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Sung Locally - Folksongs of The Catskills

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 10/3/24 | 10/3/24

By Bradley Towle

CATSKILLS REGION — Folksongs of The Catskills is a 1963 Smithsonian Folkways collection of traditional songs performed by Barbara Moncure and Harry Siemsen. An Ohio native, Moncure spent many summers in the Catskills as a child. A classically trained, Julliard-taught musician, she had a revelation while living in Texas with her husband and young children. After hearing music on a jukebox, Moncure recalled the traditional music she had heard in her youth in the Catskills and began exploring folk music. Following her husband's tragic death, she relocated to the region and poured herself into the world of folksongs in the area. At one point, Siemsen was a Catskills resident and the official historian for the Town of Kingston. He brought the perspective of someone who learned the folksongs through an oral tradition to the album.

The duo paired, and the resulting album is a 16-song collection that spans themes and song origins as wide-ranging as the geography they cover. The extensive liner notes dive deeply into the landscape, history, and traditions of The Catskills that continue to inspire arts of all kinds. Some songs included will be recognizable, even if somewhat altered. "A Frog He Would A-Wooing Go (Froggie Went A-Courtin')" sounds nothing like the versions of the song I remember hearing as a child. 

With its origins in 16th-century Scotland, the romantic exploits of Froggie have gone through many iterations (including a 1992 Bob Dylan cover). Like ancient oral traditions, folk songs are often regionalized or altered for different audiences. The songs included in this collection are no exception. 

"Mrs. Edgar Leaycraft supplied the first six verses, and papers dated 1873 belonging to a school girl and found in a Saugerties attic, provided the final three verses," explains the liner notes about the song. Other songs specifically mention the Catskills. One Ernest "Joker" Burgher claimed to have written "The Delhi Jail," and it may be that he did compose the number included in the collection. The liner notes explain that the lyrics share similarities with other compositions. 

"In spite of' references to the Delaware County Jail, similar sentiments have been used to describe local lockups across the country." But so goes the tradition of folksongs. As they traveled, they often became regionalized and, at times, merely adopted as having already been based on localized circumstances. "The Lexington Murder," for example, is "one of the most widely collected murder ballads" and went by a variety of names ("The Oxford Tragedy," "The Wexford Girl," "The Cruel Miller," to name a few). The author of the liner notes indicates that it had been sung in the Catskills by one Frank Joy, who may have believed he was singing about an actual incident in the Greene County town of Lexington (it's been said that murder ballads were a form of news reporting, but they're nothing if not rumors as well). 

Some songs are specific to the Catskills. Barbara Moncure and Harry Siemsen interviewed a 106-year-old man named Jessie Ellsworth about the "D. and H. Canal Song," which includes lyrics Siemsen found in an 1850 Kingston newspaper as well as the first verse, supplied by Ellsworth, who had worked on the D. and H. Canal as a boy. Folksongs of the Catskills captures a wide swatch of the traditional songs found in the region, whether they had traveled from Europe or were born in the famed New York mountain range. 

However, the collection is only half as interesting if one does not read the accompanying liner notes, available for download from Smithsonian Folkways. Folksongs of The Catskills is also available to stream across several platforms. 


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Whittling Away with Dick Brooks - The Tools of Opening Things

I’m going out to my shop this morning and put together a tool box to keep in the kitchen.  The time has come to get serious about my battle against protective coatings and wrappings.  The older I get the more personal the struggle gets.  My grip isn’t what it used to be so I finally see that I need the help of more heavy duty weapons to face the daily battle of trying to get to objects that I need on a regular basis to sustain life.  I have a small tool box that should work well.  I’m going to include a pair of pliers for bottle tops since those little pieces of plastic that need to be broken before the cap can be removed seem to be stronger than they were years ago.  I better include a pair of channel lock pliers that open much wider than regular pliers too for things like the lids on pickle and spaghetti sauce jars.  A sheet rock knife, the one that the razor blade slides in and out of, would be handy for the plastic coverings they put on the top of the Styrofoam trays they pack hamburger in.  I need to include a good strong pair of scissors for snipping potato chip bags open.  I definitely need a pair of tin snips remembering back a few weeks to the staple gun I purchased that came sealed in a bullet proof coating of really heavy duty plastic that had required almost every tool available on my trusty Swiss army knife before freeing the imprisoned tool.  I definitely need to include some needle nosed pliers for all those bottles of liquid stuff that have that little seal that appears when you take the cap off.  They have these teeny little tabs that I can’t get a good grip on that need to be removed before you can get to the contents.  They would also be handy for those cardboard boxes with the pull tabs that I can never get to pull all the way across before they break and when you finally get them open, there’s usually a wax paper bag inside that also has to be opened.  A hacksaw might be handy for hacking the top of any box or can that is stubborn.  I’m going to include a hammer too.  I can’t think of anything in particular I might need it for but it would be a good stress reliever.  Bashing something that won’t open may not be good for the object in question but it’s good for the soul.  It would be used mainly in my case on child-proof tops on pill containers.  There isn’t a child within a mile of our house.  Our grand- daughter is 24 and lives in Texas.  I can’t remember the last real genuine child who visited us and yet every day the pills I have to take are locked in these plastic versions of Fort Knox.  I’m not good at multi-tasking, push down and turn just doesn’t work well.  I know I could get them in non-childproof bottles but by the time I get them open every morning, my blood pressure is up, my adrenaline is pumping and I’m ready to face the day.  I’ve got an old nut cracker in the shop, think I’ll include that in my tool collection for help with the pill bottles.  I’m going to need a bigger tool box. 

Thought for the week—Most people are as happy as they make up their minds to be.   –Abraham Lincoln

Until next week, may you and yours be happy and well.

Whittle12124@yahoo.com


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A Conversation About: Asters are stars

By Jean Thomas

Literally, Asters are stars. The word “aster” means star in Greek and refers to the starry shape of the individual flowers. Most asters are whole galaxies of stars, bearing bracts of hundreds of small daisy shaped florets. Asters are one of the stars of the fall garden and meadow, with their unique blue or purple, white or pink flowers. Their botanical name has undergone changes as the scientists fuss over recalibrating small details of the plants and increased use of DNA. Asters native to Europe and Asia remain officially asters, but North American natives are now Symphyiotrichum. Their common names include “Michaelmas Daisy”.  Lucky for me, the common name remains Aster. As you may know, I get cranky when the scientists rename stuff.

Asters are among my favorite because they have one of the best attitudes of any plant. They are gorgeous in both of my meadows. They seeded themselves in the “wet” meadow and I have clouds of white interspersed with clumps of a vivid purple, all three feet tall and taller. Around the outskirts, along the mowed path, are dainty ones with tiny white speckled flowers sparkling against the mowed green of the grass. The “dry” meadow is more curated, and I have introduced the big purple tall ones (maybe the New England or the New York aster… names are fluid when you play with the natives) from the wild, along with yarrow and goldenrod. The pale blue with smaller blossoms and flowers introduced themselves, as did the small flowered white ones. Careful weeding and recognizing baby plants early on will accelerate the pace, but the whole tribe transplants happily. You can go “shopping” by just taking a walk in the fields and woods around your neighborhood. Don’t necessarily go with a shovel in hand… 

The wild asters all have built-in size patterns, and you can prune the tall ones in early July to keep the flowering a tad lower. The garden centers also provide hybrids along with the mums and pumpkins in the fall. I browse among these for elusive colors not seen in the wild. There are shades of pink in my meadows that have been given honorary “wild” status just because I like them.  While I admire the mums, they don’t act like perennials. Asters, whether hybrid or wild, are wonderfully hardy perennials, some to as low as zone three. They aren’t fussy about conditions. In fact it might be dangerous to overly coddle them because they can get pretty boisterous. I count asters among what I call my singing plants. Pollinator and naturalist experts value them all because they provide a feast for a multitude of insects, including bees and butterflies.These stars shine late in the year when many other plants have gone into fruit and seed production and lack pollen and nectar. Thus all the singing I hear when I go near the asters. Migrating insects find these to be a lifesaver on their arduous journey. For more information from better educated experts than I, lake a listen to the podcast “Nature Calls, Conversations from the Hudson Valley.” Episodes 89 and 133 are just two of the many episodes with more information about mingling native and introduced plants with beneficial results for the environment. Any specific questions can be addressed with a call to your own county’s Cooperative Extension Master Gardener Volunteers. In Greene and Columbia Counties, the link to get started is :     https://ccecolumbiagreene.org/gardening.


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Bruised Fruit: Hiding the Truth

By Max Oppen

I want to rewind the tape to 2001—November-ish. It was soon after 9/11, I remember that. I was 29 or 30, and the decision to move to Southern California, specifically San Diego, was easy. Heroin was plentiful, and I was chasing it. I had just finished a 9-month bid in the old Greene County Jail. It all started when a Greene County Sheriff pulled me over, and, surprise, they found drugs on me. I was initially sentenced to eight months with work release, so I spent my nights in the old Greene County Jail and my days working at a pizza joint in Colonie. It was a prime opportunity to save money: no rent, a solid job, and a reliable old blue Buick my Great Aunt used to own—it drove like a dream, smooth and plush.

Unfortunately, I managed to screw that up too. Almost every day, I got high, showing up to the jail hours late with a pizza for the guards, stuffing my shoes full of cigarettes, matches, and the occasional joint. The inmates loved me for it. That arrangement ended abruptly one morning when the guards couldn't wake me for work. They had to slap me to get my eyes open. But that's a story for another time.

Following my release, I hopped on a Greyhound bus to San Diego with a bundle of dope—10 small glassine bags—barely any money, and all of my poetry from college. My luggage got lost along the way, including all of my writing, which still upsets me today.

I got a job at the Crowne Point 76 gas station in Hillcrest, the center of the LGBTQ scene in San Diego. Hillcrest was a different world entirely. I moved there with a friend from New York and moved in with a mutual friend I'd known from my time in Vail, Colorado, back in the 90s, from 1994 to 1998. He'd quit drugs, and one night, he caught me doing cocaine in his bathroom. That was it for me - he kicked me out immediately.

The gas station job was overnight and quickly became one of the most insane, terrifying periods of my life. Everyone came through that gas station at night—fellow addicts, criminals, taxi drivers, struggling actors, porn stars—it was a madhouse. I'll never forget some characters: one guy had a silver pistol; another brought a sawed-off shotgun he found in a dumpster. Sometimes, someone would bring in a PlayStation, and we'd play hours of Madden Football, strung out on crystal meth, black tar heroin, piles of cheap cocaine, and even GHB, which a friend brought in those old black film canisters. 

GHB—gamma-hydroxybutyrate—is a dangerous, illegal nervous system depressant, often used as a date rape drug. I was mixing with perilous people, playing with death on a nightly basis.

One of my closest companions during this time was a Pakistani taxi driver. He stayed awake for days on end using meth and somehow survived a terrible accident after falling asleep behind the wheel. He barely had a scratch. Despite his own situation, he tried to stop me from using heroin. We connected, though I can't remember his name for the life of me.

I lasted only a few months at the gas station. One night, I decided to close up shop and head to a barrio for an eight-ball of coke. I had bought a wood-paneled station wagon from the taxi driver for $800—no registration, no insurance, and an out-of-state driver's license. After picking up the drugs, I rolled through a stop sign and got pulled over. I had 15 Valium stashed in my sock and the coke, of course. The cops found the coke almost immediately. They dragged me out of the car, cuffed me, and threw me in the back of an SUV—not in the seats, but way in the back. I knew I was headed to jail, so somehow, with my hands cuffed behind my back, I managed to grab the Valium in my sock and boofed them. For those unfamiliar, "boofing" means inserting drugs into your anus. Not exactly a proud moment, but it's all about survival in those situations.

On the way to San Diego Central Jail (SDCJ), we passed the gas station where I was supposed to be working. I had just gotten a pound of weed fronted to me and had put it behind the counter, and I remember watching someone illuminated by streetlights, kicking the locked glass front door, trying to get in. There was nothing I could do.

After a few days in SDCJ, I was transferred to Otay Mesa, near the border with Mexico. I believe it was the George Bailey Detention Center, but I'm unsure. County jails in Southern California are much different than those in New York. They're segregated—strict and rigid, like prisons back home. I was housed in a dorm with whites only. The inmates, not the guards, ran the place. Every race had its own "representatives," and the inmates ran their own exercise routine every morning. Whites with Whites, Mexicans with Mexicans, and Blacks with Blacks. I couldn't eat, play cards, or interact with anyone of a different race. If you did, you'd get a visit from your "own" people. I came close to getting my ass kicked a couple of times.

Despite these rigid race rules, I did make friends with a couple of Mexican carjackers. But the jail was brutal, nicknamed "Thunderdome" for a reason. There was constant violence. I managed to avoid fighting, but I was there about a month before I got to court and was sentenced to Drug Court—probably a relatively new concept at the time.

While I was locked up, my "friend" in Hillcrest packed all my things—papers, journals, even my Italian Birth Certificate—onto the street and moved in with his girlfriend. I lost everything. When I was released, I had a few hundred dollars from my last gas station paycheck and the clothes I was arrested in. I was officially homeless. That night, I slept behind a dumpster, using a patio furniture cushion as a bed and a wood pallet for cover. It's frightening to realize you have nowhere to go, no "safe space."

I rarely contacted my parents during this time. My father was still alive then (he passed away in 2012), and they knew something was terribly wrong. I came out as a heroin addict to my family around then. My sister told me she cried and embraced her former partner when she found out. My mother was worried sick, and most of our phone calls involved me begging for money, desperate for help.

After that, I fell in with a group of homeless people called the "Canyon Kids," loosely led by a guy named "The Wolf." We set up camps under a freeway, where I saw horrors—people poked with used

needles by addicts with HIV, constant conflict, and hopelessness. I remember scratching a poem into a green metallic power source in an alley: "Look beyond the horizon, and feel for the sun. For we shall thrive as masses, instead of only one."

I learned how to survive from the Canyon Kids. We'd grab used cups outside burger joints and refill them for free. I got pretty good at boosting (stealing) razors to fence at the local flea market, and we'd use the cash to buy coke and heroin. I wrote a short poem about doing a speedball in a Taco Bell bathroom and feeling "beautifully diseased."

But I wasn't in control. There was an active warrant out for my arrest because I had blown off Drug Court. I found a cardboard refrigerator box and hauled it up onto a rooftop. That became my home for the winter, which had the typical Southern California mild weather. I made a flap in the box for a "window" and had a giant glass jug to use as a bathroom. The rooftop felt relatively safe, but I'd return to find my things ransacked almost daily.

Eventually, I just got tired of it all—the drugs, the lifestyle, the constant fear. I called my old boss from the pizza place in Colonie, and he wired me money for a bus ticket home. I absconded, warrant still active, and returned to work at the pizza place in Colonie, with the weight of that arrest hanging over me. For years, every time I got pulled over, the warrant would pop up, but they never extradited me. The University at Albany, which I had transferred to after graduating with my two-year degree from Columbia-Greene Community College in 2012, saw the warrant and wanted it resolved before I would be accepted on campus. I had to meet with officials at UAlbany, who put me through a process to ensure I was not a danger to fellow students. Finally, in 2012, my Uncle paid for a lawyer, and with his connections in California, the attorney resolved the warrant. The felony was dropped, teaching me a valuable lesson about the connection between money and the criminal justice system in America.

Despite all that, I wasn't done using drugs. I still thought I had control. Man, was I wrong.


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Phoenicia American Legion Hosts Great Pig Roast

By Robert Brune

PHOENICIA — The Sons of the American Legion of Phoenicia Chris Huwer, Sam Umhay, and Michael Pushman arrived at the site of the pig roast fundraiser at 5:30 am to begin a long day of cooking the incredible food sourced by Meiller Slaughter House of Pine Plains who donated the pig, corn from Davenport in Stone Ridge, with other contributions from Restaurant Depot in Newburg, Sams Club, and the Boiceville Market. 

As with most American Legion’s throughout the country, the American Legion Post #950 has suffered diminishing numbers in membership, but the wider community are very engaged in keeping the doors open and the lights on for our military service members. Michaela Roycroft of Ulster Savings Bank was the friendly face of this fundraiser welcoming the nicely attended event selling tickets for the meal well worth the $15 contribution. The event attracted folks from Roxbury to Kingston as this post has a reputation for caring for their members in a meaningful way. Anyone wishing to join or contribute to this great community for our military, see ‘American Legion Auxiliary Unit 950’ on Facebook. 


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THE CATSKILL GEOLOGISTS BY PROFESSORS ROBERT AND JOHANNA TITUS - Opening a New Park

The eastern Catskills were once rich with numerous bluestone quarries. Up and down the Wall of Manitou, the Catskill Front, there were active quarries during the late 19th and early 20th Centuries. Then, one by one, they closed. They fell into neglect and each one left heaps of broken stone behind to spoil the scenery. How odd it is that all this ugliness should actually have attracted artists - some of them very good artists. Our column has spent a lot of time describing the work of Harvey Fite, a sculptor who specialized in working with leftover bluestone in a particularly large, once abandoned, quarry, now called Opus 40. Over a period of decades Fite carefully placed endless numbers of bluestone slabs into a growing sculpture. We wrote nearly a dozen columns about Opus 40 just last year.

                    A person and person standing in a doorway

Description automatically generated Tom Gottesleben and Patty Livingston; photo by Andrea Barrist Stern

We never met Harvey Fite and regret that very much. But there was another bluestone sculptor who we did meet. That man was the late Tom Gottsleben. Tom worked with paint and crystals, but he is best known for his bluestone sculptures. He arrived in the Hudson Valley in 1982. He and wife Patty Livingston lived in a small home next to an old bluestone quarry, much as Harvey Fite once did. By 1997 they set to work creating a concrete, bluestone, steel and glass architectural masterpiece which would be their home: Spiral House. See our second photo.

                                                Photo by Phil Mansfield               

We met Tom in the most unusual and remarkable way. One of us, Robert, was being auctioned off by the Woodstock Land Conservancy. The money from the auction went to the Conservancy. In return the winning bidders, Tom and Patty, got Robert’s geological services for a full day. They wanted to have Robert explore the property around the Spiral House and tell them all about the geological history there. It proved to be a memorable day. There is a lot of geology at Spiral House.

Sadly, Tom died in 2019, but the Spiral House property is now becoming a public park. Robert has been invited to return as a consultant, incorporating the geological history into the park experience. That’s a tribute to Tom and Patty’s keen interest in the geology here and their feelings that the past is part of the present. Robert has been exploring the grounds and working out the bedrock and ice age histories there. On this upcoming Sunday and Monday, October 13 and 14, there will be something of a soft opening. Spiral House will always, of course, be the centerpiece of the new park, but 1.5 miles of hiking trails will take visitors all across the undeveloped part of the property. And . . . all across its geological past. On October 14th Robert will be leading a geology hike, starting at 10:30. Admission is free but requires registration, which you can do through the park’s website spiralhousepark.org. 

Contact the authors at randjtitus@prodigy.net. Join their facebook page “The Catskill Geologist.” Read their blogs at “thecatskillgeologist.com.”


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Yom Kippur Services at Hunter Synogogue

HUNTER — Yom Kippur services will be held on Friday night, October 11 and Saturday, October 12 at the Hunter Synagogue on Main Street, Hunter.

Rabbi Bella Bogart will conduct the services. 

All are welcome to join us.


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Traditionally Speaking…with Pat Larsen - Hypnosis corner with Pat Larsen…Past Life and Age Regression Therapy

I recently continued my hypnotherapy studies with world renowned educator, Paul Aurand, MHt …in the areas of Age and Past life regression techniques. 

This  can be a big concept to comprehend, especially if you’ve not heard of this type of hypnotherapy before. 

Simply put, regression is a gentle technique to encourage someone to replay a time in their life from a safe vantage point with a hypnotherapist's guidance. 

From there and with this personal support, issues are comfortably resolvable. 

Expectations can include forgiveness, gratitude, love, letting go or learning important lessons from the issues at hand… that can block us from living joyful lives. 

Since all work in hypnosis is considered “self hypnosis” this particular therapy is very successful when the person is ready and willing to move forward with trust from a trained professional.

Oftentimes,  during a pretalk consultation, I’d hear from  prospective hypnotherapy clients that they had “tried everything ” to work through their particular stresses before seeking this specialty. Their enthusiasm to begin this treatment was heightened when they’d realized the possibility of not having to drag the heavy emotional weights around any longer.

Believing in their own emotional freedom definitely was the motivation to begin sharpening their focus on where and when an issue began for them.

This doesn’t mean that all parties are immediately released from the stresses. When you work one on one with a specialist, the focus is on you, not the aggressor.

I'd like to give you an example of some work that I did with someone recently who called to have a consultation about a past life that he thought was at the forefront of his continuous issues with moving forward in this lifetime.

The most important aspect of this discussion was helping the client to feel comfortable with me as the hypnotherapist. It was essential to listen carefully for clues in the discussion that indicated a readiness to take the deep dive into the story. 

In this particular case, this person had heard about trying to find answers perhaps in a past life. It turned out to be something very different  and unexpected.

My intention is always to create a safe environment for the work to take place.  Also, if I feel that I may not be the right person to help make these connections, I’ll refer to a colleague. 

This part is important, especially to me and those I have studied with and refer to. I find that this level of professionalism is a key component to elevating this profession to reach beyond the earlier depictions of a stage act in the 50’s.

That being said…let me continue.

The client and I began the conversation with some comfortable banter about his life. I would encourage staying on course as I 

connected the story of the  roads leading his childhood experiences on a farm as a young boy. He was the youngest of three boys in the family. 

The story continued for a half hour or so.

What a wonderful gift this kind of work is to be honest.

How often do we carry a story that has been less than ideal and have anyone to actually listen to it who is outside of the event.

This becomes such a beautiful starting point for me to see this release almost immediately on the face of the person I’m working with.

Of course this type of work, as I defined by the title,  might reflect a trauma or a stress, sometimes even a misunderstanding  that the person has carried forward.

We both can see that it is within THIS LIFE TIME that the situation and story was unfolding.

So the therapy continues as the client assumes a relaxed posture on the couch or a chair that they can stretch out on.

My voice guides the relaxation techniques that are an important part of hypnosis. Before long it becomes evident that the client is deeply entrenched in the pictures he’s created in his mind by sharing his story. 

In terms of age regression, I’ve experienced watching the client confront the offending party to share in a conversation that sets the record straight as to their behavior.

Often, this involves a very stern parent, most times a father, who was particularly harsh when this person was very young. The possibilities are very personal of course but very powerful nevertheless. 

When the therapy is completed and the conversation has taken place between the two, it’s time to express apologies or renewed unexpressed love and the session is then completed for that day.

It’s very unique and very profound to be a witness to this particular age regression therapy.

Past Life regression is similar but that subject will have to wait for another story. I happened to be present when Paul Aurand led a past life regression that involved a soldier from the civil war. It was incredibly clear with sharp  details. Until next time… 

Pat Larsen lives in Greene County, NY; her credentials include Syndicated columnist, author, certified hypnotherapist and fitness instructor.

Feel Free to Contact Pat at 518-275-8686 to chat.



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Town of Hunter to Organize Community Health Outreach for Seniors

By Max Oppen

TANNERSVILLE — The Town of Hunter held its regular Town Board meeting on Tuesday, September 24, where Town of Hunter Ambulance Administrator Ariel Woolheater provided a report on ambulance calls for August. Woolheater stated that there were a total of 51 calls, including one CPR death and seven refusals of medical care. "Out of those 51 calls, we canceled the medic twelve times," she explained, noting that the medic was required for twenty calls.

Woolheater also discussed an initiative she hopes to implement soon: a community health outreach for local seniors. "I have an idea," she said. "I want to do a health check day and start with our seniors in the area. We'd have them come to our station, do vitals checks, order weekly pill organizers if needed, and have them fill out emergency cards so all their information is readily available when needed. Just a little community outreach."

Woolheater proposed setting aside two days for this initiative, with an option to visit seniors who couldn't come to the station. "Just to ensure everyone is in good health," she said. The Town Board members were immediately supportive, with Supervisor Sean Mahoney and councilpersons Dolph Semenza and Ernie Reale expressing their approval.

Councilperson David Kukle asked if the outreach program had been budgeted, to which Woolheater responded that she had just come up with the idea and had yet to allocate funds. Reale inquired what would happen if an emergency call occurred during the outreach, and Woolheater replied that volunteers would help.

"This will help familiarize participants with the ambulance building and staff," said Semenza. "I think it's a great idea."

Mahoney encouraged Woolheater to move forward, stating, "Once you have something put together and pick a date, we will get it out there on social media and our website."

Woolheater mentioned the possibility of expanding the program if it proved successful. "If it's a success, we could open it up to others in the area," she said.

Reale emphasized the importance of the program, saying, "Something as simple as this could save someone's life." Woolheater added that during many calls they go on, seniors say they've forgotten to take their medications. "If we could hand out pill organizers, it would help," she explained. "It might save us a trip and help them get into a routine."

Mahoney concluded the discussion by giving Woolheater the Board's full support. "You have this Board's approval," he said, to which Woolheater expressed her gratitude.


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The Prattsville Scoop

By Abby and Gabby

PRATTSVILLE — Welcome Autumn. Our weather, for the most part, has been perfect – cool nights, warm days and leaves starting to turn. Enjoy.

The Free Luncheon and friendship at the Kaaterskill UMC in Tannersville continues to bring in local residents for the delicious food and companionship. Of course the tables are abuzz with shared news and happenings. The special one at the September 24th luncheon was the 93rd Birthday of Elaine Johnson. A cake was provided by her family and everyone at that time got to enjoy singing Happy Birthday to Elaine as well as enjoying the cake. Many came up to Elaine to wish her personal “Happy Birthday” greetings and to share some memories. Also in attendance were Ashland residents Lula Holdridge Anderson and Barbara Hoagland Cook. Lula is always two days in advance with plans for her next event. She is President of the WAJPL Golden Agers, on the Board for Aging of Greene County as well as being a fellow columnist for our local papers. You go Lula. Barbara is finally finding some relief for her back problems via her most recent chiropractor. When Barbara says she cried for months with back pain, she has our complete sympathy. Stay on your road to recovery, Barbara.

Well, a new record has been set. The GWH has a new total of seven skunks now gone to skunk heaven in the past two months. The skunks really loved yellow squash and tomatoes – nasty varmints now down by seven. Never heard of a herd of skunks pillaging one garden before. Anyone have a similar story? Wish to share?

Wish to thank all who supported the Tag Day by the American Legion Auxiliary Virgil E. Deyo Unit 1327, Prattsville, for the 2024 Christmas Celebration for up to 50 veterans at the Stratton VAMC, Albany. These veterans are in the residential units and will probably never be able to return to their homes. So anything that is done for them for some sort of normalcy for their lives is so gratefully appreciated. Again thank you for helping Unit 1327 make this upcoming 2024 Christmas a true season of giving for our deserving hospitalized veterans. During Tag Day a number of things happened that bring unexpected joy. A gentleman drove up with a bouquet of wild flowers in a cup of water and when I acknowledged him for being a good guy, I was presented with a sprig of wildflowers. Thank you sir, nice gesture. Then Jason and staff at Catskill Mtn. Liquor Store sent over a donation and a patriotic red, white and blue garland I could wear as a scarf. Thank you so much. We were reminded to “VOTE” in the upcoming election – no names/parties mentioned – and complimented by another for saying we do not discuss politics within our organization. Then we got a nickel that was almost bent in half and half a dollar bill that will have to be destroyed. For a U.S. to be legal, both numbers have to be present. Also got a sunflower seed and a packaged toothpick – thankfully not used. Most rewarding and interesting day. Thanks to all.

Randy Brainerd is feeling a little better. He was having a good day so he went into town to enjoy a cooling soda with friends. Continue to feel good Randy. You never see Randy without a smile and something funny to say.

Now another Randy – this time Randy Briggs. Saw Randy three times on Saturday and each time he was driving a different vehicle. But the last time he was just sitting in his little roadster in Jim’s parking lot waiting for wife Darlene, who was shopping in the store. Both were full of smiles and happy conversations.

Feel better wishes go out to Anita Creazzo and Randy Brainerd. Sympathy to Patricia Lawyer and family of Ashland on the loss of her brother. Mary Cline is also sent condolences on the death of another cousin.

Bob Hermance stopped by to pay his wife Carrie’s Auxiliary dues. Had a chance to catch up on their lives. Bob made a donation to our Tag Day and put in his apple pie order for the Veterans Day Bake Sale to be held November 8. He always gets there too late for the pies, which always sell immediately. This bake sale is strictly for the benefit of local veterans or veterans’ families in need. So Bob’s apple pie order and Tag Day donation is a case of a veteran helping is fellow veterans. Bob was returning from a game show contest in Stamford. Not sure of his successes. Thanks Bob for your support of veterans. Happy Anniversary and our best to you and Carrie, see their anniversary date in last paragraph of The Scoop.

Joanne Dunphy, Jodi Gurley, Ginny and Bob Gurley and Bobby Gurley traveled to Cooperstown to celebrate the 4th birthday of Lincoln Huntsman, son of Isaac and Nadine Gurley Huntsmen. Nadine and Isaac have moved their family to a new residence in the heart of Cooperstown. “New” is a relative word as the house was built in 1840 and a well known artist (Lippert) lived there. Isaac said it takes him four minutes to walk to work at Bassett Hospital. The older generation had a chance to enjoy some quiet conversations.

Marie and Ken Smith, formerly of Windham and Florida, are now in a senior citizen neighborhood north of Albany. At this time do not have their address but will share it when it is available to us. We are quite sure Marie and Ken would like to be in touch with friends from their hometowns. After selling their home in Windham, they moved permanently to Florida only to lose their Florida home to a hurricane a number of years ago. Ken is a Korean War CV and was awarded the Purple Heart. Marie loved to dance and with her group would entertain the hospitalized veterans at Stratton VAMC as well as entertaining many in our area. Ken and Marie were also members of the WAJPL Golden Agers. Such an active couple and mostly for the benefit and entertainment of others. We had a chance to greet Ken during a medical appointment at the VA. Ken would make sure to collect candy for us to deliver to the VA on a regular basis. Our best to Ken and Marie.

Happy Birthday to Dean Isaac Martin on October 6. On October 9 it is Happy Birthday to Samantha Baker. On October 10 it is Happy Birthday to Karissa (Joe) Baker and Brian Young. On October 11 it is Happy Birthday to Billy Decker. Happy Anniversary to Carrie and Bob Hermance on October 8. Special Wishes to all.

God Speed to Kris Kristofferson and Pete Rose.

Send news to gurleyrv@gmail.com or call 518-299-3219. Thank you.


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Sonny Rock: Have Drums Will Travel

WINDHAM — “Sonny Rock Have Drums Will Travel” is the inscription on a brick that was laid last May on the Blue’s Foundation’s Walk of Fame in Memphis, Tennessee. But who is Sonny Rock?

Sonny Rock grew up on the mountaintop in Windham. His grandparents were the proprietors of a well known restaurant on Main Street called “The Blue Moon” that burned down in February of 1975. It stands today as the Main Street Italian Market after it was rebuilt in 1979. His grandmother Anne Kurz, would let him stay up late to watch the Johnny Carson Show where he would sit mesmerized by the drum stylings of Buddy Rich. “By age five or six my grandmother knew I was gonna be a musician” begins Sonny while explaining how his journey to become a professional drummer got started. When Sonny was 12 years old he received his first drum set that he would practice on in an apartment above the Blue Moon. “I would play in local marching bands and some neighborhood cover bands too” Sonny continues. “Learned some guitar, learned some piano, but the drums are what I always came back to.”

After High School, Sonny would move to Los Angeles to gain more experience in the heavy metal scene that was the backdrop to Sunset Boulevard in 1983. Sonny began playing at some coffee houses and even had a main spot to play at a popular venue of the time “The Music Machine”, where he also worked at the door. Sonny also made a wage by working as a scenic artist on films for Local 729 of the International Alliance of Theatrical Stage Employees. He has helped develop sets for films such as 1999’s “Stuart Little” and the 2001 horror/mystery “Jeepers Creepers”. Building connections like these helped Sonny introduce his drumming into the soundtracks for early 2000’s tv shows like “Malcolm In The Middle” or “The Bernie Mac Show.” “I was the drummer for the 877-Kars For Kids Jingle” Sonny admits.  

By the time Sonny returned to the East coast nearly thirty years later, his talent and experiences had grown exponentially after playing shows with legendary names like Tom Jones, Slash of Gun N Roses, KISS, and touring with Iron Maiden! 

Sonny and Iron Maiden drummer Nicko McBrain, even sprung for a wild ride of disorder through the city of Casper in Wyoming one night while in town for the tour.   

When Sonny arrived back in New York, he wasted no time getting involved with local musical artists performing in the area. Currently Sonny is working alongside other artists in the Hudson Valley like the classic rock players Lex Grey and her Urban Pioneers, the country band Whiskey Cross, and the in house Blues band at McGeary’s Irish Pub in Albany for the Capital Region Blues Network’s weekly shows These are only a few of the bands he currently plays with when not working on other up and coming projects. Sonny had also worked for four different local radio stations including RIP 97.9 in Windham for over ten years.

“I am also working down on Long Island with a program called “Road Recovery”, which tries to help troubled teenagers in schools through a music program backed by Billy Joel and the Department of Justice” Sonny explains.

 But now Sonny is planning on publishing three books he himself has written to launch in this upcoming March that act as different looks back on a lifetime of triumphs and failures out on the open road amongst the music circuits of America. 

The first of his books is going to be his autobiography “Safety First (Lions and Hearts)”.

“This one’s gonna be in more of a humorous light to balance out the tragedies” Sonny says.

“It's got rock and roll, it's got sex, it's got drugs, it's got motorcycle clubs, and then eventually me getting myself sober.”  

The second one Sonny describes as a “coffee table book” filled with pictures Sonny was taking while touring the deep South with musical group Tas Cru from 2012 to 2020. The book itself lacks a working title so far but will feature a collection of photographs of cotton fields, gin mills, old juke joints, fellow musicians and more, with follow up captions that explain where and when Sonny is and why he is there.

The third volume is going to be a short 70-page reflection on the early relationship between Sonny and his dad entitled “Life Is Good”. “This one will look more at how my father didn't kill a long haired drummer he was raising while moving from Long Island into the Catskills,” Sonny adds humorously. 

Juggling all this can seem pretty heavy, especially when splitting your time between Windham and Long Island, but Sonny always leaves room for his girl Victoria and his stepson Andres who he affectionately calls “The Dude”. 


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