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MAIN STREET COMMUNITY CENTER - Amy Silberkleit: Lithographs With a Local Look

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 3/7/25 | 3/7/25



If you think you have seen “Durham Road” (offered in lithograph form by Amy Silberkleit), it’s highly likely you have, not far from where the artist lives, in the rural hamlet of Conesville, out betwixt Schoharie and Greene counties. “I get a certain feeling when I walk on this road and see the three sugar maples that anchor the house,” Silberkleit says. “I can’t help but get a sense of the farm that used to be. It seems like it is always windy there, at the crest of a hill, but I am drawn to this place by the quiet too.”


Main Street Community Center in Windham, partnering with the Windham Arts Alliance, is hosting “Pressing Matters,” a solo show featuring the traditional lithography of Amy Silberkleit such as “Crop,” inspired by a cornfield along the Rail Trail between the towns of Bloomville and Roxbury. The exhibit runs until April 1 including a meet-and-greet reception on March 22 with live music and refreshments (3 to 6 p.m.) and a free print-making demonstration on March 29 (4 p.m.).
One leaf clings to its life-giving branch as another is “Letting Go” in a lithograph on transparent paper fused it to a monotype of the plant, Equisetum. “I love drawing the forms that leaves take when they wither in the Fall,” Silberkleit says. Two of her works are part of the Albany Institute’s permanent collection. 

“Sunflower” became “more interesting to draw once the petals fell and the seeds ripened,” says Silberkleit, a Windham Arts Alliance member and onetime artistic director of The Rod and the Rose Puppet Theatre, receiving her Certificate in Natural Science Art and Illustration from The New York Botanical Gardens.

 

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True West by Sam Shepard at MATH

HUNTER — True West by Sam Shepard directed by Jacob Shipley.

Two brothers duke it out in this classic play about sibling rivalry and creativity run amok.

At the end of March MATH is partnering with Fellow and Scribners to bring Sam Shepard's classic play True West to an in-the-round experience at the Apex Lounge. Included in the evening will be a cocktail hour with appetizers and specialty cocktails (including n/a), desserts and coffee at intermission, and a cash bar open throughout the play. 

Tickets are $65, and very limited, so visit www.catskillmtn.org for more information and ticket links! The show will be Mar. 28 and 29 at the Apex Lounge at Scribner's Catskill Lodge at Hunter.

 

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St. Patrick’s Day Parade is March 16

Originally Published in Porcupine Soup

EAST DURHAM―The East Durham St. Patrick’s Day Parade Committee is gearing up to once again paint the town green when the second annual parade marches down State Route 145 on Sunday, March 16.

Last year was the first time in 30 years that the Emerald Isle of the Catskills hosted a St. Patrick’s Day parade and thousands of people came out to celebrate as festive floats, color guards, marching bands, pipes and drums, firetrucks, and more made their way through the hamlet.​

“Last year’s parade was hugely successful and we are planning on topping it this year,” organizers say.

The committee has been hard at work for months preparing and on February 22 they hosted the Passing of the Sash Dinner Dance at the Shamrock House. Colleen McGrath Fenlon and Dermot Fenlon, owners of McGrath’s Edgewood Falls, were officially named grand marshals. 

Founded 51 years ago by Colleen’s parents, Kathleen and Mattie McGrath, the family-run resort has been a cornerstone of the East Durham community and local Irish culture.

Fr. Henry Reid will be aide to the grand marshals. Mike Hurson will once again serve as master of ceremonies. ​

Some 180 people attended the dinner, including Assemblyman Chris Tague who presented volunteer Natasha Voisey with a commendation from the Greene County Legislature for her “time and efforts in various capacities for the betterment of the community.” Voisey was also given a special Above and Beyond award from the East Durham St. Patrick’s Day Parade Committee.

“It was Natsha's birthday and everyone enthusiastically sang ‘Happy Birthday,’” said Wesslock.

 

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Filmed Locally - A Complete Unknown


By Bradley Towle

PHOENICIA — A Complete Unknown is the long-awaited Bob Dylan biopic starring Timothy Chalamet as the young songwriter in the early 1960s. With its detailed production and stand-out performances, the film received numerous nominations and awards, including seven Academy Award nominations. Among the film's Oscar nominations was Ed Norton for his nuanced portrayal of Pete Seeger, a figure who loomed large in upstate New York during his long life of activism and music. Aside from charting Bob Dylan's early days as a folk singer to his notorious decision to "go electric" at The Newport Folk Festival in 1965, director James Mangold's film brings Pete Seeger's vision for folk music into sharp focus, with a clear-eyed depiction of how he believed it could help tip the scales of justice. The folk world and Seeger may have lost the darling Dylan they'd wanted—and in fact, it never was Dylan's fate to remain a folkie— but that never caused Seeger to become cynical about his worldview or vision for folk music. The times may have changed, but Seeger had already become a well-established entity by the time of Dylan's artistic shift. His involvement at the famous Camp Woodland just outside Phoenicia, starting a few years earlier in the 1950s, offers a further glimpse into the musician and activist's vision. 

Founded in 1939 and inspired by FDR's New Deal, its founders sought to establish a summer camp for city kids where American Democracy would be put into practice. The progressives behind the camp aimed to walk the walk and ensured the camp was racially and ethnically inclusive while also acknowledging, honoring, and preserving the local culture of the Catskills, including its rich folklore and history. Derided as "Camp Red" by conservative detractors in the 1950s (it would likely be dismissed as "Camp Woke" today), Camp Woodland has been widely acknowledged as an "incubator" for the burgeoning folk music scene of the 1950s and 1960s. Only a short distance from his home in the Hudson Valley, it's easy to see how Camp Woodland would have been an irresistible destination for Seeger. 

Seeger had been blacklisted in the 1950s after refusing to respond to Senator Joseph McCarthy's accusation that he was a communist. That led to a lengthy blacklist from network television (The Smothers Brothers were the first to bring him back to national television in 1968). Seeger's status as a dangerous radical did not stop him (it likely emboldened him) but made it harder to hash out a living. He had a growing family to support with his wife Toshi and earned a living by giving guitar and banjo lessons, performing at venues brave enough to host him, and through work at Camp Woodland. It was Toshi's father, Takashi Ohta, caretaker at Camp Woodland during the late 1940s and early 1950s, who brought the camp into Seeger's orbit. 

Camp Woodland has been a well-documented and studied subject over the years. Bill Horne's 2016 book The Improbable Community: Camp Woodland and the American Democratic Ideal tells the camp's story and reflects on its legacy. Folk Songs of the Catskills: A Celebration of Camp Woodland is a 2000 audio recording of songs honoring Herbert Haufrecht, Woodland's music director during the 1940s, who passed away in 1998. He had also helped collect the songs for the 1982 book Folk Songs of the Catskills. The Norman Studer Papers at the University at Albany Libraries' Department of Special Collections & Archives boasts more than 15 hours of audio recordings of Pete Seeger singing and teaching folk songs to the campers at Woodland. The collection offers a treasure trove of recordings from Woodland's heyday, including Seeger singing the Woody Guthrie classic "This Land is Your Land." A recording of counselor Hector Angula teaching Seeger "Guántanamera" stands out in the collection. There is palpable excitement from the campers as they prepare to listen to the two perform the song before settling into a hush as the song starts. Seeger is audibly taken by the beauty of the song as it concludes, and as the campers applaud, he asks Angula what the words mean in English. The Cuban folk song became a favorite of Seegers (he would later record it for an album), and one can imagine a particular verse resonating with him: 

With the poor people of this earth,

I want to share my lot.

With the poor people of this earth,

I want to share my lot.

The little streams of the mountains

Please me more than the sea.


To explore the digital Camp Woodland collection at SUNY Albany, including pictures and audio recordings, visit https://archives.albany.edu/web/seeger/. A Complete Unknown is still playing in some theaters. 

 

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James Hannahs to Head the Department of Economic Development, Tourism and Planning



CATSKILL – We are excited to announce that James Hannahs has been promoted to the position of Director for the Department of Economic Development, Tourism and Planning. Since joining the department as Director of Economic Development in 2022, Hannahs has made a significant impact on the Greene County Economic Development Corporation (GCEDC) and economic development initiatives across Greene County. His leadership and vision have strengthened relationships within the local business community and earned him a sterling reputation across the state. 

Through his efforts the county was able to secure Community Development Block Grant Funding from Housing and Community Renewal (HCR), which Hannahs used to create the highly successful MULTI Grant, Microenterprise Assistance program. This funding was used to provide 12 qualifying businesses with reimbursement grants representing $255,000 between the projects. 

Hannahs succeeds outgoing department head Warren Hart who is retiring after more than 20 years of exemplary service to Greene County.

 

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Creatives in Conversation: Creative Resilience this Friday

Resilience is a topic that's been top of mind for many of us recently. As creatives, we draw on and cultivate resilience because it's a skill that is learned through creative practice but it's not always easy to access.

Join us for the first in a series of community building conversations with local artists and authors, Jen Hewett and Katrina Rodabaugh, for a conversation on creative resilience, and what it means to be an artist, creative business owner, and community member right now.

While the program will begin with a moderated discussion between these two artists, we will also leave plenty of time for an open exchange with attendees. Afterward, don’t miss the opportunity to get your books signed—Jen and Katrina’s books will be available for purchase at the gallery. This event also marks the final weekend for the exhibit What We Hold: Stories and Objects featuring 70+ regional women artists - you don't want to miss this!

Friday, March 7

6-8pm

CREATE gallery - 398 Main St, Catskill NY

 

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C-GCC Awarded $50K State Grant to Support Adult Learners

By Liz Montgomery, Porcupine Soup

HUDSON―Columbia-Greene Community College has been awarded a $50,000 state grant to support adult learners.

A total of $1.1 million in grants was announced Monday for 22 community colleges across New York for implementation of action plans designed to help more adult learners access transformational educational opportunities that lead to upward mobility.

Governor Kathy Hochul has already proposed offering free community college tuition, fees, books, and supplies for adults ages 25 to 55 who pursue degrees in fields like health care, advanced manufacturing, cybersecurity, and green jobs.

“SUNY's community colleges are engines of upward mobility, and Governor Hochul’s proposal for a free community college degree in high-demand fields will help connect more working-age New Yorkers to economic opportunity,” said SUNY Chancellor John B. King, Jr.

More than one in four SUNY community college students are age 25 or older, with nearly two-thirds of them attending college part-time, according to the governor's office. An estimated 1.5 million working-age New Yorkers have completed some college but have not yet obtained a degree.

“Our campuses are ready to step up to help more adult learners earn a community college associate degree and advance in their careers,” added King.

Columbia-Greene Community College’s grant will specifically go toward marketing and recruitment targeted to specific adult learner populations; expanded use of credit for prior learning; availability of academic offerings and non-academic support in-person on weekends/evenings; and creating a sense of belonging for adult learners, according to the governor’s office.

Community college campuses will utilize the grants to build out their strategies to support adult learners through July before beginning implementation no later than the fall 2025 semester.

 

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ASF Celebrates The End Of Winter With Its Annual Ralph Hartman Tribute Cup

WINDHAM – The Adaptive Sports Foundation (ASF) will be hosting the annual Ralph Hartman Tribute Cup this Saturday, March 8 at Windham Mountain Club.

The Ralph Hartman Tribute Cup celebrates the end of the ASF’s winter season. It is a fun race for all athletes who took an adaptive snow sport lesson with the ASF during the 2024-2025 winter season. Students who registered for the race will arrive at the ASF’s Gwen Allard Adaptive Sports Center at 9 a.m. on Saturday morning and go out for some last-minute instruction and practice runs on the racecourse. Lunch will be served at the ASF lodge from 11 a.m.-12:15 p.m. before the race begins at 12:30 p.m. The race will be held on Windham Mountain Club’s “White Way” trail. 

Racers will take two runs down the course, with their best time being measured for awards. Racers’ families, ASF staff, ASF volunteers and general spectators are invited to watch the race from the bottom of “White Way”, where they will be encouraged to cheer for the athletes as they cross the finish line.

Once the race concludes, the athletes, their families and ASF volunteers will attend the award ceremony at the ASF lodge. Not only will race medals and awards be handed out, but the ASF has several season-long awards that will be given to adaptive athletes and volunteers that worked hard all winter long. The Hartman Award, the All-Around Volunteer Award and the Volunteer Rookie of the Year Award are all given to deserving volunteers, while the Stu Smith “Magic Man” Award and the Robert "Buff" Donnelly Award are given to students who exemplified courage, improvement, enthusiasm and a love of winter sports. 

The party doesn’t end after the award ceremony. From 5:30-8 p.m., the Ralph Hartman Dinner Dance will be held at the Windham Mountain Club base lodge in its Seasons restaurant. Each year, the dinner dance has a different theme, and this year’s theme is the old west. Attendees are encouraged to wear their best western-style clothes and take part in the festivities. 

If you plan on skiing or snowboarding at Windham Mountain Club this Saturday, March 8, feel free to join the ASF crowd in cheering on these incredible athletes.

About the Ralph Hartman Tribute Cup

Since 1990, the ASF has held an end-of-season race that gives its adaptive skiers and snowboarders the opportunity to show off the skills they learned during the season in an actual race. Ralph Hartman, the man who the race was eventually named after, was a lifelong skier that lost part of his left leg due to a heart condition. One day a discouraged Hartman met ASF founder Gwen Allard, who introduced him to adaptive skiing and revitalized his passion for snow sports. Hartman became a student and ultimately a certified adaptive instructor who also helped gain funding from politicians and sponsors for the ASF.

 

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LEGISLATURE STUFF - Anything but Blah

By Michael Ryan

CATSKILL - The world keeps whirling around whether there is a hot story or the same old same old emanating from the Greene County Legislature.

This week features the latter, although any resolutions or laws adopted are anything but the usual blah for the involved agencies and individuals.

Lawmakers, during their recent monthly meeting, okayed a lengthy list of measures and agreements including the following:

—The purchase of a 2025 excavator for the Solid Waste Department, with a suitable John Deere 135 P Tier model, meeting all the requirements, available from United Construction & Forestry for $212,500.

After a trade-in allowance of $77,000 for the county’s current 2022 Hyundai HX-130 excavator, the amount owed the dealer, based in Clifton Park, is $135,500, the resolution shows.

—The purchase of a 2025 wheel loader with options for the Solid Waste Department and likewise, a satisfactory John Deere 444 G Tier Wheel model is on hand at United Construction & Forestry for $176,000.

Subtracting a trade-in allowance of $105,000.00 for a 2023 John Deere 444 currently owned by the county, we mules of taxation owe the firm $71,000.

—The acquisition of two 2025 wheel loaders with options for the Highway Department and, as good fortune would have it, they too are obtainable thru United Construction and Forestry for $187,900 each.

A suitable pair of John Deere 544 G-Tier wheel loaders, measuring up to all the specifications, will ultimately cost $87,900 apiece (totaling $175,800), thanks to a trade-in value of $200,000 on a couple of 2019 John Deere 544K wheel loaders currently owned by the county.

—The acquisition of a 2025 John Deere 85 P Tier Excavator (with options) for use by the Highway Department, to be delivered by - guess who? - United Construction and Forestry for $136,000.

Unlike the first three deals, there is no trade-in. Legislature chairman Patrick Linger noted, with fiscal exuberance, that funds for all the transactions are already included in the 2025 budget.

“There is no borrowing,” Linger said. All four procurements are channelled through Sourcewell Contract #011723-JDC, a State Office of General Services agreement that keeps the price at a minimum.

That fiscal savings can be similarly shared by the county with local municipalities, often resulting in happy rather than sad spending.

—The buying and installation of a high pressure breathing air compressor and fill station system for the county’s Emergency Services Center.

Solicitations for the apparatus went out in December with two bids received including the lower offer of $74,920 submitted by AAA Emergency Supply, headquartered in White Plains.

The second estimate came from a local dealer but was multiple thousands of dollars more than the accepted deal, officials said.

Lawmakers further authorized the county treasurer to transfer the 75 G’s from an Emergency Services Reserve Fund to Appropriated Reserve.

—The purchase of a vehicle for the county Buildings and Grounds agency, going through the State Office of General Services competitive mini-bid process, finding a little beauty for $50,997.65.

Buildings and Grounds will be getting a 2025 Ford F259 XLT Super Cab 4x4 from McGuire Ford, based in Ithaca.

Funds were already written into the 2025 budget, the measure states, noting the department will surplus a 2013 Ford F250 model.

—A pay increase for election inspectors which has not happened since 2018 and covers various elements of the job.

Lawmakers passed a resolution stating State that election law requires four inspectors per district, drawing equally from the two major political parties.

“The efficient and fair administration of elections in Greene County, and all of New York State, is dependent on capable and trained election inspectors being available to work at our voting poll sites,” the measure states.

Election inspectors are required to work “extremely long hours” in General and Primary elections (5:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. or later) and “long hours” (10:30 a.m. 9:30 p.m..or later) for Village vote, the measure states.

Compensation for the inspectors will be raised thusly: General and Primary elections (from $225 to $275); Village elections (from $125 to $175) and Training Sessions (from $25 to $30).

 

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Concerts and Conversations: Music from America’s Gilded Age - Anthony Bonamici, Fortepianist








HUNTER On Saturday, March 8 at 2:00 PM, pianist Anthony Bonamici will perform the music of John Knowles Paine in the intimate setting of the Piano Performance Museum at the Doctorow Center for the Arts in Hunter. 

Music from America’s Gilded Age includes: Sonata in A minor, op. 1, Vier Character-Stücke für Pianoforte, op. 11 and In the Country: Ten Sketches for Piano, op. 26, all of which were composed by John Knowles Paine, the first music professor in America. Originally from Maine, Paine was the first American-born composer to achieve fame for large-scale orchestral music. Paine’s music appreciation and music theory courses at Harvard became the model for departments of music in America. Paine served as a director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra and began America’s symphonic tradition. He was also a founder of the American Guild of Organists. Paine was inducted into the American Classical Music Hall of Fame in 1998.

Anthony Bonamici is an American pianist originally from Livonia, Michigan. Known for his decisive musical voice, emotional intensity, scrupulously crafted interpretations, and ability to connect intimately with his audiences, Anthony has performed at Carnegie Hall and the DiMenna Center for Classical Music in New York City, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., and in many of Russia’s most famous concert halls including the Moscow Conservatory, the Great and Small Halls of the St. Petersburg Philharmonic, and the Mariinsky Theater Concert Hall. He has collaborated with vocal soloists of the Mariinsky Theater and Helikon Opera, and with members of the Mariinsky Theater Orchestra, Saint Petersburg Philharmonic, Russian Early Music Ensemble, Barocco Concertato, Bolshoi Symphony Orchestra, and The Moscow Virtuosi. He has presented lecture recitals for the Steinway Society of Michigan, the Westfield Center for Historical Keyboard Studies, the Ann Arbor Piano Teacher’s Guild, and has performed for the Chopin Society of Connecticut. 

Bonamici will perform at 2PM on Saturday, March 8 at the Piano Performance Museum at Doctorow Center for the Arts, 7971 Main Street, Hunter, NY. Enjoy the music, meet the artist and stay for the reception. Get tickets at www.catskillmtn.org. The concert is free but the suggested donation of $10 will help cover the ticket fees and support programs like this one.


About Catskill Mountain Foundation
The Catskill Mountain Foundation’s (CMF) aim is to provide educational opportunities in the arts for youth and lifelong learners, to bring the experience of the arts to the Catskill community, and to support artists and art organizations in the development of their work through residencies. Since its founding in 1998, CMF has presented hundreds of music, dance, and theater performances; screened over 1,000 films to tens of thousands of audience members; provided studio arts classes to thousands of students of all ages; and served thousands of art-loving patrons in the Catskill Mountain Foundation Gift Shop. The Catskill Mountain Foundation operates the Doctorow Center for the Arts in Hunter, the Orpheum Performing Arts Center in Tannersville, and the Sugar Maples Center for Creative Arts in Maplecrest, NY.


Since 1998, CMF has raised, generated, and invested close to $16 million in facility development and an excess of $42 million in programming operations, for a total investment in the Catskill community of over $58 million. Catskill Mountain Foundation is supported in part by New York State Council on the Arts, the Greene County Cultural Fund administered by the Greene County Legislature, The Jarvis and Constance Doctorow Family Foundation, The Royce Family Foundation, The Samuel and Esther Doctorow Fund, The Orville and Ethel Slutzky Family Foundation, Platte Clove Bruderhof Community, Bank of Greene County Charitable Foundation, The Greene County Youth Bureau, Marshall & Sterling Insurance, All Souls’ Church, Stewarts Shops, Windham Foundation, and by private donations. CMF believes that the arts can transform the lives of those touched by it and can transform the community. Like us on Facebook, follow us on Instagram, and subscribe to our YouTube channel.



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Ashland Speaks

By Lula Anderson

Welcome March!  First let me remind you to Spring ahead this weekend to Daylight Savings time.  We will be able to enjoy more time outside—if it ever warms up.  We've had a couple of teaser days, only to have it go back into the teens at night.  I hope the sap is running, although it hasn't really reached above freezing during the days even though we have flirted with it.  I want to go break a couple of branches to see how things are progressing.  I went out on Sunday, and the wind blew right through me, thought I was going to freeze.  Hopefully by the end of the month we will have outdoor weather again.

Signups for the WAJ Drama Club are still going on.  The Senior Citizen Dinner Theater/ dress rehearsal is Thursday March 13th.  If you don't sign up and show up, don't complain if they run out of food.  Call Opal at 518-750-8380. Keep in mind that we will be collecting donations for the Drama Club. 

On March 14th, the Windham Hensonville UMC will be holding its annual Corned Beef lunch.  The cost this year is $18 for Corned beef sandwich, chips, coleslaw, dessert and a drink.  Serving starts at 10:30.  

March 15th is an all you can eat breakfast at the Ashland Town Hall  benefit of the Ashland Historical Society.  Starts at 7:30 thru 11.  Save some room for the Annual Corned Beef Dinner at the Masonic Lodge in Windham in the afternoon.

This week starts the Lenten Season, starting with Ash Wednesday on March 5.  I'm sure you all know that means it's the start of Hensonville Hose Company's Friday Fish Fries.  Fish, clam strips or chicken tender dinners come with french fries or baked potato, coleslaw and a brownie.  $20,

March 30th is the fifth Sunday, which means the Mt Top Methodist Parishes will be having combined church services in Ashland starting at 9 AM.

Happy 60th birthday to Randy Sutton.

Prayers  and  sympathy to the family of Marilyn VanEttan McKracken (JoEllen's sister)

Get well wishes to Ray Benjamin.

AS I REMEMBER IT

Since I decided to forego rehab and come home from the hospital, my medical team wants me to be on bed rest.  I sit and wait for my food to arrive, I sit and wait for the therapist to come, and for the nurse.  I wait for my repairman to fix my hot water, and I sit and wait—----.  So I watch television.  On Saturday, I was watching the Incredible Pol Farm which follows Charles Pol and his family as they work to establish a farm on 350 acres of undeveloped land.  This segment was learning about bees, and making raised beds for their vegetable garden to prepare for spring.  Then they  made a large pond with a big rock for dangling feet in the water.  I became entranced by the large rock.  I must have fallen asleep because I was soon going back in time to when my sister and I had matching rocks way up on a hill on the farm.  Florence and I would bring our dolls and play by the hour.  Our rock was our home for the day.  We could sit and listen to the wind blowing through the grass and trees, hear the birds sing, and be in our own world.  

If you go to Hunter by Rt 17 in Jewett, you go to the bottom of the hill and on the left is a large rock sitting in the middle of a hay field.  When Jeanne and Clarence Soule lived there, there was always a path mowed to, and around it.  Picnics would be held on that rock, kids would sit and daydream on it.  In the '50's, it was a meeting place for Peggy, Judy and Janet.  

Along the creek in Jewett, are many large rocks, each one a perfect picnic place.  How many bologna sandwiches were eaten on those rocks?  How much KoolAid was consumed there?  Judy's sons always headed right for the creek when they came up to visit Grandma and PaPa.  After Anthony married, his wife always let him go to the creek alone until one day she was invited to go.  It was then that she found "The Rock".  As she sat there, she realized what the attraction was.  The Hudecek family has made a tradition of pictures on the rock as the girls (3rd generation now) grew up.  

On Tuesday mornings, WRIP does a fitness segment with Gerard Friedman from Bellhouse Fitness.  The past two weeks they have been talking about Mindfulness and relaxation methods.  One way to relax is put yourself into your "Happy Place".  Is there anything more relaxing than picturing yourself in the middle of a field, or creek, perched on a huge rock, just listening? 

 

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Outdoors with Larry DiDonato - DEC Releases Hunting Safety Statistics for 2024-25

Greene County ECO Lucas Palmateer, (right), is pictured here receiving a Captain's Commendation in January from DEC Police Captain Tom Caifa, (left). He was presented the award in recognition of his outstanding efforts in creating a Youth Turkey Hunting Program in Greene County. ECO Palmateer is once again coordinating the now annual event, which will take place at the Norton Hill Wildlife Club in Greeneville this April.

Second Safest Season on Record in New York State
  The New York State Department of Environmental Conservation (DEC) has announced the 2024-25 hunting season as the second safest on record. DEC released its annual report documenting 11 hunting-related shooting incidents (HRSIs) for this past hunting season. Only 2021 and 2022 had less HRSIs with 9 for each of those years. The HRSI numbers for 2024-25 are consistent with low incident rates observed across the state in recent years. DEC noted, “Hunting-related incidents are preventable when hunters follow safe and legal hunting practices and proper tree-stand safety measures.” If you would like further details for each HRSI you can go to https://dec.ny.gov/sites/default/files/2025-02/dechrsisummary24.pdf  or use the link, Hunting Safety Statistics.
 This year’s safe season is great news, but not it’s not at all surprising to see hunting continues to enjoy a stellar safety record. It’s been a safe, enjoyable, outdoor activity for some time. New York attributes the success to its strong Hunter Education Program, which continues to be exceptional thanks to the years of dedicated service from the more than 1500 certified volunteer instructors who teach in-person classes. Online-only courses have also been made available. Hunters adhering to regulations, requirements, and firearm safety, allow hunting to be a safe and enjoyable activity for hundreds of thousands of New Yorkers and visitors each year.
 “All first-time hunters, bowhunters, and trappers are required to successfully complete a hunter or trapper safety course and pass the final exam before being eligible to purchase a hunting or trapping license. These additional efforts to increase public awareness about hunting safety have resulted in a sharp decrease in hunting-related incidents from decades ago.”
 The safest demographic in terms of age remain youth hunters aged 12-15. That stands as a testament to the quality of New York’s hunter safety instruction. It sets the stage for the future of hunting in New York to continue to safely connect both kids and adults to nature and the outdoors.
 The benefits of hunting are many. Chief among them is getting out in the fresh air while getting exercise and enjoying the beauty of the natural world.  Whether you’re working dogs pursuing rabbits, pheasants, or grouse, getting in a canoe to paddle out to a duck blind or to do some jump-shooting, or sitting on watch for deer or turkeys, there’s benefits whether or not you harvest any game. It gives you time away from screens and the constant demands of modern life. It allows you to reflect, and to focus on every element of the natural habitat and inhabitants of your chosen hunting environ. Time spent hunting is a success whether or not you bring meat home for the table.
 While nearly all hunting seasons have closed by the end of February, it’s a good time to get ready for the upcoming spring turkey season. If you’re thinking about getting your license for the first time, now is the perfect time to search for classes. Go to the website, https://www.register-ed.com/programs/new_york/165 to find an in-person, certified hunter safety class near you.
 The Spring Youth Turkey Season is just weeks away, scheduled for the weekend of April 26th and 27th. Eligible youth hunters, 12–15 years of age who hold a Junior Hunting License and a Turkey Permit can hunt one week before the regular season which opens on May 1st  closing on May 31st.
All youth hunters must be accompanied by an adult holding a current hunting license and Turkey Permit. Parents/Mentors may assist the youth hunter (including calling), but may not carry a firearm.
 In Greene County, at the impetus of ECO Lucas Palmateer in conjunction with the Norton Hill Wildlife Club, the New York Conservation Officer’s Association (NYCOA), and the Northern Catskills Longbeards Chapter of the National Wild Turkey Federation, (NWTF) is once again holding the Second Annual Youth Turkey Hunt on Saturday, April 26th 2025. That program includes a prerequisite safety briefing and shotgun patterning session at Norton Hill’s Range. Parents/mentors must be present at the safety briefing and when youth are taken afield turkey hunting on the Saturday of the youth turkey opener. After the hunt, all are invited to get together at the Norton Hill Wildlife Club in Greenville for a barbeque and to share stories of the harvests of the hunt and “the ones that got away.” Many county sportsmen’s organizations across the state also hold mentored Youth Turkey Hunts during the spring youth hunting weekend.
Happy hunting, fishing and trapping until next time!
News and Notes
The Ducks Unlimited Greene County Chapter Banquet is on Saturday March 8th  
There are still some tickets available for the Greene County Chapter of Ducks Unlimited Annual Banquet, Dinner and Auction on Saturday, March 8th at Anthony’s Banquet Hall located at 746 County Route 23B in Leeds. Doors open at 3:30 pm with buffet dinner starting at 5:00 pm, followed by a live auction. Formed by concerned waterfowl hunters in Sullivan County, NY in 1937, “DU” has conserved more than 19 million acres of wetlands and grasslands that provide essential habitat for breeding, migrating, and wintering waterfowl. So, this event is not only a for a good cause, it’s a good time. There will be lots of opportunities to win great prizes including firearms, gear, and unique home décor items.
Tickets are available online at www.ducks.org/newyork/events. For more information, you can call Dana Hanusik at 518-821-1773 or Jeff Holiday at 518-965-6105.
Remember to report poaching violations by calling the 24-hour ECO Dispatch at:
1-844-DEC-ECOS.

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