of Webb Historical Association
classical mv
john krause
Current Town: Utica Instruments: Piano, Voice Age began music: 10 Education: Crane School of Music at SUNY Potsdam, Temple University in Philadelphia, PA Current Employment: Recently retired after teaching Chorus and Drama for 23 years at Herkimer High School and the same before that at New York Mills Jr./Sr. High School. Presently working as an accompanist in local schools and colleges. Collaborations: Recently directed “Newsies” at Herkimer High School and “The Little Mermaid, Jr.” at Herkimer Middle School. Also recently music directed “Sister Act” for Stage Two Productions in Herkimer. Was a Founding member of Stage Two Productions and have worked for them since 1992. I have worked for Players of Utica, MVCC Theater Department, Hamilton College Choir productions and for many local high schools in the area. Influences: Cal Gage and Anitra Lynch of the Crane School, Christine Anderson from Temple University, Lauralyn Kolb, Pasquale Caputo, Rob Kolb, Jo Gatza, Randy Davis, and Bonnie Hibbard as a music educator. Rod and Janet Foote, Cate Daly, and Dale Cruskie as theatrical inspirations.
In cooperation with
urbanik’s paint co. See us in our new location!
Best Paint! Best Prices! Best Service! 1420 Oriskany St., Utica • (315) 724-5129 Mon-Fri: 8am-5:30pm, Sat: 8am-1pm • www.urbanikspaintco.com
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31
SPACE BOOT BOY by boother i run the cosmic mile as I chase memories of when I was a 10 years old, in the time where heroes and villains were everywhere...
I started each school day with sweet morning moments of cereal in front of the glowing box of wood and glass...
...and every day was a clash against the monsters who would destroy my galaxy.
an hour before school, the tv tackled my brain, transported me to places and planets... pushed my imagination, and I gained super powers...
and through rain, snow, or wind i could hear the school bus shifting gears, calling me
black and white friends made me laugh every morning. heroes who always won, costumed teachers, lessons learned.....
to face villains and heroes down that school bus aisle on the cosmic mile...
this comic by a local artist is brought to you by ravenswood comics!
mv crossword
november Crossword
All answers found in the pages of this magazine! Solution will appear in next month’s issue
Across 1. The name of the “Littlest Lamb” inspired by one of Stallone’s tough-guy movie characters. See Suzie 4. This happened in Shawangunk a year ago! 6. MV Gardens explores growing greens here. 10. Piece of Eight 12. We celebrate the 20th anniversary the first crew ____ to arrive at the International Space Station! 13. It’s always easy to do business with ___-Ponte 14. More than one of these edible tubers. Down 2. Who Was Charles P. ____? 3. This Utica politician clashed with women’s rights activist Susan B Anthony. See Oneida Co. 4. Art Gallery North of Rome, NY. 5. Check out the new vendor mall in Herkimer, MV _____ Market. See Valley Girl. 7. This “big” constellation is at the lower point in the sky this month. 8. Valley Girl tries to resist the baked goods at ____ Bakery. 9. Gary find a High Peaks alternative in this park during the pandemic. 11. You can observe flocks of Toms and ___ in forests and fields this month. See November Nature. 15. ___ Sweet Candy Cafe
MVL Crossword Puzzler:
Just before the month of November says adieu, This harbinger of winter will be on view. Unscramble the letters in the yellow boxes then email your answer to: mohawkvalleyliving@hotmail.com by the 18th of this month. You’ll be entered to win an MVL Mug and a bag of delicious, fresh-roasted FoJo Beans coffee!
15% OFF
in november *Excluding new comics.
Bossone’s Sausage & Meat Co.
Utica’s Pork Store
Try our Famous Sausage!
Deli items • Beef • Steaks • Cheeses • Dry Goods Holiday Catering trays made to order! Sundays: Fried Meatballs & Fried Dough!
711 Bleecker St., Utica
735-3699 Big Apple Plaza, New Hartford
Taking Holiday Orders Now!
(315) 765-6409 Open: Thurs & Fri: 9-4, Sat: 8-2, Sun: 8-Noon 33
The Everyday Adventures of Mohawk Valley Girl
Ramon’s Bakery
Tucked beside Family Dollar on Albany Street in Utica, Ramon’s Bakery is quickly becoming a neighborhood favorite
in Utica
I had a moment of nostalgia driving down Culver Avenue toward Albany Street. The bakery is right near the National Guard Armory, where I drilled one weekend a month for two years after my stint in the regular army. Ramon’s was not there during my Guard time. I’m not saying I would have re-upped if they had been, but it would have been a selling point. I was actually hesitant to go to a bakery – especially one known for their half-moons! I have been struggling with my weight, and I really cannot be trusted in these places. Still, readers of Mohawk Valley Living might be interested. A journalist has a certain duty, after all. I arrived late Sunday after they had had a very busy morning. The lady behind the counter told me their selection was not nearly as good as it had been earlier in the day, but I still found plenty to tempt my taste buds. One slice of breakfast pizza remained. That looked good! Racks on the other opposite wall held buns and loaves of Italian bread. Mmmmm…. I was also interested in a case of foods in containers: macaroni and potato salads, pasta dishes, and what looked like meat rolls of some kind. I found out they were pepperoni rolls. That was for me! Yes, yes, I am sure pepperoni has just as many calories as pastries. I’ll go for a longer run tomorrow. I was also tempted to get a hot chocolate bomb – just add warm milk. I expect I will go back and pick up a few when the
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weather gets cold. I might also try that breakfast pizza! Ramon’s offers cakes, breads, pastries, tomato pie, and more. They are home to the “donnoli,” a cross between a doughnut and a cannoli, something else I will have to try. They also offer all kinds of special orders: birthday cakes, strawberry-filled donuts, and pastry tables for weddings. I discovered that they were previously housed in a food truck. The tremendous response to their food truck encouraged owner Ramon Zayas to invest in a brick-andmortar location, and by the look of their picked-over shelves, people are just as enthusiastic about the storefront! Zayas (who served four years active duty in the Marine Corps) also added an offering of deli lunches to-go that includes Spanish rice, meatloaf and potatoes, homemade mac and cheese, goulash, homemade chicken pot pies, and tuna noodle casserole. If you ever find yourself in the Utica area, or even a 20-mile radius, be sure to stop in this wonderful bakery. Just get there before everyone else does! •
The fresh made treats at Ramon’s go fast. Get there early!
Ramon’s Bakery
1256 Albany St., Utica • 315-790-5200
Open Wednesday through Sunday 7am to 2pm, closed Monday and Tuesday. 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
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Tomato pie is one of the lunchtime (or anytime) offerings at Ramon’s Bakery in Utica
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Herkimer county historical society
Who Was Charles P. Byron? By sue perkins
What started as a researcher’s hunt for gravestones in Old St. Mary’s Cemetery in Little Falls turned into a quest to find out who Charles P. Byron was. Here is what happened on a beautiful autumn afternoon in September. While walking through the cemetery, Caryl Hopson and I came across this very large monument. At the base of the monument was the surname of BYRON and towards the top of the monument was a bronze plaque. It read: “Charles P. Byron Born in Ireland, 1844. Entered the United States Navy in 1861. Served on the STRS. Penguin and Oneida. Participated in the Battle of New Orleans onboard the Oneida. The fourth ship of the first division in line of the battle under Admiral Farragut. Assisted in the capture of Forts Jackson and St. Philip the fortified defenses of the lower Mississippi part in the Battle of Vicksburg. Received with his shipmates the congratulations of the Navy Department, the government, and the country for courage and honor in letters from Washington dated May 10th, 1862. Took part in engagement on the Potomac River and at Port Royal, Nov. 7th Honorably Discharged July 18th, 1863.” There were five gravestones right behind the large monument that said BYRON on it. They are Charles P. Byron (1844-1912) and his wife Annie (Buckley) Byron
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The visit to Old St. Mary’s Cemetery in Little Falls takes historian Sue Perkins on a quest
Annie Buckley Byron gravestone (wife of Charles P. Byron)
(1855-1895). Their children Nellie Byron (1875-1882), Thomas P. Byron (1878-1913), Willie Byron (1881-1881) and Alma Lucy/Lucy Alma Byron Collins (1881-1971). Alma’s husband Burt Harrison Collins (1839-1932) is buried there as well. As soon as I got home, I went on the laptop to find out what I could on Charles P. Byron. I used Ancestry.com, www.fultonhistory.com and Google Books. “Bradford Township” by J.H. Beers, Chicago, 1890 from the History of the Counties of McKean, Elk, Cameron and Potter Pennsylvania had a brief bio that read “Charles P. Byron, oil producer, Bradford, is a native of Ireland born in 1844, son of Thomas O. and Bridget (McGraw) Byron. His mother died in 1849, and in 1850 his father came with his family of seven children to the United States and settled at Little Falls, N.Y., where he died in 1875. Charles P. commenced working in the paper mills when a child, going to school a half-day and working the other half. When fourteen years old, he left home and went to sea, and from there he followed the life of a sailor, being both on the ocean and the lakes. After the war he returned home for a time and once more sailed the lakes; subsequently, he became interested in the production of oil and had drilled several wells in the oil field of Pennsylvania. He also has an interest in the gas districts and is president of Smethport Gas Company.” Charles’ father, Thomas O. Byron (1808-1875/76) first married Bridget McGraw/McGrath in Ireland. Note: Charles’ death certificate says Ellen McGrath. Thomas then married Mrs. Mary Ann O’Hara, who had three children named Thomas, Catherine, and Marcus O’Hara from her previous marriage. They were listed in the 1860 Census as living in Little Falls. By 1870 and 1875 (The New York State Census was taken June 5th of 1875) Thomas and Mary Ann were the only ones living in the household. Thomas’s Will is probated October 30, 1876. Charles P. Byron was married on June 9, 1874, to Miss Anna Buckley, daughter of William Buckley, who was a native of Ireland. In politics, Charles was a Democrat and was a delegate to the Pennsylvania State and national conventions of 1888. Charles died of cancer of the larynx in 1912 in Bradford, PA a wealthy man. He left an estate of $152, 311.21. In his will, he left money to his sister Bridget Byron Clancy and her daughter Lucy Clancy to be paid annually. The rest was divided equally to his son Thomas P. and daughter Alma Lucy/Lucy Alma Bryon Collins. In further research, I was able to find on www.fultonhsitory.com in the Amsterdam Evening Recorder, Monday, May 6, 1911, the following: “ William E. Hennessy has been in Little Falls the past week, where he had been putting up a 20-ton monument of cottage design, in St. Mary’s cemetery for Charles P. Byron of Bradford, Pa. The monument has a raised anchor in front and a bronze tablet which bears the record of Mr. Byron, who is a naval veteran of some distinction.” You never know what you are going to find once you start researching! •
Sue Perkins is the Executive Director of the Herkimer County Historical Society
Get your copy today! 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)
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Detial of Albion Light, by John Fitzsimmons. His work and the works of Whitfield and Montan are on display at the Kirkland Art Center in Clinton
november 2020
GALLERY GUIDE The Holiday Show & Sale November 13 - December 23, 2020 Fine arts and crafts made by CAA Member Artists, perfect for holiday gift-giving.
Cooperstown Art Association Main St., Cooperstown, NY (607) 547-9777 www.cooperstownart.com
Julia Pilny: Pottery November 7-25, 2020 Opening Saturday, November 7, 3-6pm Fusion Art Gallery
8584 Turin Road, Rome, NY (315) 338-5712 www.photoshoppeofrome.com
Pete Souza: Two Presidents, One Photographer Through December 31, 2020 Exhibit features images of Presidents Obama and Reagan that provide us with candid moments that are windows into their humanity.
Fenimore Art Museum
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Holiday Stroll Nov 27 & 28
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Fitzsimmons, Montan, Whitfield Through November 21, 2020 Online at: www.kacny.org In-person Saturdays 1 - 4
Kirkland Art Center
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Victorian Yuletide - “Oh, Tannebaum, oh Tannebaum, how lovely are thy branches…” November 27, 2020 - January 3, 2021
Annual event: Yuletide 2020 commemorates the tradition of Christmas trees, an iconic seasonal symbol that originated in Germany.
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Michael Rakowitz: Nimrud NY State Juried Sculpture Exhibit and Solo exhibitions by Matt Wilt, Inguna Gremzde, and Elisabeth Lorentzsen November 14, 2020 - March 27, 2021 Reception: Fri., Nov. 13, 4-6pm You must pre-register to attend, call View (315-369-6411 x201) or go online.
View
3273 Rt. 28, Old Forge, NY (315) 369-6411 • www.viewarts.org
Through June 13, 2021 Open by appointment Iraqi-American visual artist Rakowitz has turned to Nimrud’s hallmark, the Northwest Palace in his ongoing effort to complicate the narrative around cultural patrimony, especially as it pertains to the Middle East.
Wellin Museum of Art
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On the farm with Suzie
The Lamb and Her Girl
by Suzie Jones, Photos: Brenda and Jenna Riese Isolation during the pandemic brings a lamb and a girl together
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Back in May of this year, when we were just settling into the new world of COVID, my friend Brenda called me up. Her daughter Jenna was looking for a project—something to keep her occupied over a long summer of not seeing friends; of no softball or figure skating. Jenna had seen a video on YouTube of a bottle lamb being best friends with his humans and thought this would be the perfect thing to occupy her time! She could take care of a lamb and bond with it, making the perfect summer-of-COVID-companion. Mother Brenda wasn’t so convinced… In fact, when Brenda called, it wasn’t so much to ask if we had a lamb for Jenna to bottle raise, it was more along the lines of “can you please help me convince Jenna what a bad idea this is?” I agreed with Brenda right away. So much can go wrong! Baby lambs can be tricky…and heartbreaking. Even if everything goes well, and the lamb never overeats (this can kill them), never ingests some poisonous decorative plantings found in most people’s yards (another thing that can kill them), and is protected from neighborhood dogs or wild coyotes (so many things can kill a lamb!), they can get lonely if they don’t have a friend and can be quite destructive as they get bigger. Besides, I told Brenda I really don’t have a steady supply of bottle lambs. Lambs on our farm stay with their mothers unless something goes terribly awry. Jenna was disappointed but understood. Both Brenda and I were relieved. But a few days later, I spotted a little lamb not more than a couple of days old, following the rest of our herd as best she could. She was dehydrated and weak. None of the mother ewes responded to her sad calls and I saw that she would not survive without immediate care. I gave her a warm bottle of milk, which she took gladly. I texted Brenda a picture of the little lamb and, “Guess what we have?” After chatting about what she would need to feed the lamb, Brenda made plans to stop by after work the next day. They would take the lamb and Jenna’s project would become a reality. The next morning, however, the littlest lamb would not take her bottle. She was not doing well. I texted Brenda a second time: “We should hold off on the lamb.” I tube-fed the littlest lamb with electrolytes several times that day. Although I hoped for the best, I was starting to think Brenda’s and my initial conversation was spot-on. The next morning, the lamb was full of energy
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and eagerly drank a bottle and a half! I texted Brenda a third time: “Somebody’s doing much better today!” Jenna and her mom came that evening and took little “Lambo” home. Jenna was an excellent caretaker for Lambo. She set a 5am alarm for the first feeding every day, mixed milk replacer, and washed bottles on constant rotation. She even gave Lambo baths from time to time, meaning that little lamb was sparkling white in every picture her mother texted to me. The two spent hours together every day, sometimes playing hide and seek in the tall grasses or just “hanging out” as Jenna read and Lambo munched in the lawn. Jenna’s parents were pleased that she was spending so much time outside. It was truly a win-win-win. As Lambo grew, so did her love for Jenna. She followed her human everywhere. While Jenna practiced pitching softball from the mound in her backyard, the lamb would hop and skip after her in a near-perfect mimic. If Jenna took a break to sunbathe in the chaise lounge, Lambo would jump up and join her. If Jenna ran into the house for the least little thing, Lambo would blat at the bottom of the stairs until Jenna returned. As it turns out, Jenna was absolutely right about having a lamb for a summer companion and seemed to love every minute of it. Of course, all good things must come to an end. When school started back up again for Jenna in September, her parents thought it best to return Lambo to our farm. Jenna and I walked Lambo out to the pasture where our sheep and goats were happily grazing. My hopes that Lambo would willingly join them were completely dashed when Jenna tried to quietly walk away. Lambo chased after her, not wanting to be far from her favorite human! Instead, we put Lambo in the barn where she would be reunited with the rest of our animals that evening. I didn’t realize until the next day that Jenna was not ready to say goodbye to Lambo either. After so much time spent together, she was sad to see her friend go. Jenna and her parents have visited Lambo several times since, and Lambo continues to grow and act more like a sheep. After a very shaky start, that little lamb has a long life ahead of her thanks to a girl and her idea for a summer project. Thank you, Jenna! •
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 at www.anotherjonesfamilyfarm.com
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Mohawk Valley nature
Utica Peregrines 2020 update Part 2
story & photos by matt perry 44
Xena hovers over her perch
We always feel a sense of apprehension when hatching time approaches and this year was no exception. It had been a particularly cold early spring and even though we saw no significant gaps in incubation, we wondered if the parent falcons had been able to keep the eggs warm enough. On April 29th, we had reached 32 days of incubation, which is one day less than the maximum number of days Peregrine eggs typically take to hatch. Late that morning we noticed that Astrid had been doing a lot of egg jostling. She does this to compel chicks inside the eggs to move around and begin breaking out of their shells. Though she regularly shuffled the eggs, she was not lifting off them completely, so we had a difficult time discerning if any had started to hatch. Finally, we got a short glimpse at the clutch and could see that one egg (laid back on March 23rd) had a “pip” in it. A pip is a small hole a chick inside the egg pounds out with its egg tooth. Later in the afternoon, we began to hear the chick calling from inside its shell and that meant hatching could occur at any time. As it happened, the hatch took place in the pre-dawn hours on April 30th, at somewhere between 3:00 and 5:00 AM. At 5:30, we were able to make out broken pieces of eggshell on the floor of the nestbox in front of Astrid. She shifted when Ares came into the box and we got our first look at the new chick. It was already dry and clad in pure white down feathers. Ares had come to the nest several times, sometimes with food, but each time his mate sent him away. At 6:11 AM, Astrid was calling into the canyon. She had been sitting on the nest for many hours and she seemed ready for Ares to take over. Ares flew through giving a screech call. He came to the box, hopped in, but then had to muscle a reluctant mother off her nest. That is correct, despite asking to be relieved only moments before, Astrid needed to be pried off the nest! She loathes leaving when there are chicks to tend. As she flew into the canyon, Ares gave an incredulous look at the new chick and then noticed there was a prey item placed in the middle of the clutch. Astrid had been keeping breakfast warm! He picked at it a few times before settling down and brooding. Of course, his object was to cover the new chick and all three eggs at the same time. That was easier said than done. He settled back onto the clutch but left two of the eggs out in the
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cold. Fortunately, he adjusted a few more times and managed to cover everything. Astrid came back to take over only a few minutes later. At 7:30 AM, we saw the first feeding of the new chick. As the wobbling nestling stretched its head upwards, Astrid tore minuscule pieces of meat and gently placed them into the chick’s gaping bill. At that time, we had a decent look at the eggs and none of the remaining ones had been pipped. We went the next couple of days with no additional hatches and we began to wonder if there would be only a single nestling this season, which would have been unprecedented for the Utica nest. The weather had been persistently cold, and Astrid was staying tight on the nest and that afforded us few opportunities to scan the eggs for pips. The falcons continued to be plagued by interlopers during this period and on the morning of May 2nd, an unknown female Peregrine caused Astrid to abruptly vacate the nest. While she was gone, Ares came in to take over incubation/brooding. Astrid promptly chased off the intruder and was back to relieve Ares only minutes later. Evidently, it had only been a short-term fix, and in the early afternoon, Astrid was back to dealing with what appeared to be the same persistent intruder. According to a witness on the ground, Astrid was seen spiraling high into the sky and then repeatedly diving down on her nemesis like a projectile. No one knew if she actually hit the bird, but her efforts to drive it out of the canyon appeared to work. As each day went by there were decreasing chances of another hatch. By the morning of May 3rd, we had almost given up hope of having more than one nestling in the box. At 5:30 AM, Ares took over brooding from his mate. Astrid came back a few minutes later with food she drew from one of Ares’ pantry ledges on the State Building. She began tearing off pieces of the carcass while Ares was still in place on the nest. For a few minutes it looked like she was going to feed Ares instead of the chick beneath him! He looked legitimately confused and so were we! Finally, he got off the nest and flew out. Astrid then fed the chick. By 9 AM we noticed that one of the eggs (it was the third egg laid in the clutch) was pipped. Soon after, we heard the faint sound of the chick calling from inside the egg. A few hours later the second chick hatched. We became aware when a large piece of eggshell suddenly appeared in front of Astrid. She then shifted on the brood and we could see the new nestling. It was still wet and pink. After eating some of the cast-off eggshell, Astrid tucked the chick beneath her and continued to brood. By early afternoon,
Astrid feeds the first nestling to hatch
Ares broods the two chicks
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the new nestling’s feathers had dried off and it appeared cottony-white like its sibling. At 2 PM, Astrid was back at the box with food. She conducted a feeding of the older chick. The newly hatched nestling was still too uncoordinated to handle vying for food. At one point it toppled onto its back and was unable to right itself for several minutes. The size difference between the two nestlings was very great and we wondered if the smaller one would be able to successfully compete for food with its giant nestmate. As it happened, in the succeeding days, there would be no additional hatches, and there remained a stark size difference in the two chicks. All fears aside, the smaller nestling got more than an adequate amount of food. Time and time again, when Astrid conducted feedings, she took care to feed the smaller one. With more than enough nutrition, both nestlings developed quickly and by the time they were two weeks old, they had become ambulatory in the nest. They were also showing the beginning of dark flight feathers emerge from their white wings and tails. As expected, Ares was bringing a great variety of prey species back to the nest. Interestingly, the prey he brought back told us where he been hunting. One day he brought back a Virginia Rail which is a denizen of cattail marshes; another day he brought back a Solitary Sandpiper and then a Least Bittern. These were all birds most likely caught at the Utica Marsh, which is less than a mile away from the downtown canyon and well within Astrid and Ares’ territory. For most of the period the young are in the nest, it is Ares’ job to provide food for the family. However, when it comes to doing the actual feeding of the chicks, that job falls to Astrid. In recent years that strict gender-based task assignment seemed to erode and Astrid was letting Ares get in an increasing number of feedings. However, for whatever reason, this year she seemed to backtrack, and she didn’t allow him to do any feedings until the chicks were over two weeks old. It is true that female falcons are control freaks and Astrid is certainly no exception. Given the persistent presence of interlopers in the territory and the constant construction work going on in the canyon, Astrid’s response was to exert what control she had over her nest and family. Unfortunately, for Ares, that additional control seemed to come at his expense. I should add here that male Peregrines love to feed nestlings. They don’t typically do it as well as the females, but they do enjoy the process. On May 17th, in the late morning, we heard Ares’s cries ringing through the canyon. Astrid had done a feeding not long before and was absent from the nest. Ares stopped at the box
Zeus and Xena start to explore beyond the nest
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to check on the nestlings and then was out again. Ten minutes later he returned with a Goldfinch in his talons. He looked around when he stepped onto the lip of the box. We think he was expecting Astrid to barge in and grab the food from him, but she was nowhere in sight. This was Ares’ big chance! It was a small meal, but he was able to feed it to the chicks with no interruptions. After the meal was done Ares went out onto the long perch and gave some satisfied-sounding screech calls. The next day, Astrid allowed her mate to conduct yet another feeding. Ares had come to the box with prey and attempted to feed a couple of very disinterested chicks. Despite her proximity to the nest, Astrid wasn’t intervening. Ares chirped at the nestlings to get them to start feeding. This is something Astrid does all the time and it probably doesn’t seem like a big deal, but we had never seen Ares do it before. As Astrid knows only too well, vocalizing prompts the nestlings to bend their heads back and gape their bills. During a pause in the feeding, one of the chicks pointed its tail towards Ares, bent over, and scored a direct hit of “whitewash” on Ares’ wing. He didn’t seem to notice and, after a short visit to the cross perch, he hopped back into the box to serve out the remainder of the food. It had not been a large meal, but it was extraordinarily successful for father and nestlings. We experienced more than our share of hot sunny days in the latter part of May, and this became a concern for the parent falcons who were keen to protect their nest-bound young from the heat of the afternoon sun. On May 20th, the afternoon was hot and sunny with temperatures reaching 80 degrees. Ares was in the box doing shading duty. The only trouble was, he was shading just the eggs and not the nestlings. As for the chicks, they were huddled together in a shady corner, so it wasn’t of any consequence that their father spent a few hours protecting two unviable eggs from the harmful effects of the sun. By late afternoon, the light flooding the box had shifted and the eggs were in the sun again. Despite that, Ares continued acting like a parasol and perhaps he thought he was keeping something cool. As for the chicks, they still preferred the back corners of the box. However, by early evening, they did take advantage of Ares’ shadow. The unseasonably hot weather continued that
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week and both parents put in time doing shading duty. During that time Ares’ shading technique improved and he began ignoring the eggs and concentrating on shading the chicks. By this time, the nestlings had developed dark face masks, tan cheek patches, and half-grown flight feathers made a dark fringe around their wings and tail. The nestlings received names on May 22nd. The first to hatch (female) was The nestlings get names: Zeus and Xena named Xena and the smaller one (male) was named Zeus. The chosen names were among many submitted to the Utica Peregrine Falcon Project (UPFP) during our annual naming contest. The size difference between them would help us to discern the juveniles from each other. The intense heatwave continued through the last week of May and just as the nestlings were becoming more independent and rambunctious in the nest. The parents ratcheted down the amount Feeding time at the nest of food they were providing to the nest; they seemed to be purposely fasting the chicks during the hottest part of the day. This made the nestlings more At the close of May, and as the fledging winirritable. When a parent would land on the nest- dow crept closer, Astrid was getting increasingly box’s cross perch to check on them, they would touchy about any human activity that took place be charged at by ravenous squealing monsters. in the proximity of the nest. It took little provocaLate in the day, when it became cooler and more tion for her to give alarm calls or actively swoop bearable in the nest, food brought to the box was by a floor of windows. If someone in one of the often grabbed and taken to a back corner by one adjacent offices dared to look out their window, of the nestlings (usually Xena). By this time, the that would be reason enough for Astrid to haze young birds were becoming more adept at feed- the building. She was also not happy about the ing themselves, although Astrid would continue continuing construction work on the nearby to conduct feeding sessions when she was al- apartment building roof and by the work taking place on the State Building. Also contributing to lowed.
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her anxious state was the fact that nearly every time she tried to feed the nestlings, she first had to have a tug-o-war with Xena. The Utica Peregrine Falcon Project’s official fledgewatch began on June 5th. It had been 37 days since Xena had hatched and the chance of a fledge (either accidental or intentional) by one of the chicks was becoming increasingly likely. Despite what the calendar said, the nestlings did not look ready to leave. Although their white body feathers had given way to the dark plumage of juvenile Peregrines, both retained a fringe of white down on top of their heads. As the fledgewatch volunteers began their vigil in the church parking lot, the shedded white feathers were floating around the canyon like silk parachutes of milkweed seeds. The Peregrine nest box was like a snow machine on the 15th floor of the bank building. Every time one of the nestlings practiced flapping their wings, a flurry of white feathers would billow from the box and precipitate into the canyon. The young birds were doing a lot of wing exercising, and on the second day of fledgewatch (June 6th), both took their first cautious steps away from the haven of the nestbox. Xena was first. She hopped onto the lip of the nestbox and then jumped back into the box. Feeling her power, she did it a few more times. Meanwhile, the parents were demonstrating how the nestlings could get onto the side platforms (or “verandas”) located on either side of the nestbox. They would land on the box’s cross perch and then hop back and forth between it and the verandas, showing the nestlings precisely how to do it. It worked, and by early evening, first Xena and then Zeus had scrambled onto the east veranda for the first time. That day the parents were doing a lot of flying. These showy flights were also demonstration performances for the benefit of the nestlings. At one point during the morning, we watched Astrid and Ares as they circled the canyon while gliding easily on the wind. Their flight paths converged occasionally as they rose and descended with only the slightest wing movements. They were showing their young how to fly like Peregrines. For two hours straight we watched them rising on thermals, soaring high above the canyon, setting out on hunting runs, executing dives, and stalling into landings. They both de-
Xena maneuvers around a pillar
Xena displaces Astrid from her perch
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Zeus finds a railing to perch on after fledging
liberately made landings on the wide window ledges on the State Building. This is something that especially Astrid rarely does unless she is in demonstration mode. Undoubtedly they were trying to show the young birds the safest and easiest places to land after fledging from the nest. One thing the parents weren’t doing was trying to encourage the nestlings to fledge by withholding food or by using prey to lure them out of the nest. In fact, they were continuing to feed the chicks in the nest or on the verandas. From this we gleaned that Astrid and Ares did not yet want the young to fly, but instead desired them to remain at the nest area where they could continue to exercise their wings and refine their jumping skills. Over their seven-years of nesting experience, the parents seemed to have learned that the more successful fledglings are those that have practiced and exercised the longest. One of the most interesting aspects of the 2020 breeding season, was the behavior of Xena. Unlike most pre-fledging female Peregrines, she was not timider than her male sibling. In fact, she kept parity with him in all activities. Granted, she was a few days older than he, but in our experience, the female nestlings hold back and are not so eager to explore outside the confines of the nest. This doesn’t apply to accepting food from the parents, in which case there is no hint of shyness with females. Xena was bold about going onto the perches, the verandas, and then onto the window ledges beyond the box area. Although she was not the first one of the nestlings to fledge, she was the first to take a flight that could have easily led to fledging. On the morning of June 12th, Xena was making her way east along the
window ledges and well away from the nestbox. A couple of years ago, we had a perch installed outside of Deb Saltis’ office window. Xena made it all the way over to that perch and there she did some wing exercising and jumping between perches. It was an extremely Zeus and Xena windy day and the fledgewatchers knew only too well that any miscalculation made during exercise, any mistake in judgment on a nestlings part, and they would have been swept into accidentally fledging. High winds notwithstanding, Xena stood out on the newly discovered perch, spread her wings, let go her grip on the wooden perch and let the wind lift her. I was on the sidewalk below her at the time and I thought for sure she was going to sail off into the canyon, instead, she exhibited great control over her untested feathered airfoils. She hovered two feet above the perch and then lowered herself right back onto it a few seconds later. Almost immediately after landing, she made her way east along the window ledges and back towards the nest. She wasn’t going to fledge that day, but she was making great strides. On June 16th, more than a week after we began the fledgewatch vigil, at a couple of minutes after 10 AM, Zeus fledged. It was deliberate on his part. He had recently hopped up onto the roof of the nestbox (followed closely by his sister) and had been staring out into the canyon with a look of determination. He flew out towards the Grace Church steeple, attempted a landing on its sheer walls, failed, recovered, headed north over Genesee Street, and was soon out of our view. Two of us ran after him and, a few minutes later, we found him perched on a rooftop located on the same block as the Adirondack Bank building. He had come down on a rooftop approximately 10 stories high and seemed to be in a good place. He was undamaged and within ten minutes he was exploring his new realm. Meanwhile, Xena was stretching her wings on top of the box. Astrid was monitoring Zeus from Hotel Utica and Ares was watching her from a perch on the steeple. Xena’s gaze was fixed on some point in the canyon, and then, as her brother did only 20 minutes before, she decided to trust her wings and jump into the sky. With intense wing flapping, she crossed over Elizabeth Street and tried to land on the steeple. Again, just like her brother did, she found no viable landing place. The nearly vertical masonry offered nothing
to grip on. She tumbled down about twenty feet before her wings caught the air and she was able to resume powered flight. She then circled towards the east, flying high over the parking lot of the County Building. She attempted to land on the roof of that building but came in a little low and landed on top of a thin pillar just short of the roof. There she hung on with wings partially spread out against the building. Fortunately, she had enough strength to scramble onto the roof and to safety. Her mother visited her shortly after. Only a half-hour after fledging, Zeus was flying again. This time his flight took him west and onto the roof of Hotel Utica. It was a good flight. For most of the way, his mother flew above him as an escort. His wing-flapping was intense as he made the transit. Typically, juvenile Peregrines new to flying do little to no gliding or soaring. As it happened there was little “typical” about the fledge day. The siblings made several flights through the afternoon and into the evening. Normally, newly fledged young fly little on their first day. Zeus did something unprecedented for a new fledgling. He ascended high over the canyon and made a few wide circles. He was alternating between flapping and gliding. He was soaring! He may have continued circling a few more times if Astrid didn’t decide he had enough and forced him into a landing. Xena also made news on that day. She did it by flying over and displacing her mother from her perch. Upping a parent like this is often done by older fledglings to compel a parent to provide a meal. There was no doubt that Xena and Zeus were progressing very quickly. And they would continue to hone their skills for the next month before ultimately leaving their parents domain and striking out on their own. Our fledgwatch volunteers continued gathering at the church parking lot to monitor their behavior. We were all prepared to mount a rescue if one was needed. Thankfully, none was ever needed. Finally, first Zeus and then his sister moved away from their parent’s territory. They were gone by the end of July. Thanks to all this season’s Fledgwatch volunteers and thanks to all those who helped us out during the falcon’s 2020 breeding season. As usual, I am most grateful to Deb Saltis, co-founder of UPFP and proprietrix of Falcon Heart Rescue, for contributing a great deal of the behavioral data that makes detailed narratives like this possible. The young falcons may be well on their way to South America by the time this article is in print, but their parents will remain in the canyon throughout the winter. If you are in their downtown neighborhood, come down and say hello. They may just dip their wings to you. • 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.
mohawk valley Gardens & recipes
growing salads in winter by Denise A. Szarek
Since it looks like we will be spending more time indoors together this winter, why not start an indoor garden and grow your own salad! Enjoy tender salad greens indoors, in recycled plastic containers under a couple of inexpensive fluorescent shop lights. Seriously, it’s not hard to grow salads all winter long! Here’s how! First We Need Light You will need a couple of two bulb shop lights outfitted with full spectrum grow lights and suspended by chains from the ceiling. You could hang your lights in an attic, basement, or even a large closet. As long as the space can maintain average temperatures of around 50 degrees F and has an electrical outlet for the lights, you can grow nutritious greens. For planting containers, you can recycle some of those plastic takeout containers we all seem to be collecting during the quarantine. I do not recommend using foam or paper containers. Fill them with a mixture of a half good quality soilless potting mix and half compost. What Greens to Plant The simple answer: almost any type of salad or cooking greens – the faster growing the better! If you have leftover seeds from your spring-summer planting mix them together, diving them into categories with similar germination and growth habits: · Various leaf lettuces · Pea shoots · Kale, arugula and leafy Asian greens (bok choi, mizuna, tatsoi, etc)
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· Spinach, chard, and beet greens If you’re buying new seeds for winter planting, I suggest one of the fast-growing mesclun or braising mixes sold by most seed companies. Scatter the seeds thickly across the soil surface, cover with paper towels and water well. This is the only time overwatering is not a real issue, as long as your seeds are not drowning in water. However, under-watering will result in poor or no germination. A germinating seed must remain moist. If the seedbed, and therefore the seed, is allowed to dry out, the process will halt and your seeds will no longer be viable. Care and Harvest Turn the lights on when you get up in the morning and shut them off around supper time. Water them every couple of days, when the top of the planting medium feels dry. Every week or so water with a weak solution of seaweed and fish emulsion (available at garden centers). This is a great way to get the kids involved in gardening and in eating more nutrient-dense greens. Everything they learn planting in containers can be transferred in the spring to the garden. As the plants get to be about 2 inches tall, harvest the greens throughout the entire container with clean scissors (I wipe the blades with alcohol before each cutting). Make sure to leave the growing tips to produce another crop. After about 5 weeks of growth, six to eight containers of greens will begin producing robust, two-person salads, three to four times a week for about 6 weeks as well as a few handfuls of greens to throw into winter soups.
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MVL RECIPES
Autumn Greens Salad By Denise A. Szarek
This is one of my all-time favorite salads and when it’s made with our own spinach it tastes so much better!
2 cups baby spinach (or any greens you have) 2 large apples, granny smith and gala are my go-to apples (but you can also make with a pear and apple of your choice) ½ small red onion, peeled and thinly sliced 1 cup mix toasted walnut, & pecan halves and slivered almonds 2/3 cup dried cranberries or raisins 5 oz crumbly goat, feta, or blue cheese Apple Cider Vinaigrette Dressing 1/3 c extra virgin olive oil ¼ c apple cider vinegar 2 T lemon juice 1 T Dijon mustard 1 T honey A generous pinch of salt & black pepper
Add greens, apples, red onions, nuts, cranberries, and half the crumbly cheese in a large bowl. To mix the vinaigrette, add all the ingredients in a mason jar and shake to combine. Drizzle with vinaigrette and toss to combine. Serve immediately, garnished with the remaining cheese. Enjoy! This salad is pretty enough for your holiday table but easy enough for your kids to make on a weeknight for dinner. To make it a meal, add some cooked chicken, turkey, or cubed ham!
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Rising floodwaters threatened Peg and Tim’s home last year.
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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.
The wind has picked up. Golden yellow, red, and orange leaves swirl about, going every which way, colliding with everything, swirling like ghost spirits in an anxious frenzy. The wind now has that mournful, hollow sound of winter when the cheery chatter of rustling leaves is only a blissful summer memory. This is an appropriate time for Halloween. Last year, in 2019, there was a huge storm and flooding on Halloween night. We watched Misty Brook in front of our house rise the next morning, creeping higher and closer to our cottage than ever before in 45 years here. We started getting a bit nervous when I heard that a whole house was floating down the West Canada Creek only a few miles away. Would we have to evacuate? When I was fourteen, my family had to quickly vacate from a campground. We were traveling across the United States and were hurriedly awakened early one morning in the Dakotas. “Get up!” mom called out, “We’ve got to get out of here!” The wind was racing toward us from the west and madly whipping
our old military canvas tent. Across the plains, on the horizon, we could see malevolent clouds of billowing black, turning a sickly green and gold with every lightning flash. I was instantly concerned about a stray dog I’d befriended the night before and wanted to look for it but had to help take down the tent and load the station wagon. Dad was still tying gear on the roof when heavy rain began plummeting down, and we kids squeezed into the car just in time. Mom flew into the front seat and slammed the door shut. We were pretty scared, but when mom looked back at us, she burst out laughing! All she could see was a wild confabulation of still inflated sleeping mats, blankets, pillows, and boxes of food in complete disarray with
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Tim considers using a water trough as a boat before Peg finds the canoe
Peg and daughter Becky float above the submerged walkway using the handrails to navigate
o u r three little faces with big eyes and tousled hair peeking out from among them. Dad tapped on the driver’s side door and yelled above the percussion of rain; “Are you all right?” (He thought she might be hysterical.) “I’m fine, but I don’t know about them!” as she pointed out our exceedingly cramped situation. As we drove out, we saw other tents blowing over with their former inhabitants running about in a frenzy, getting soaked as they tried to retrieve gear blown off by the fierce wind. We didn’t get very far, though. We had to stop and wait for the rain to abate, as the windshield wipers couldn’t even keep up with the deluge. Tim and I have seen other exceptionally dramatic storms in our own North Country, and one of the wildest occurred rather recently as we were driving home between Deerfield Hill and Poland on Rt. 8. A fierce wind blasted across the plateau from the north-west, full of hard-driving rain. The air was livid with unceasingly pulsating flashes; like a fluorescent light when it’s beginning to ebb, filling heaven and earth with eerie glows of greenish-gold. Roaring, crashing thunder rolls heaved like tsunami swells temporarily obscuring the mad staccato of rain pelting our car so we could hardly see the road. Wildly branching blasts of electricity shot from the low clouds to the ground all around us as our car lurched through wind gusts. This was a fierce, other-worldly chaos of electricity, wind, and rain, and I seriously wondered if we would survive it. Tim offered to take over the wheel, but I was afraid to stop and drove grimly on. It tempered when we finally began the descent down Schermerhorn Hill into the Kuyahoora Valley and escaped the in-
tense fury across the highlands, but I dreaded continuing on up Cold Brook Hill to another plateau and risk entering the same dangerous conditions. However, surprisingly, the storm wasn’t so fierce here. In fact, when we got home in the Shawangunk Valley, it just seemed like an average thunder and lightning storm. Now, in 2019, Misty Brook is still rising and getting extremely close to our house. I am starting to think about escape options. Tim looks for a low, galvanized water trough the grandkids floated in the creek one summer. I remember the canoe we left at the beaver pond upstream, but it’s on the opposite side of the creek! Will we have to swim across to get it? I hike up through the woods to see if I could possibly walk across the beaver dam and get to it. What a surprise to see that Misty Brook’s upstream borders are almost normal! I’m able to cross it without much difficulty by carefully balancing on semi-submerged logs for a short distance! YAY! No flooding to speak of up here! I drag the canoe home along the road, then launch it across from our cottage, floating merrily above our walkway. I don’t even need a paddle. I can pull myself along with my hands on the handrail. Obviously, the flooding is not due to Misty Brook but from Black Creek, at least a half-mile away! It’s fun for a while, navigating back and forth through the maze of alder trees to get in
and out. And our son-in-law tries paddling toward the main channel of Black Creek but the current gets too strong. The high tide of the flood came within a few inches of our foundation before receding. Whew! November is the portal to winter in the Adirondacks and a whole new constellation of daily chores involving running the wood stove, gathering dry leaves for our composting toilet, transplanting green vegetables into the greenhouse, getting water through the ice in the creek, clearing snow and ice off paths and parking areas… but this seems minuscule when, one Thanksgiving day, our brotherin-law, Ed Roberts, tells us about some of the chores he had as a lad on a dairy farm near my family home in Westmoreland. “I started working with my foster father on his farm at about age seven, helping to feed and bed his herd of 30 cows plus cleaning the stalls. At nine, I started helping with milking. We’d get up at 4am in the morning to work in the barn; just the two of us, feeding and milking the cows. That took about an hour and a half which means that about 6:30 he’d head back into the house to get ready for his job driving a school bus, leaving me with the clean-up. I fed the cows, washed the milk machines, cleaned the platforms where the cows stood, pushed the straw and manure into the gutter; then
Serving Rome & Utica Since 1946
WKAL
Milk gets processed at the Dairylea plant in Utica, 1960s cleaned the gutters with a shovel, put it in a manure spreader, took the spreader out, and spread it in a field (or dumped in a pile) and came back. It was all really hard work, but I loved it!” My friend, Janice Reilly also helped in the barn as a child; cleaning gutters, feeding cows... She remembers the rhythmic “chit, chit, chit…” of the milking machines, the whitewashed walls, the warm air sweetly full with the aroma of milk and hay and manure (which they didn’t mind). When sunbeams peeked through, she’d see bits of hay dust floating lazily about, and there were always lots of multicolored cats around. Another farm boy recalled the hazard of occasionally getting kicked or showered by a
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57
cow urinating in the stall next to where he was doing the milking. “At least,” he commented wryly, “it was warm.” Ed continued; “When I was sixteen and could drive, I had a morning milk route in addition to the milking. I’d pick up milk at two neighboring farms in our stake truck, filling it with 30 - 35 cans. Each one held 10 gallons so that’d be about 100# apiece that I’d lift onto the truck. I’d grab two of them at a time because I wanted to hurry up. I’d take this all the way down to Eagle St in Utica to the Dairylea Plant (about 10 miles), and unload the cans on the conveyor. They’d go through a process where they were dumped, cleaned, and came back out the conveyor at the other end. I’d load the empty cans back onto the
Peg’s sister Marion marries Ed Roberts, 1973
truck, deliver them back to the farms, and then get to school! “As soon as I got home after school at 3:15, I’d grab a peanut butter & jelly sandwich and a glass of milk, change my clothes and go back in the barn to work. Stan would get home from driving bus around 4 to 4:30; we’d milk from 5 to 6:30, then re-bed the cows for the night, and come in for supper around 7pm. By the time we finished around 7:30, I was too tired to study! I had to go to sleep so I could get up at 4am and do it all over again; seven days a week! Consequently, my high school marks were terrible, but when I got to college, (studying Agricultural Engineering) I ended up with a 3.8 average because I had all the time in the world to study. “The best days of my early life were on the Merriman Farm. All the previous foster parents just wanted me to help with the work and get the money from the county. But the Merrimans were very kind, and helped me with my problems, instead of punishing me (sometimes violently) like others had. For instance, when I first went there, I got caught sneaking food up to my room, and it wasn’t just a little snack; I had drumsticks from the chicken, and lots more! So I was scared to death, when they found out, thinking; ‘Boy I’m really going to get it!’ But instead, Mrs. Merriman said, ‘If you’re hungry, Eddie, just come to the kitchen and help yourself. You can have all
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you want.’ Well, that was something new to me, and I was so relieved! Stan was good to me, too, although he did argue with me a lot. I didn’t realize ‘til after I was married, that he just liked to argue, right or wrong, just to get me going. “I don’t think there’s a day in my life that I don’t think about them. They were so good to me! And working hard didn’t hurt me. To work means to get dirty. There’s dirt that washes off, and dirt that stains. I’ve been embarrassed by the dirt stains on my hands, but it’s really a badge of honor, to have the color of the earth on you.” This month of harvest before the long months of winter succinctly points to the preciousness of the Earth and the elements. To the farmers, truck drivers, shop owners, and all who bring forth the delicious nourishment that sustains the gift of life for humanity, Tim writes: “Hands hardened from tiresome toil are as honorable as degrees signed by esteemed educators. The calloused hand is precious, like the full heart. Let us be moderate in everything except gratitude.” • 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
Advertiser Directory please support Our sponsors, they make this magazine possible Antiques Antiques & Art Westmoreland . . . . . . . . . 25 Attic Addicts, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Black Cat Antiques, Earlville . . . . . . . . . . . 25 Broad St. Flea Market, Utica . . . . . . . . . 25 The Bull Farm Antiques, Vernon . . . . . . 25 Butternut Barn, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . 25 Canal House Antiques, Bouckville . . . . . . . 25 Dawn Marie’s Treasures, Clinton . . . . . . . 26 The Depot Antique Gallery, Bouckville . . . 25 Foothills Mercantile, Barneveld . . . . . . . 26 Gallery Antiques, Bouckville . . . . . . . . . 26 The Shoppes at Johnny Appleseed, Cazenovia . . 13 Little Falls Antique Center, Little Falls . . . 26 Madison Inn Antiques, Madison . . . . . . 26 Mohawk Antiques Mall, Mohawk . . . . . . . 27 MV Community Market, Herkimer . . . . 26 The Online Exchange, Dolgeville . . . . . . . 27 The Potting Shed Antiques, Whitesboro . . . 27 See the Man Antiques & Collectibles, Sherburne . . 27 Showcase Antiques, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . 27 Victorian Rose, Bouckville . . . . . . . . . . . 27 Weeden’s Mini Mall, Camden . . . . . . . . 27 Whistle Post Antiques, Bouckville . . . . . . . . 43 Art Classes & Supplies Full Moon Reflections Art Center, Camden . . . . 38 Art Galleries/Museums Fenimore Art Museum, Cooperstown . . . . 2 Full Moon Reflections Art Center, Camden . . 38 Fusion Art Gallery, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Art and Custom Framing Artisans’ Corner, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Fusion Art Gallery, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Heartwood Gift Barn, Sherburne . . . . . . . 42 Auto Dealerships Steet-Ponte Auto Group . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63 Automotive Repair Clinton Collision, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Precision Unlimited, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . 62 Awards & Engraving Speedy Awards, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . 39 Bakeries and Pastry Shops Caruso’s Pastry Shop, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Karam’s Middle East Bakery, Yorkville . . . . . 21 Ramon’s Bakery, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 20 Rosato’s Pizzeria & Bakery, Utica . . . . . . 21 Star Bakery, Whitesboro and Utica . . . . . 46
Wicked Sweets, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Banks and Financial Institutions Bank of Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Bike Shops Dick’s Wheel Shop, Herkimer . . . . . . . . 13 Books Berry Hill Book Shop, Deansboro . . . . . . . 6 Treehouse Reading Room, New York Mills . . . . 6 Cabinets and Kitchens Custom Woodcraft, Munnsville . . . . .. . . 11 Knotty By Nature, Bridgewater . . . . . . . . 29 Candy Shops So Sweet Candy Cafe, Utica . . . . . . . . 6 Catering Club Monarch, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 RoSo’s Cafe & Catering, Utica . . . . . . . . . 20 Willie’s The Original Bagel Cafe, Utica . . . . 21 CBD Products RAW ADK, Barneveld . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Utica Hemp, New Hartford, Utica . . . . . . . . 53 Cheese Grassy Cow Dairy, Remsen . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Jewett’s Cheese, Earlville . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Jones Family Farm, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . 46 Stoltzfus Family Dairy, Vernon Center . . . . . 5 Christmas Trees Massoud’s Tree Farm, Sauquoit . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16 Naturewood Knoll Tree Farm, Little Falls . . . . . . . 16 Clothing Krizia Martin, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Paca Gardens, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 The Queen’s Closet, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . 24 Comics and Collectibles Ravenswood Comics, New Hartford . . . . . . . 26 Consignment Family Finds & Consignment Shop, Taberg . . 26 The Online Exchange, Dolgeville . . . . . . . . . 27 The Queen’s Closet, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . 24 Renewed & Rescued, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . . 27 Contractors Ed Smith Contractor and Handyman . . . . . 52
Convenience Shops Stewart’s Shops . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26 Delis and Meats Bosonne’s Sausage, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . 33 Little Italy Imports, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Meelan’s Meat Market, Clinton . . . . . . . . . 54 Mohawk Village Market, Mohawk . . . . . . . . . . 8 Olde Kountry Market, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . 47 Pulaski Meat Market, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 Riverside Diner, Marcy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 Diners Charlie’s Place, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Sheri’s Diner, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21 Wendy’s Diner, Cassville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18 Dog Sitting Barney’s Angels, Frankfort . . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Estate Sales Attic Addicts, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24 The Potting Shed Antiques, Whitesboro . . . . 27 Events and Local Attractions Fenimore Art Museum, Cooperstown . . . . . 2 Farm Equipment Clinton Tractor, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 41 Hobby Hill Farm Sales, Rome . . . . . . . . . . 42 White’s Farm Supply, Waterville/Canastota . . . . . . 64 Farm Markets Cooperstown Farmers Market . . . . . . . . . . 51 Horn’s Family Farm, Remsen . . . . . . . . . . 58 North Star Orchards, Westmoreland . . . . . . . . 3 Oneida County Public Market, Utica . . . . . . . . 8 Fencing B&K Fencing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45 Financial Services Van Meter & Van Meter, Little Falls . . . . . . . 35 Flooring Mike’s Floor Store, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 Funeral Services Prince-Boyd & Hyatt, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . 55
Furniture Ironwood Furniture, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Jeff ’s Amish Furniture, Richfield Springs . . 52
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John Froass & Son, Inc., Sherrill . . . . . . . . 45 Furniture Makers Custom Woodcraft, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . . . 11 Garden Center and Greenhouses Casler Flower Farm, West Winfield . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35 North Star Orchards, Westmoreland . . . . . . . . 3 Szarek’s Succulent Shack, Clinton . . . . . . . . . 11 General Contractors Ed Smith Contractor and Handyman . . . . . . . . . 52 Gift Shops/Shopping Artisans’ Corner, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . Between Us Sisters, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . Fusion Art Gallery, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . Heartsome Handicrafts, New Hartford . . . . . . . Main Street Gift Shoppe, Newport . . . . . . . Krizia Martin, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . The Shoppes at Johnny Appleseed, Cazenovia . .
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Grocery Stores, Co-ops, and Convenience Stores The Country Store, Salisbury . . . . . . . . . . 19 Deansboro Superette, Deansboro . . . . . . . . . 36 Little Italy Imports, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Mohawk Village Market, Mohawk . . . . . . . . . . 8 Olde Kountry Market, Vernon . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Richfield Springs Community Food Cooperative . . . . . 14 Handyman/Repairs Ed Smith Contractor and Handyman . . . . . . . . . 52 Hardware/Lumber/Farm & Home Lincoln Davies, Sauquoit . . . . . . Morgan’s Hardware, Waterville . . Turner Lumber, Barneveld . . . . Wightman Specialty Woods . . . . .
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Hearth Shops and Fuel Buell Fuel Hearth & Home, Deansboro . . . . . . . . . . 10 Insurance Farm Family Insurance, Boonville . . . . . Gates-Cole Insurance, New Hartford . . . . HBE Group, Inc. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Turnbull Insurance, New Hartford . . . . . .
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Interior Design/Custom Window Treatments The Added Touch Drapery, New Hartford . . . . . . 46 Ironwork Raulli’s Iron Works, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Jewelry Alison’s Jewelry & Repair, Utica . . . . . . . . . 10 Goldmine Jewelers, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 29
Phoenician R E S TAU R A N T Please wear mask until you are seated. Call ahead for parties of 5-10.
We are excited and hope to see everyone soon! Specials and our full menu available for takeout and curbside pickup. Mon-Sat 11:30am - 8pm 623 French Road New Hartford (315) 733-2709
Banquets
Serving Rome & Utica Since 1946
WKAL
TALKRADIO 1450
Weddings
8524 Fish Hatchery Rd, Rome, NY 13440 315-533-7710 www.deltalakeinn.com
Lawn Mowers, Leaf, and Snow Blowers SD Power, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 Lighting Mills Electrical Supply, Rome . . . . . . . . . . 30
news & NOTES
Liquor Stores and Wine Ilion Wine & Spirits, Ilion . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Prospect Falls Winery . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Trenton Station Liquor & Wine, Barneveld . . . . 52 Maple Syrup Ben & Judy’s Sugarhouse, West Edmeston . . . . 28 Shaw’s Maple Products, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . 51 Tibbits Maple, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . 48 Meats (See Delis) Media 92.7 The Drive WXUR, Utica . . . FOX33/WUTR . . . . . . . . . . . . WKAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Weekly Adirondack . . . . . . . . .
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Monuments & Memorials Yorkville Memorials, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Musical Instrument Sales, Rentals, Lessons Big Apple Music, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . 29 Natural Food Stores Cooperstown Naturals, Cooperstown . . . . . . . . 14 Peter’s Cornucopia, New Hartford . . . . . . . . 56
White’s Farm Supply Welcomes Dan Dillenbeck
White’s Farm Supply, Inc. is excited to welcome Dan Dillenbeck. Dan comes to us with over 20 years of equipment industry and sales experience. He has also spent time working as an equipment service tech and parts manager. He has lived in the Little Falls area over 40 years and is looking forward to seeing familiar faces amongst our current and new customers. When he is not out driving from farm to farm, you’ll find him enjoying time with family (Naomi, Gabriel and Vivian), taking care of his beef cows and chickens, camping, or snowmobiling. Call Dan, 315-868-8730, for your equipment needs!
Optometrists Towpath Vision Care, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . 31 Paint and Painting Supplies Urbanik’s Paint & Wallpaper Co., Utica . . . . . . . 31 Physical Therapy Inertia PT, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 Pizzerias DiCastro’s Brick Oven, Rome . . . . . . . . Primo Pizzeria, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . Rosato’s Pizzeria & Bakery, Utica . . . . . Tony’s Pizza, New Hartford . . . . . . . . .
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Portable Toilets and Bathrooms Mohawk Ltd. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47 Primitives Between Us Sisters, Munnsville . . . . . . . . . . . 28 Butternut Barn, Richfield Springs . . . . . . . . . . 25 Main Street Gift Shoppe, Newport . . . . . . . . 26 Produce, Local Ben & Judy’s Sugarhouse, West Edmeston . . . . . . . 28
Johnny Appleseed Suited for New “Normal” The Shoppes at Johnny Appleseed in Erieville (Cazenovia) is well equipped to adhere to new Covid requirements. They are fortunate to be housed in a building especially suited to deal with Covid. It is well-ventilated and its large 20,000 square foot space is ideal for social distancing. With colder weather ahead, The Shoppes are expecting to welcome many customers searching for safe places to shop indoors for the holidays. The Shoppes at Johnny Appleseed are open year round, Wednesday through Sunday, 10-5. The Apple Kitchen is open on weekends 12-4, offering food and NYS wine and beer. www.johnnyshoppes.com (315) 235-9451
Grassy Cow Dairy, Remsen . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Jewett’s Cheese, Earlville . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36 Jones Family Farm, Herkimer . . . . . . . . . 46 Shaw’s Maple Products, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . 51 Stoltzfus Family Dairy, Vernon Center . . . . . . . 5 Tibbits Maple, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . 48 Twin Orchards, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . 57 Quilt and Yarn Shops/Services Love & Stitches, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Tiger Lily Quilt Co, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23 Record Stores Off Center Records, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . 48 Restaurants and Cafés Ann St. Deli, Little Falls . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Club Monarch, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Country Store, Salisbury . . . . . . . . . . Delta Lake Inn, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . DiCastro’s Brick Oven, Rome . . . . . . . . . Gone Coastal, Lee Center . . . . . . . . . . . Karam’s Middle East Bakery, Yorkville . . . . Killabrew, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . . Main Street Ristorante, Newport . . . . . . . . Michael’s Alder Creek Inne, Barneveld . . . . Nola’s Restaurant, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . Ohio Tavern, Cold Brook . . . . . . . . . . . Patio Drive-In, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . Phoenician Restaurant, New Hartford . . . . . . Rosato’s Pizzeria & Bakery, Utica . . . . . . . . RoSo’s Cafe & Catering, Utica . . . . . . . . . . Route 69 Steakhouse, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . Sammy & Annie Foods, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . Tailor and Cook, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . Wendy’s Diner, Cassville . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Willie’s The Original Bagel Cafe, Utica . . . . . . The Willows, Utica . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Answer to last month’s Riddle about ghostly tours held here:
Hyde Hall
Every October Hyde Hall in Cooperstown hosts Candlelight Ghost Tours Winner: Mary Lou Coughlin of New Hartford. She has chosen Meelan’s Market and North Star Ochards for her shopping sprees.
Shoes Karaz Shoes, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 Sneaker Store, New Hartford . . . . . . . . . . . . . 43 Signs, Handcrafted Artisans’ Corner, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13 Whistle Post Creations, Bouckville . . . . . . . . 43 Snowmobiles/ATVs Hobby Hill Farm, Rome . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42 Towing Services Clinton Collision, Clinton . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 Tree Services and Tree Farms Rick Turk Tree Service, Rome . . . . . . . . . . 58 Weddings and Banquets Club Monarch, Yorkville . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53 Wineries Prospect Falls Winery, Prospect . . . . . . . . . 52
NYS INSPECTIONS • OIL CHANGES • TUNE UPS • COLLISION WORK • AC
Complete Collision and Mechanical Repair Since 1987
Yarn and Knitting Supplies Love & Stitches, Whitesboro . . . . . . . . . . . . 34 Yogurt Stoltzfus Family Dairy, Vernon Center . . . . . . . 5
7509 Route 5 • Clinton, New York 13323 • Phone 315-853-8804 62
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© Kubota Tractor Corporation, 2020. $0 Down, 0% A.P.R. financing for up to 84 months on purchases of new Kubota BX2680 equipment from participating dealers’ in-stock inventory is available to qualified purchasers through Kubota Credit Corporation, U.S.A.; subject to credit approval. Example: 84 monthly payments of $11.90 per $1,000 financed. Customer instant rebates of $500 are available on qualifying finance or $800 on cash purchases of BX2680 equipment. Additional instant rebate of $700 are available with purchase of two new qualifying implements. 1st implement $500, 2nd implement $200. Contract term begins from the date of first payment which is due 90 days from the contract date. Example: Purchase made on 9/1/20, first monthly payment is due 12/1/20. Some exceptions apply. Offers expire 12/31/20. Terms subject to change. This material is for descriptive purposes only. Kubota disclaims all representations and warranties, express or implied, or any liability from the use of this material. For complete warranty, disclaimer, safety, incentive offer and product information, consult your Dealer or KubotaUSA.com.