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Outdoors with Larry DiDonato - Big Trout Stocked in Local Lakes, Just in Time for Ice Fishing

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 12/19/24 | 12/19/24

Want to catch some big trout through the ice? Thanks to veteran Greene County Fish Chairman, Walt Bennett, ECOs Lucas Palmateer and Jason Smith, with support from DEC’s hatchery in Livingston Manor and Region 4 Fisheries, two Greene County waterways were stocked with 400 big breeder trout. The big trout, some measuring over 20 inches, were placed in Greens Lake and the lake at CD Lane Park back in October. Walt said the trout were so big, they couldn’t be stocked the traditional way using buckets. He and the ECOs had to use boats, tanks, and nets to get the lunker trout to where they needed to be. Both bodies of water are open to fishing for trout through the ice, as is Colgate Lake which did not get the big breeders this year. 

 Once local waters start to freeze, and before considering venturing out onto any frozen waters of the state, DEC encourages anglers to safely enjoy ice fishing this season by reviewing ice safety guidelines.

“With the onset of winter and colder temperatures, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) Interim Commissioner Sean Mahar today reminded ice anglers to be safe when venturing onto the ice this season, especially given recent variations in weather conditions. Outdoor enthusiasts considering ice fishing should always be aware of essential safety guidelines and make sure ice is thick enough before heading out.” 

 The commissioner encourages those recreating on ice to routinely check the thickness and quality of ice when traversing upon any frozen waters throughout the state. 

“Before leaving shore, ice anglers are advised to check the thickness of ice. Four inches of solid, clear ice is usually safe for anglers accessing ice on foot. However, ice thickness can vary between waterbodies and even within the same waterbody, increasing the need to ensure thickness. Anglers should be particularly cautious of areas of moving water and around boat docks and houses where bubblers may be installed to reduce ice from forming. Checking the ice can easily be done with an auger or “spud bar” (a long, metal tool with a chisel on one end) at various spots. Local bait and tackle shops are a great resource for finding out where there is safe ice and what anglers are catching. In addition, fishing with family and friends is also encouraged for safety.”

An interview about ice safety with Forest Ranger Ashly Carabetta is available for download (video, 743 MB).

 If you’re new to the sport, a good time to give it a try, (ice conditions permitting), is the weekend of February 15th and 16th 2025. It’s a designated free freshwater fishing weekend, so the freshwater fishing license requirement is waived during those dates. Free Fishing Days are also a great opportunity for experienced anglers to introduce someone new to fishing.

Fisheries biologists and veteran ice fishermen alike say for some fish species, ice fishing can be more productive than pursuing them during open-water conditions. 

“Given good ice conditions, anglers normally limited to shore fishing can access an entire waterbody. Beginner ice anglers can download the Ice Fishing Chapter (PDF) of DEC's I FISH NY Beginners Guide to Freshwater Fishing (PDF) for helpful information on how to get started.

For more interactive options, DEC released a series of six ice fishing videos on the agency's YouTube channel. Visit the playlist to check out the brief instructional videos. Additional information, including a list of waters open to ice fishing, can be found on the DEC ice fishing webpage, and also through the Tackle Box feature in DEC's HuntFishNY app

The use of bait fish, like minnows, is a productive technique and very popular when ice fishing, especially when using tip-ups. You can also use popular jigs, like Swedish Pimples and many other time-tested lures, which work even better with a “mousie,” “spike” or minnow head. Definitely check with your local bait shop for the best baits to use in your area.  

Baitfish may be used in most, but not all, waters open to ice fishing. For more information on baitfish regulations, visit DEC's website. 

To protect New York's waters from invasive species and the spread of fish diseases, anglers are advised to take these critical steps when using baitfish while ice fishing:

  • Review and follow DEC baitfish regulations;

  • Ensure the use of baitfish is permitted in the waterbody by checking the special 'regulations by county' section of the fishing regulations guide;

  • Use only certified, disease-free bait fish purchased from a local tackle store (buyers must retain the receipt provided to them while in possession of the baitfish);

  • Personally collected bait fish may only be used in the same waterbody from which they were caught; and

  • Dump unused baitfish and water in an appropriate location on dry land.

  • DEC reminds anglers to make sure that they have a valid fishing license before heading out on the ice. Fishing licenses are valid for 365 days from the date of purchase.

While temperatures are starting to trend lower, good, safe ice takes time to form and discretion is certainly the better part of valor when considering venturing onto ice-covered lakes and ponds. Remember the 4-inch-clear-ice rule and all the exceptions regarding moving water and thinner conditions by bubblers and structures as recommended by DEC. Checking with local bait shops is a great way to learn of local ice conditions while getting some tips on where to go and what to use to make the most of your outing on the ice. 

And don’t forget to try and haul in a few big breeder trout from Greens Lake and at CD Lane Park this year! 

Merry Christmas, and happy, hunting, trapping, and fishing until next time!

News and Notes

“Nature Calls” Podcast Adds Hunting, Fishing, and Trapping to the Conversation

“Nature Calls Podcasts: Conversations from the Hudson Valley,” is sponsored by Cornell Cooperative Extension of Columbia and Greene Counties. It covers all aspects of gardening, ecology, and nature. Kudos go to Master Gardiner, Jean Thomas, who identified the need to include the topics of hunting, trapping, and fishing, in their “on-air” conversations about popular outdoor, natural pursuits. Jean invited me to join them to answer a few questions and share some experiences, explaining how hunters and trappers in particular enjoy a mutually beneficial relationship with gardeners, home owners, farmers, and environmentalists. Problem is, they also share mutual misconceptions. Sportsmen and women keep wildlife from overpopulating the Hudson Valley and elsewhere, and both camps have vested interests in the conservation of our natural resources. If you’d like to listen to the conversation, go to: 

https://ccecolumbiagreene.org/gardening/nature-calls-conversations-from-the-hudson-valley/episode-147-hunting-and-fishing 

Remember to report poaching violations by calling 1-844-DEC-ECOS


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A Conversation about What’s a Family to Do?




By Jean Thomas

It’s the dreaded holiday time. Families are cooped up together for abnormal amounts of hours. Parents attempt to make memories with their children. Great stress often ensues, because multiple generations have multiple ideas about what to do with spare time. Some prefer strolling about in nice toasty museums, preferably with gift shops and cafes, while others want to be romping around outdoors participating in vigorous sports. Rare is the family that happily goes on a group adventure without at least one or two whining about how much they hate their life. Feel free to insert family names as you continue to read. Grandma loves to gaze at paintings and other assorted art. Mom enjoys touring historic homes and comparing them to the sets of her favorite historical television sagas. Grandpa and Dad are happy just standing around with a coffee, admiring the scenery and gabbing. The kids, depending on age, just want to romp around outside for a while and then sink back into their usual electronic cocoons. How can a family manage to build some fun holiday memories without ugly drama? Well, we in the Catskills are blessed with places to go that can satisfy whole tribes of mismatched folks.                  In the town of Catskill, for example, there is the Thomas Cole House. The site is part of a smorgasbord of indoor and outdoor adventures where the clan can split up, go have different adventures, and rejoin to share their stories.

The Cole House is a National Historic Site and consists of a six acre campus, with the historic home Cedar Grove the highlight. The tours inside the house are by appointment this time of year, so check the website before going. The adventurous in your group have the option of taking the Skywalk over the Hudson River, which leads to the New York State Historical Site of Olana, home of Frederick Church. Both Church and Cole were world famous artists in their day, and both historic homes are open to the public (always check on line for details before you head out). The hardy nature lovers can take hiking trails on the 250 acres of Olana’s landscaped and naturalized grounds. The vistas from Olana are beautiful, and worth a trip. The grounds of  both sites are free to visit, and house tours usually have a small fee.

Another feature of a visit to the Cole House is the opportunity to visit the Mawignack Preserve. This is a treat for hikers (or snowshoers in season) along the Catskill Creek where Cole found inspiration for most of his most famous works. The area is a short drive from the Cole Site, and is a 144 acre preserve with a beautiful one-mile hiking loop and interpretive panels describing the history and ecological importance of this place, whose name translates to “the place where two streams come together.”

If the Catskill/Hudson River trek is too long a trip in the winter, the New York State area is rich in history and, therefore, historical sites. Your assorted clan members can find similar mixtures of indoor/cultural and outdoor/natural places in many of our local counties. Schoharie County has the Lansing Manor, adjacent to the Blenheim-Gilboa Visitor’s Center and Power Authority, connected to the Mine Kill State Park. Again, the history buff can toddle around inside and the energetic have hundreds of acres to hike and explore. Every county in our area has at least one treasure spot, many either New York or National Park associated. Check websites for details and assign the organizing to whoever is the family trip planner ( we all have one!) Happy holidays.


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Whittling Away with Dick Brooks - Letter to Santa

Dear Santa,

How are you?  It's me again, for what--the eightieth time or so.  How is the missus, all the boys in the shop and the reindeer?  I hope this letter finds all in good health and good humor.

It's been a busy year since I last wrote to you.  Our family has been blessed for the most part with good health or is at least on the road to recovery, anyway, compared with others we know, we have nothing to complain about.

Our Princess continues to grow in strength and beauty.  She is now engaged to a wonderful young man and intends to be married in the coming year. My Queen rules our domain in her usual cheerful, benevolent manner, so all is well in our little world.  The boys move further into manhood and still haven't become a burden to society and our granddaughter is still the brightest star shining in Texas.  Please pass my heartfelt thanks along to The Big Guy the next time you see him and thank you for any part you may have played in this matter.

This is the part on the letter where I used to list what I wanted for Christmas, you know, the important stuff!  The older I get, the shorter my list gets as I continue to realize how much I have and how little I really need.  I'm not going to continue to ask for that pony because I realize now who's going to be the clean-up crew.  I now know that no matter how hard you try, that Corvette that I always have asked for isn't going to fit in my stocking in spite of the ample size of my tootsies.  I guess on a personal level, I'd like things to continue moving smoothly down life's sometime-not-smooth road.  Keep us under your wing and traveling towards good health.  That's about it for us, short list!  

Maybe now that my list is two or three pages shorter, you may have a few extra moments to spare.  Could you maybe concentrate on some of the folks around who could use a little extra help.  There's a lot of people worried about loved ones in harm's way overseas, could you spend a little time helping smooth that mess out so they can come home.  There are a whole bunch of hungry folks out there who could use a helping hand too, some of them don't live too far away either so maybe it wouldn't be a whole lot of extra work to make sure the little ones don't go to bed hungry.  There are people who are going to be alone for the holidays, it really wouldn't take much time for a quick visit and would mean so much.  Some of them haven't talked to you for a great many years and it would do them good.  If you don't have time for a lot of visits, maybe you could lift the fogs that sometimes cloud their past, even just for Christmas Eve, and let them warm their souls with the memories of Christmas Past. It would mean so much. I'm hopeful that your annual visit will spread a little happiness and love around.  Our country could use all it can get.  It might help end some of the unhappiness and anger that's so prevalent.  If it's not asking too much, could you spread some old fashioned politeness around. There's way too much rudeness and anger in our country. 

Well, I've taken up enough of your time, I do so enjoy our yearly visit and I do try my best to keep you in my heart all year around, but then, you know that.  Thank you so much, my old friend and with you helping, maybe this year that "Peace on Earth" thing will finally work.

Love you!

Dick Brooks       


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Why Art? - Political Art/Art Activism

OSMOS Station, Dec. 14th, Stamford, NY


By John Halpern

Part 1 of 2

There are those who would have it that “all art is political” and those who would say “everything we do is a political act.” There are those that say “everyone is an artist,” (Originally attributed to German artist Joseph Beuys/co-founder of the European Green Party). And it is said that the historic “Siddhartha,” the first Buddha, said, “Everyone is a Buddha.”

Taking this apart requires layers of analytic deconstruction or contemplation. I’ll describe only a bit. I’ve interviewed over 100 artists, activists, spiritual teachers, celebrities and political activists around the world, delving into these topics. 

In the 1970’s it became more frequent to see celebrities using their public personas to campaign for social, political and environmental causes or issues. George Harrison, a Beatle star, hosted Benefit Concert for Bangladesh, New York. Millions were raised from the concert album sales. Most Bangladeshi taxi drivers know about the concert from their grandparents. The campaign resulted in the liberation of now, a sovereign Bangladesh from then Pakistan. 

A recent TUNING FORK LIVE program hosted film director Susanne Rostock about her film FOLLOWING HARRY, where Rostock followed Harry Belafonte’s human rights activism for 14 years prior to his death. Human rights was the chain of command in Belafonte’s entertainment career.

George Harrison and the musicians that joined the concert, like Dylan and Eric Clapton, were not politicizing their music. Some were creating politically motivated music in protest of social inequity, racism, etc. McCartney wrote the Black Bird song because of the discrimination he witnessed in the US, on tour in the 1960’s. Leonard Cohen wrote about apocalyptic realities and their sources. 

Did we at those times think of this as “political art or activism?” Mostly we thought that that was what artists did. There was a perspective that “art can change your life.” Not the lives of the artists making it, but the lives of everyday people exposed to art. 

Something has happened in our world. 

Leonard Cohen’s prophetic song, The Future anticipated much of what we see happening in the world today. The lyrics, “You see a woman hangin upside down, her features covered by her fallen gown and all these lousy little poets coming round tryin to sound like Charlie Manson, and the white man dancin,” speaks of the degradation of human values, the exploitation of industry on the common person, of alienation and the ruin of our natural world. 

So, maybe art is political, at least some art – but what is politics? 

Surely the theatrical display of corporately sponsored, lobbied and financially motivated politicians cannot be real politics. It seems more like “entertainment politics,” not politics that is meant to serve the people. 

Art that serves the people is “real politics.” Art inherently does serve people, whether it is self expressive or socially engaged, as much of the art today is. 

Some art is made for the art industry. In the past Industrial Art referred to learning skills like welding or shop work at school. Why isn’t the “made for industry art” today not called Industrial Art? Would that erode the value of art made for the art industry? Would calling made for industry art “Industrial Art” be an act of political art – in criticism of the art market, the market that requires Art Stars and the inevitable competitive narcism and vanity of artists, collectors and art institutions from art schools to galleries to museums?  I think that would be a real political statement. Don’t you? 

And then there’s the topic of Art Politics, where in the process of trying to advance in the conventionally accepted “art world,” – to make it, we pathetic, corporately programmed and driven artists clamor and claw our way to success, climbing over the carcasses of fellow artists through nepotism, favoritism and selling our souls. 

Mind you, this is not a condemnation. It is a simple and empathetic observation. It is analytic deconstruction and contemplation.

If “everyone is an artist” it requires that we take stock of the programming that divides you from me. The programing demands that I adhere to a self image, all the time, reifying my identity and using all the available resources to maximize my ego power to dominate daily life situations. To have concrete, fast opinions. To judge others when we disagree and to condemn myself when failing to take advantage. Where love is transactional, manipulated and performative. 

Being a real “artist” requires that we free ourselves from this programing, change our inner lives, projections of our skewed realities and perceptions of the world. 

OSMOS Station in Stamford is one of several outposts beyond the art industry here in rural New York State. Their current artist residency program (see photo) included a conference last weekend where local residents met with a collaborative group of artists, a lawyer, curator, an economist and others to devise or invent a legal contract protecting artists and engaging art collectors in a new economic paradigm. Their ongoing conversation is a collective contemplation requiring analysis of past economic models and scenarios that could impact creative process and the business and exchange of art.  

NEWS: Diamond Hollow Books has reopened in Andes. It, like OSMOS is where art thrives.     

In Part 2: the difference between activism and re-activism (or blindly reacting to an out of balance world while being oneself, out of balance)

OSMOS Info: www.Artsrec.org


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Year-Long Poaching Investigation Ends in Arrests and Conviction – Greene County

Illegal deer poaching captured on doorbell camera in Greene County, November 2023


On Nov. 16, 2024, ECOs ended a year-long investigation with the apprehension of two New Jersey residents suspected of illegally taking a deer in the front yard of a residence in the town of Lexington.

In November 2023, ECOs Palmateer and Smith responded to complaints from a homeowner who reported receiving an alert on his ring camera that captured a deer being shot and collapsing in his driveway. The surveillance video also showed two subjects back a black pick-up truck into the driveway before they finished killing the animal, loading it into the truck, and driving away.

Lieutenant Glorioso, along with ECOs Palmateer, Smith, and Hameline used several investigative techniques in the following months to narrow the subject vehicle down to a pick-up truck registered to a subject residing in New Jersey.

On Nov. 16, opening day of the 2024 Southern Zone regular firearms season, Officers Palmateer and Smith located the suspect’s vehicle parked along a roadway at a public hunting property in the town of Lexington. Officers followed the vehicle back to a nearby hunting camp where they identified the driver as the same individual in the ring camera video. The Officers then found the other subject at the hunting camp.

The subjects, both residents of New Jersey, admitted to illegally shooting and killing the deer from the roadway the previous year. ECOs charged the pair with possessing a loaded firearm in a motor vehicle, taking a deer from a public roadway, discharging a firearm within 500 feet of a dwelling, illegally killing a white-tailed deer, and failing to properly tag the deer. Officers discovered an untagged seven-point buck at the hunting camp, which also resulted in another charge for failing to tag deer as required by law.

On Nov. 22, 2024, both subjects pleaded guilty in the Town of Lexington Court and paid fines totaling $2,500. DEC thanks New Jersey Conservation Police and the New York State Police Forensic Multimedia Service Unit for assisting in this investigation.


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Village of Tannersville Accepting Bids for $500,000 Municipal Solar Project

By Max Oppen

Tannersville – The Village of Tannersville is once again seeking bids for a municipal solar energy project that could save taxpayers tens of thousands of dollars annually. This is the second time in more than three years that the project has been put out to bid, following delays caused by changes in the Village administration. The deadline for submissions is January 3, 2025, according to Village Clerk Robin Dumont. Applications are available on the Village of Tannersville's website.

The project was originally proposed in 2021 as part of the $10 million Downtown Revitalization Initiative (DRI) by the Tannersville Local Planning Committee, with support from state agencies, including the NYS Department of State, NYS Homes and Community Renewal, Empire State Development, and the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA).

The committee, co-chaired by former Mayor Lee McGunnigle and Todd Erling of the Hudson Valley AgriBusiness Development Corporation, included a mix of local business owners, school officials, and community leaders. Among them were Ryan Chadwick, owner of Boathouse Restaurant; Sarah Slutzky, Director of Skier Services at Hunter Mountain; and Nate Jones, Superintendent of the Tannersville/Hunter School District. A municipal solar system was identified during stakeholder workshops as a key priority for reducing taxpayer costs and promoting sustainability.

The proposed system would install solar panels at four locations: Village Hall, the pavilion at Rip Van Winkle Lake, Gooseberry Creek Park, and a new trailhead parking area. According to Village DRI documentation, the project will cover all municipal power usage, including streetlights, and is expected to take 10 months to complete.

Former Mayor Lee McGunnigle expressed frustration about delays in implementing the project. "I secured $500,000 for the Village Solar Project to offset the electric use of the municipality," McGunnigle said. "It would eliminate the electric bill for the Village taxpayers. When I left office, we had a bid for $497,000, so the project should have been completed."

McGunnigle said his administration had secured a bid in 2021, but the new administration rejected it. "They're going to give a bunch of excuses, but the buck stops with the Mayor and Deputy Mayor," McGunnigle said, referring to current Mayor David Schneider and Deputy Mayor David Kashman. He also emphasized that Governor Kathy Hochul wanted the project completed on the original timeline, adding, "The two years they haven't had solar panels put in have cost taxpayers at least $120,000 in electric costs."

In 2021, Solar Communities, Inc. (DBA SunCommon) submitted two proposals in response to the Village's initial bid request. The first was a $405,000 base proposal for a combination of roof-mounted and ground-mounted solar systems at four municipal sites. The second proposed a more extensive ground-mounted system at the water treatment plant. Both proposals promised long-term positive cash flow but were rejected by the Village, which cited higher-than-expected costs and the desire for immediate cash-positive results through DRI funding. According to the DRI documentation, the base proposal would generate positive cash flow by Year 16, with the alternate proposal doing so by Year 17.

Mayor David Schneider, who took office in April 2023, says his administration is now moving forward with the project after receiving a state contract. "We have not lost any time or savings for Village residents," Schneider stated.

Schneider clarified that he was not in office when the original bids were rejected. "As Mr. McGunnigle should know, all these projects are subject to contracts with New York State, and we cannot start them until we have said contracts," he said. Schneider added that his administration received the state contract for the solar project about a month ago, enabling them to proceed with a new Request for Proposals (RFP).

He also disputed McGunnigle's timeline, noting that McGunnigle remained in office until March 2023, meaning it was McGunnigle's administration, not his, that rejected the solar project in 2021.

The updated plan excludes the water treatment plant at 195 Leach Drive, which lies outside the DRI boundaries. Instead, a solar installation at a new trailhead parking area at the intersection of Railroad Avenue, South Main Street, and Spruce Street has been added.

The solar project aligns with Tannersville's broader sustainability goals, aiming to reduce the Village's carbon footprint and reinvest savings into green initiatives. These include connectivity improvements to encourage walking and biking within the Village.

The project promises several benefits:

  • Short-Term: Covering 100% of municipal electricity needs, significantly reducing taxpayer costs and the Village's carbon footprint while easing the strain on the power grid.

  • Mid- to Long-Term: Freeing up resources for other public projects and inspiring broader community action on climate change.

Despite its potential, the project has drawn mixed public reactions. According to a DRI survey, 50% of respondents supported the solar initiative, citing its importance for environmental leadership and sustainability. However, others questioned whether alternative funding sources should have been considered and whether the project aligns with downtown revitalization efforts.

Cost estimates for the project's three solar sites were based on SunCommon's 2021 proposals, while projections for the solar canopies at the trailhead parking area were developed using industry best practices.

By moving forward with the project, the Village of Tannersville hopes to establish itself as a leader in renewable energy and sustainability, demonstrating the practical benefits of solar power while reducing costs for taxpayers.




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Traditionally Speaking…by Pat Larsen - The Re-gifting of Christmas Past

The task always seems quite tedious at the onset.

Beginning with the arduous task of setting out to choose the perfect fresh tree or lamenting, yet again, over whether this would be the year to purchase an artificial one. 

By the way, it’s always the former, a Balsam Fir. 

Not as a default decision, mind you, it’s just that this particular choice always won out because we never wanted to make that much of a change to what we knew to be “our” Christmas tradition.

With the tree then perched in its rightful place near the bay window, the time had come to adorn every branch with twinkling  lights and all those special ornaments that were beckoning  to be chosen again this year. Sometimes, I’d make a contest of it. I’d look over the assortment of colors and taunt the blue and gold ornaments, saying out loud, “maybe I’ll pick your colors this year, knowing the reds and greens would always win out again. 

Before long though, I’d be totally in the groove and even the old Christmas songs and I had made friends again and I was belting out the one about Grandma’s catastrophic intersection with the reindeer's and laughing out loud yet again at the absurdity of these lyrics.

Perhaps as Baby Boomers, at some point we began to experience the whole enterprise of decorating, year after year, a bit tiring to execute. That anticipation and excitement that was present when the children lived at home was gone and now  searching for the ornament hooks at the bottom of the bin left us frustrated.

Then this  happened quite unexpectedly this year.

Each of the very special ornaments that I began to carefully unwrap so as to honor their delicacy, seemed to have a special message to share this year that stopped me in my haste to complete the task. 

I guess it’s not surprising when I realized that now 71 Christmases later, here I was looking at ornaments that signified a time gone by and wondering just how many more " holidays" would be on the horizon. 

So,  as I unwrapped each ornament, suddenly right there, in the reflection of those glimmering orbs, I saw myself, all those years ago. 

The shiniest of the Christmas balls spoke to the laughs of  recalling seeing my Mom in her holiday apron, directing the decorating from the kitchen, as she took cookies out of the oven. There was no doubt that we’d distract her later on as we sent a spy into the kitchen to grab a handful. My poor kid sister always took the blame.

A tin full of snowflakes then presented themselves to me after all the lights were neatly placed and the ornaments had taken up their positions. That’s when the  memory of my beloved Aunt Pauline’s  incredible handy work of having crocheted these beautiful decorations over 50 years ago came flooding back. They were still as perfect as the day they had been gifted to us on the first Christmas we shared as a married couple. I sat for a long while with these memories and took the opportunity to thank my Aunt yet again feeling her presence as I spoke aloud. 

Following this revelation, I then found some of the most precious of my holiday adornments wrapped ever so carefully. These ornaments had been gifted to me from my sister, Lisa, as a special memento of our love for each other during the last Christmas that we shared before she passed at age 34.

The emotion and the overwhelming connections were still palpable within these ornaments. 

This was such a very different experience this year.

Slowing down, and to be honest, having to slow down then converging to bring me to an entirely enjoyable place.

Re-gifting isn’t so bad after all…even if many many years later.

Wishing all of my readership the very best of the Holidays coupled with the best of memories that carry you forward to what comes next for us.

Pat Larsen is a syndicated columnist. She lives in Greene County with her husband Chris and their pup Lily.

Her first book, Reflections…anything but an ordinary life is available on Amazon.com. 

Please feel free to contact Pat to chat at 518-275-8686.


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The Prattsville Scoop

By Abby and Gabby

PRATTSVILLE – This will be the last Scoop before Christmas – so have a very Merry Christmas and will be in touch after the holiday. May your every wish come true and may you have a very Healthy and Happy New Year.

It was the ladies day to do Christmas shopping on Saturday in Kingston. Stephanie Brainard Braswell, Kelly (Mrs. Adam) Brainard, Stephanie Goff Marino, Cathy Brainerd Martino, Marianne Krauss and Ginny Gurley were doing their holiday shopping for their loved ones, from toddlers to the very elderly. Only the dedicated took advantage of the sales, the temperature was not conducive to going from store to store. Kelly said they had so much to do, they were ordering their lunch to go and they would eat on the run. Been there done that but not for shopping just appointments. All in all, the day came under the heading of “enjoyable” and some parts of the mission were accomplished.

In the picture of Santa’s helpers at the Stratton VAMC for the Christmas Celebration are Lana Breigle, Marianne and Johannes Krauss, Diana and Arnold Jaeger, Rebecca, Ginny and Bob Gurley, Dana Hommel and Cathy Martino, Michelle Ferrauilo and Christine VA Staff, and Nancy Orr.

Steve and Lisa Birnbaum continue to support our veterans with bags and bags of assorted snack candies. The wants of those in need are fulfilled, and the candy can be the finishing touch to wishes granted.

It is amazing the number of trees and/or branches that are still actually resting on the power lines. I suppose they are just waiting for the next snowstorm to snap those lines. Take care of them now and avoid outages. We did get some rain that was very much needed.

The WAJPL Golden Agers had their holiday luncheon on Thursday at Prominence in Windham. The facility was nicely decorated and the food was very well prepared and served, everyone’s special request was granted or answered with satisfaction. It took quite a while to draw for the raffles, including $$$ and gift baskets. Congratulations to the winners. Thanks to all for the enjoyable day.

Merrill and Teddie Cline made a holiday trip to visit her brother Charlie Rion at the Firemen’s Home in Hudson on Monday. Teddie said she wishes Charlie was doing better so we wish him the best and a very Merry Christmas.

Keep Anita Creazzo in your prayers. She continues to try to get her health on the straight and narrow road to good health. We send Anita our prayers for good health. Al, her husband, is her guardian angel and she gives him high praise and thanks him for all his health. Anita’s neighbors and best friends, Pat and Tony Bifolco, have their own health issues, mostly flu like ailments. We wish you all a return to good health and in time to enjoy your families at this very special season.

On December 22 we wish Steve Haskin a very Happy Birthday. On December 23 we wish Marcia Dougherty a Happy Birthday. On December 25 we wish Chris Tompkins a Happy Birthday and a Merry Christmas. On December 28 we wish three fine ladies Happy Birthday – Jane Lane, JoAnn Haskin and Janice Cross.s Happy Birthday to Jerry Raeder on December 29. On December 30 we score a homer with Happy Birthday wishes to Kory O’Hara, Debbie Baker, Diana Jaeger and Sandy Kiley. On January 1 we wish Janet Chatfield and CarliAnn O’Hara a Happy Birthday. On January 2 it is Happy Birthday to Lana Breigle and Jim Hull. Happy Birthday to Ursula G. Lindley on January 3. Belated Happy Anniversary wishes to Judy and Steve Haskin on December 16. We wish Claudia and Ray Bracaliello a great and Happy Anniversary on December 31.

Enjoy the Holidays with family and friends.


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CD MS/HS Hosts its Give a Hoot Silent Auction

CAIRO – The Cairo-Durham Middle and High School is raising funds for the CDTA Scholarship through its Give a Hoot silent auction. Five chainsaw-carved wooden owls made by Tom Morrissey, Class of 2008 alum, are on display and still up for auction. Tom Morrissey is a local self-employed professional chainsaw carver and the Cairo-Durham Rotary Club’s President. He was recently invited to showcase his chainsaw carving during Mr. Criswell’s classes. Afterward, the seven finely carved owls Tom carved that day were given to the school for an internal silent auction. 

Staff and faculty throughout the Middle and High School’s campus have the chance to bid on the five remaining beautifully carved owls. Proceeds from winning bids will go toward the CDTA Scholarship fund. One owl is auctioned every month. Bidding starts on the first day, and bidding ends on the second Wednesday of the same month. Faculty and staff can find a sign-up sheet in the art room, E-7. 

The owls are currently on display near the gymnasium. 



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