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“New Day” Vocal Spring Concert to Benefit Animal Shelter of Schoharie Valley

Written By The Mountain Eagle on 5/1/25 | 5/1/25

COBLESKILL – New Day – Voices of Schoharie County announces its Spring Vocal Concert to be held at the Cobleskill United Methodist Church located at 109 Chapel Street, in Cobleskill. The performance will take place Sunday May 18th, 2025 @ 3:00pm. 

New Day will perform a wide variety of music for this program covering six centuries. The concert opens with William Byrd’s 16th century “Haec Dies” followed by the Rachmaninoff “Bogoroditse Devo” written during World War 1 to raise money for war relief. Many of today’s top vocal composers are represented with Ola Gjeilo’s “Serenity” featuring cello played by “New Day” member Brittany Tissiere. Representing international folk music are “Jumalo” by Latvian composer Laura Jekabsone, Kirby Shaw’s “Celtic Dance”, and “Caledonia” by Blake Morgan. This concert also features jazz and popular musical styles by Greg Jasperse, John Rutter, Kate Rusby, and finishing with Anders Edenroth’s “Chili Con Carne” written for the Swedish a cappella group, The Real Group. The women of the group will be featured in Michael Trotta’s “Veni, Veni Emmanuel” and the men will be featured in Leon Dubinsky’s “We Rise Again”. 

Members of New Day come from a wide variety of backgrounds with a common love of vocal music and musical excellence. The members of New Day are: Sopranos – Elizabeth Borkowski, Adrianne Canterbury, Brittany Tissiere, & Sarah Wright; Altos – Lissa VanDeValk, Laurie Pracher, Kathy Burgin, & Teresa Munson; Tenors – Jerry Law & Johnny Wilson; Basses – Paul Schultz, Paul Munson, Jim Cole & Robert Gosselink & Artistic Director Mark Pracher. 

In addition to its dedication to quality vocal performances, the group also focuses on giving to the community. Each year the spring concert is presented as a benefit concert for an area cause or charity. New Day is pleased to announce that this year’s spring concert will be held as a benefit for the Animal Shelter of Schoharie Valley.

The Animal Shelter of Schoharie Valley is a not-for-profit organization and is the only animal shelter in Schoharie County. The mission of the ASSV is to help the most vulnerable animals and strive to provide care and compassion to as many animals as the capacity at the shelter allows. 

“We couldn’t do it without the support we get from our community” said Executive Director Maggie Jackman Pryor. “This support is what allows us to help the hundreds of animals that pass through our doors each year. In 2023 ASSV was able to care for and adopt out 421 cats and dogs and in 2024 that number jumped to 494, a nearly 20% increase! ASSV also strives to educate the public to spay or neuter their pets to eliminate the problem of animal overpopulation.” 

You can learn more and follow ASSV on Facebook at the Animal Shelter of Schoharie Valley or go to their website at www.schoharieanimalshelter.org  to see all the amazing animals that are available for adoption, or call (518)296-8390 for more information. 

There will no charge for admission and all who attend are encouraged to make donations at the concert directly to the “Animal Shelter of Schoharie County”.

 

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The Story of Thomas Machin, Revolutionary Hero from Schoharie and Montgomery Counties

Submitted by Ken Jones, Town and Village Historian, Esperance, NY

Thomas Machin was born in England and, according to his son Thomas’s obituary, he studied under engineer James Brindley who was building a canal and aqueducts for the Duke of Bridgewater. When and how he arrived in the United States as well as other parts of his story have been a source of dispute among historians. The son’s obituary has him coming to America in 1772, arriving in New York and then settling in Boston, where he participated in the Boston Tea Party and was wounded at Bunker Hill. He becomes a Captain in Gen. Knox’s Artillery in 1776. He is assigned by Gen. Ward to enhance the fortifications of Boston from invasion and because of his success, is sent to Fort Montgomery where a problematic chain is being placed across the river. Washington sends him to Gen. George Clinton to be a fixer to replace the previous engineer. Unfortunately the British are able to breach the chain and attack the nearby forts, where Machin is wounded. None the less, Machin is assigned a similar project at West Point and is successful at laying a great chain across the Hudson that lasts throughout the war and is never breached by the British, preserving Albany and other northern towns from a naval invasion by the enemy. He is also credited with damming Otsego Lake so that the water could carry the soldiers down the Susquehanna River to start Sullivan’s Campaign. Machin was lauded with gaining a prize to Gen. Knox from the French when he fired a cannon disabling a British watercraft with one shot at the Battle of Yorktown.

After the war Machin operated a mint that created coinage near Newburgh, NY during a time of counterfeits and the use of imported imitation coinage metals leading to the copper panic of 1789. In January of 1791 he moved with his family to Charleston, Montgomery County, where he was a surveyor and land speculator. His business associations were mainly with Schoharie County. He was politically aligned with George Clinton. He took considerable efforts to see that his children were educated, and his son Thomas was trained as a surveyor. Historian and Esperance Attorney Isacc Hall Tiffany, who knew Machin intimately, told a story how his son Thomas was born with a club foot and Machin manually straightened out the limb himself saying “if God could not finish his work, he would do it for him”. His son was an officer in the War of 1812 and later a General in the New York State Militia, surveyor and professional lobbyist. 

Machin Sr. was also a member of the Masons. The Franklin Lodge #75 of Free and Accepted Masons located in the Town of Charleston, Montgomery County was established in 1799. In 1803 the lodge petitioned the Grand Lodge of the State of New York to form a new lodge for the convenience of their respective dwellings which is from twenty to ten miles from any regular lodge. Supporting Lodges of the petition included Walton Lodge #75 of Duanesburgh signed by Sect. Benjamin Frost and Master James Cantly. The new lodge was to be named Matchin also and more regularly spelled Machin. The meetings were to be held alternately at or near the house of James Brown in the Town and County of Schoharie and the home of Lemuel Clark in the Town of Charleston, County of Montgomery. James Brown was an Inn Keeper in what became Sloansville. Martin B. Schuyler was recommended as Master and John Herrick Jr. as Senior Warden and Lemuel Clark as Jr. Warden. Among the signatures to the petition are to be found the names of such prominent residents as Judah Burton the founder of Burtonsville/Burtonville and Jacob Eaton of Eaton’s Corners. The first person listed under the heading of “Names of Petitioners” was Thomas Machin. Machin had applied for a military disability pension, so it is possible that it was either himself or his son, named first on the list. Machin died in 1816 in Charleston, Montgomery County and apparently was buried there with other notable Revolutionary veterans.  Machin Lodge No. 127 had moved to the Village of Esperance by 1826 and is located halfway between Charleston and Schoharie. On the 24th of June 1826 the Lodge celebrated the Festival of St. John at the Village. Lodge members were to assemble at 10 A.M. and the procession was to form at 11. The advertisement invited other lodges and clergy to attend. “The Brethren of the order, are requested to appear with their appropriate clothing, badges, & c. Tickets reasonable. Geo. W. P. Wheeler, Secretary.” The lodge forfeited its warrant on June 8, 1832. When his son Gen. Thomas Machin died in Albany in 1875 it was noted his body was being brought to Charleston to be buried with his kindred. At some point Thomas Machin the engineer of the great chain across the Hudson River was disinterred and buried in the Carlisle Cemetery in Schoharie County. Read more about this acclaimed hero of the Revolutionary War in Donderburg’s Pumpkin Vine by Kenneth Lifshitz, 2010.

 

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Iroquois Museum Announces Full schedule of Events and Exhibitions for 2025 Season

HOWES CAVE — The Iroquois Museum is pleased to announce its full schedule of workshops, artist demonstrations, and special events for the 2025 season, including the popular 42nd Annual Iroquois Arts Festival, Haudenosaunee social dancers, and nine opportunities to learn directly from Haudenosaunee artists.

The season kicks off with an opening reception for “Once a Tree” and “Separated but Unbroken” on Saturday, May 3, from 1 to 4 p.m. and will remain on view through Nov. 30. The opening will feature a presentation by Mohawk author Dawn Cheryl Hill, the daughter of two residential school survivors. 

A member of the Turtle Clan, Hill grew up in the Tuscarora Territory in Lewiston, NY, and now resides at the Six Nations Territory in Ohsweken, Ontario. Her debut book, Memory Keeper, was nominated for the Indigenous Voices and 2022 First Nations Communities Read awards. She will offer a book signing following her presentation.

“Once a Tree: Continuity, Creativity, and Connection” explores the deep-rooted significance of trees in Haudenosaunee culture, tradition, and creative expression. Featuring the work of 42 artists and more than 100 objects—including decorative and utilitarian baskets, cradleboards, snowshoes, ladles, lacrosse sticks, toys, instruments, carvings, and sleds—this exhibition highlights the important relationship between nature and artistry. Selected from the Museum’s permanent collection, the exhibition was created with guidance from curatorial consultants Terry Chrisjohn III (Oneida), Preston Jacobs (Mohawk), and Sheila Ransom (Mohawk).

"Separated but Unbroken: The Haudenosaunee Boarding School Experience" explores the lasting impact of the Thomas Indian School, once located on the Cattaraugus Reservation south of Buffalo, NY, and The Mohawk Institute near Brantford, Ontario. These institutions, which enrolled a significant number of Haudenosaunee students, were part of a larger system that sought to erase Indigenous identities while deeply shaping the lives of those who endured them. Co-curated by Erin Keaton (Mohawk), the exhibition sheds light on Haudenosaunee resilience.

"We are excited to support Haudenosaunee artists and culture this season through a range of engaging workshops and demos — from basket and lacrosse stick making to traditional beadwork," said Museum Director Steph Shultes. "New this year, we are also hosting a summer solstice celebration with reiki and yoga, alongside special exhibitions exploring the Indigenous boarding school experience and the role of trees in Haudenosaunee artistry."

The museum is at 324 Caverns Road in Howes Cave. It is open Tuesday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sunday from noon to 5 p.m. For more information, visit www.iroquoismuseum.org.

 

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Bee Population Decline in Schoharie County: How We Can Help

By Heather Skinner

COBLESKILL — Lori Davis, owner of Empty Pockets Ranch, said she has noticed the silence in place of the usual buzz of bees traveling from across the road to Davis’s farmland in Spring. 

Empty Pockets Ranch is this area’s go-to shop for delicious and convenient homemade meals, amazing events in their stunning sunflower field, and an impressive array of products made by several local business owners.

One such local business, Sunstruck Farms, run by Phoebe and Jerry McDonough, provides Empty Pockets Ranch with honey. Customers buy honey for all kinds of reasons. Phoebe McDonough said people use local honey to manage allergies, it is great for wound care, and because they just love it! Some cook with honey, to which McDonough advises never to let honey get over 100-110 degrees to keep the nutrients of the honey present.

With so many reasons honey is in high demand in Schoharie County, it seemed crucial to get an update on a Facebook post from the end of March where Empty Pockets Ranch shared a link to an NBC News article titled, “Scientists warn of severe honeybee losses in 2025”. Davis had also recommended stocking up on honey by saying, “I've been hearing this from all of my honey bee keeper friends. If you can get it, you may want to stock up while you can. I think what is most alarming about this is that no one knows why.”

One commenter on that Facebook post is the owner and founder of Mickle Hollow LLC, and is the beekeeper that most other beekeepers in this area go to for queens, Dean Haskin. Haskin commented that there are as high as 80 percent losses in some operations. 

Many commenters brought up insecticides, herbicides, and fungicides as the cause of the damage, because they stop bees from being able to process nutrients, which eventually leads to the death of colonies.

The NBC News article cited the entomologists at Washington State University’s news release that stated, “honeybee colony losses have averaged 40% to 50% annually. But this year, a combination of nutrition deficiencies, mite infestations, viral diseases and possible pesticide exposure during the previous pollinating season led to higher losses.” 

Also in the NBC News article, the National Institute of Food and Agriculture was quoted explaining that, “about 35% of the world’s food depends on pollinators.”

Professor of pollinator ecology at WSU, Brandon Hopkins, said in a statement included in the NBC News article that, “higher losses could also lead to higher costs for farmers who depend on bee colonies. I don’t want to be a fear-monger, but this level of national loss could mean increased bankruptcies amongst beekeepers. Growers of crops downstream from almonds may need to scramble if the beekeeper they’ve relied on to pollinate their apple trees, for example, isn’t in business anymore."

McDonough said they have lost all three of their bee colonies. One colony they had kept for three years.  Healthy colonies can typically continue with a queen replacement every 5-7 years, according to McDonough.

Sunstruck Farm is still selling honey stock they had from last season’s surplus production. They don’t rely on only their honey sales, as McDonough also makes pottery, they offer horse boarding, have chickens, and are branching out into beeswax candles and essential oils. They are also testing growing garlic in their soil, currently.

In response to the loss of their colonies, Sunstruck Farm has set swarm traps and ordered two 5-frame groupings and a queen, and expressed confidence in the fact that bees come back pretty well and that their genetics can fight issues off naturally. McDonough agrees that pesticides are bad for bees. While no one knows the cause for sure of the current increase in losses, McDonough said that thankfully Cornell is working on surveys to figure out the answer. 

In the meantime, McDonough explained what everyone can do every year that is helpful to precious bee populations who rely on dandelions and clovers. Resist mowing in Spring until flowers bloom as secondary sources for the bees. If you need to mow early in the season, it still helps if you mow high to save the dandelions and clovers for the bees in the process. 

On Earth Day this year, April 22nd, the documentaries Kiss the Ground and Common Ground became viewable through Amazon Prime Video. Insights in the films were shared about the loss of bee populations, and on harmful pesticide and weed killer’s dark origin starting as chemical warfare, to then being bottled to “fight the war on pests.” Other concepts shared in the documentaries include thinking of soil more as the living thing it is due to microbes in it that need a variety of cover crops to thrive, just like our own bodies’ microbiomes. Also, regenerative farming practices and machinery are explained with intentions to help avoid another Dust Bowl and keep carbon in the ground during farming, which in turn helps with global warming damage that is attributed to the bleaching of necessary coral reefs. 

Davis watched the documentaries, and if you are curious to check them out for yourself, but don’t subscribe to Amazon Prime Video, they have a corresponding book called Kiss the Ground by Josh Tickell.

While history and current statistics are looking quite alarming, there is comfort in knowing studies are in progress, there are solutions to every problem, and there is hope for the future that comes from sharing these important conversations together and learning about changes we can make now to improve the quality of our future.  

On the aforementioned Facebook post, Sunstruck Farm commented, “We got this. Sometimes we need to rebuild. Mother Nature is resilient! Plus last year was a banner year- plenty of honey!”

872: Jerry and Phoebe McDonough’s Sunstruck Farm booth at the 2025 Schoharie County Maple Festival. 

721: The Empty Pockets Ranch store shelf fully stocked with honey!


Bee Population Decline in Schoharie County: How We Can Help

By Heather Skinner

COBLESKILL — Lori Davis, owner of Empty Pockets Ranch, said she has noticed the silence in place of the usual buzz of bees traveling from across the road to Davis’s farmland in Spring. 

Empty Pockets Ranch is this area’s go-to shop for delicious and convenient homemade meals, amazing events in their stunning sunflower field, and an impressive array of products made by several local business owners.

One such local business, Sunstruck Farms, run by Phoebe and Jerry McDonough, provides Empty Pockets Ranch with honey. Customers buy honey for all kinds of reasons. Phoebe McDonough said people use local honey to manage allergies, it is great for wound care, and because they just love it! Some cook with honey, to which McDonough advises never to let honey get over 100-110 degrees to keep the nutrients of the honey present.

With so many reasons honey is in high demand in Schoharie County, it seemed crucial to get an update on a Facebook post from the end of March where Empty Pockets Ranch shared a link to an NBC News article titled, “Scientists warn of severe honeybee losses in 2025”. Davis had also recommended stocking up on honey by saying, “I've been hearing this from all of my honey bee keeper friends. If you can get it, you may want to stock up while you can. I think what is most alarming about this is that no one knows why.”

One commenter on that Facebook post is the owner and founder of Mickle Hollow LLC, and is the beekeeper that most other beekeepers in this area go to for queens, Dean Haskin. Haskin commented that there are as high as 80 percent losses in some operations. 

Many commenters brought up insecticides, herbicides, and fungicides as the cause of the damage, because they stop bees from being able to process nutrients, which eventually leads to the death of colonies.

The NBC News article cited the entomologists at Washington State University’s news release that stated, “honeybee colony losses have averaged 40% to 50% annually. But this year, a combination of nutrition deficiencies, mite infestations, viral diseases and possible pesticide exposure during the previous pollinating season led to higher losses.” 

Also in the NBC News article, the National Institute of Food and Agriculture was quoted explaining that, “about 35% of the world’s food depends on pollinators.”

Professor of pollinator ecology at WSU, Brandon Hopkins, said in a statement included in the NBC News article that, “higher losses could also lead to higher costs for farmers who depend on bee colonies. I don’t want to be a fear-monger, but this level of national loss could mean increased bankruptcies amongst beekeepers. Growers of crops downstream from almonds may need to scramble if the beekeeper they’ve relied on to pollinate their apple trees, for example, isn’t in business anymore."

McDonough said they have lost all three of their bee colonies. One colony they had kept for three years.  Healthy colonies can typically continue with a queen replacement every 5-7 years, according to McDonough.

Sunstruck Farm is still selling honey stock they had from last season’s surplus production. They don’t rely on only their honey sales, as McDonough also makes pottery, they offer horse boarding, have chickens, and are branching out into beeswax candles and essential oils. They are also testing growing garlic in their soil, currently.

In response to the loss of their colonies, Sunstruck Farm has set swarm traps and ordered two 5-frame groupings and a queen, and expressed confidence in the fact that bees come back pretty well and that their genetics can fight issues off naturally. McDonough agrees that pesticides are bad for bees. While no one knows the cause for sure of the current increase in losses, McDonough said that thankfully Cornell is working on surveys to figure out the answer. 

In the meantime, McDonough explained what everyone can do every year that is helpful to precious bee populations who rely on dandelions and clovers. Resist mowing in Spring until flowers bloom as secondary sources for the bees. If you need to mow early in the season, it still helps if you mow high to save the dandelions and clovers for the bees in the process. 

On Earth Day this year, April 22nd, the documentaries Kiss the Ground and Common Ground became viewable through Amazon Prime Video. Insights in the films were shared about the loss of bee populations, and on harmful pesticide and weed killer’s dark origin starting as chemical warfare, to then being bottled to “fight the war on pests.” Other concepts shared in the documentaries include thinking of soil more as the living thing it is due to microbes in it that need a variety of cover crops to thrive, just like our own bodies’ microbiomes. Also, regenerative farming practices and machinery are explained with intentions to help avoid another Dust Bowl and keep carbon in the ground during farming, which in turn helps with global warming damage that is attributed to the bleaching of necessary coral reefs. 

Davis watched the documentaries, and if you are curious to check them out for yourself, but don’t subscribe to Amazon Prime Video, they have a corresponding book called Kiss the Ground by Josh Tickell.

While history and current statistics are looking quite alarming, there is comfort in knowing studies are in progress, there are solutions to every problem, and there is hope for the future that comes from sharing these important conversations together and learning about changes we can make now to improve the quality of our future.  

On the aforementioned Facebook post, Sunstruck Farm commented, “We got this. Sometimes we need to rebuild. Mother Nature is resilient! Plus last year was a banner year- plenty of honey!”

 

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Crucial Shutout for C-R

COBLESKILL —  B. Becker threw a two-hit shutout and launched a home run Tuesday, leading Cobleskill-Richmondville to an 11-0 home victory over Schoharie in a high school baseball game shortened to six innings.

Becker dominated on the mound for the Bulldogs, allowing just two singles and no walks while striking out eight batters over six scoreless innings to earn the win.

At the plate, Becker drove in three runs with his home run. M. Gunzinger also had a big day offensively, going 2-for-3 with a double and three RBIs. E. Barr contributed two hits and two RBIs, while B. Rotman reached base safely in all four plate appearances with two hits and two walks, adding an RBI and a run scored.

Cobleskill-Richmondville broke the game open with an eight-run rally in the bottom of the fifth inning and added three more runs in the sixth.

Schoharie's offense was stymied by Becker, managing only singles from Schoemore and Dingoe.

Starting pitcher Vangasbeck took the loss for Schoharie, surrendering five earned runs, including Becker's homer, over four innings. Dingoe pitched the final 1 2/3 innings in relief.

 

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Cobleskill-Richmondville Crushes Fort Plain

FORT PLAIN — E. Barr tossed a one-hitter and Cobleskill-Richmondville erupted for eight runs in the fifth inning to defeat Fort Plain 12-1 in a high school baseball game Monday that was shortened to five innings. We had access to the box score but the Fort Plain players were identified only by numbers.

Barr earned the win for the Bulldogs, allowing just one earned run on one hit and three walks while striking out 12 batters over five complete innings.   

The Cobleskill-Richmondville offense provided plenty of support. M. Gunzinger went 2-for-3 with a double, scored three runs, and had an RBI. B. Rotman collected two hits, two runs scored, and two RBIs. S. O'Neil also drove in two runs. The Bulldogs scored four runs in the third inning before breaking the game open in the fifth.   

Fort Plain's only run came in the fourth inning on an RBI double by player #2, which was also the team's only hit. Player #33 scored the run.   

Player #13 started on the mound for Fort Plain and took the loss, allowing four unearned runs in 1 1/3 innings. Fort Plain used three pitchers who combined to allow 12 runs (eight earned) on seven hits and four walks. The team struggled defensively, committing five errors.   

 

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Cobleskill Woman is "Set for Life"

SHARON SPRINGS - Jessica Terpenning, of Cobleskill, recently claimed the top prize in the Set For Life scratch-off game, scoring $5,000 a week for life.

Rather than collecting the cash over time, she opted for the lump sum payout, walking away with $3,367,702 after required withholdings, according to officials at the New York Lottery.

Ms. Terpenning purchased the winning ticket at Stewart’s Shops at 526 Highway 20 in Sharon Springs.

The Set For Life scratch-off comes with a guaranteed minimum payout of $5 million. As of this writing, five top prizes remained on the game.

The New York Lottery generated more than $4.3 billion in scratch-off sales during the last fiscal year, contributing nearly $5.8 million in aid to Schoharie County school districts alone, Lottery officials said.

 

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Close Loss vs. Schalmont for C-R

SCHALMONT — Schalmont scored four runs in the bottom of the sixth inning and held off a late Cobleskill-Richmondville rally to secure a 6-5 victory in a high school baseball game Thursday.   

Daus pitched Schalmont to the win, going 5 2/3 innings. He allowed four runs (three earned) on five hits and struck out 11 batters. louinella pitched the final 1 1/3 innings for Schalmont.   

Offensively for the hosts, Daus and louinella each collected two hits and scored two runs. Mulyca drove in two runs, while Cleveland hit a two-run double. Bouia also added a double. Schalmont finished with six runs on six hits and committed two errors.   

Cobleskill-Richmondville chipped away at an early deficit, scoring two runs in the fifth, two in the sixth, and one in the seventh, but came up short. B. Becker led the Bulldogs' offense with two doubles and two RBIs. A. Carr also drove in two runs. A. Joslin singled and scored twice.   

M. Gunzinger took the loss in relief for the Bulldogs, allowing four runs (three earned) over two innings. Starter E. Barr pitched the first four innings, yielding two earned runs on three hits while striking out five. Cobleskill-Richmondville tallied five runs on seven hits but committed four errors.   

 

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Buses, Library Funding, Board Seats Also on SCS Ballot

SCHOHARIE - In addition to the 2025-26 budget, the following propositions will be on the Schoharie Central School ballot on May 20:

* School Bus Purchases, purchase two replacement buses at a total cost of $340,000 (before trade-ins).

* Public Library Tax Levy: $161,000 (increase of $15,000).

Three seats will be up on the Schoharie school board on the ballot. 

The three seats expiring are: school board President Terry Burton, Vice-president Dan Guasp, and Tara Barton.

The candidates on the ballot will be: Ms. Barton, Mr. Guasp, and newcomer Emily Gigandet.

Each seats is for three years.

Mr. Burton has been on the board since July 1, 2010 and has served as board president since July 1, 2019.


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Bluebird Lottery at Landis

ESPERANCE — During the spring of 2025, Landis Arboretum on Lape Road in Esperance is holding its second annual free Bluebird Lottery with entries accepted from now through April 15. The purpose of this lottery event is to have some fun while highlighting the birding opportunities at the Arboretum. Oh ... and there will be prizes! Click here to access the online entry form, and here to download the Bluebird Trail Map.

How to Participate

Guess which nest box pair you think will host fledged bluebirds by June 15, 2025. Submit your guess (one guess per person) by April 15. If you guess correctly then you will be entered into a prize drawing for one of fifteen free one year Landis Arboretum memberships. Free membership winners will be subsequently entered into the free grand prize drawing. Refer to our website for grand prize details. Winners will be notified by email by late June.

Nest boxes are number coded by location. You can view the Landis Bluebird Trail Maps here to aid you in your guessing. There may be more than one nest box that produces fledglings by June 15 - you only have to guess one of them correctly to qualify for our prize drawing! 

For more information, visit our website here.

 

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Auto Racing News

By Tom Coughlin

Tonight, Utica-Rome Speedway will offer hot dogs for $1 at the "Home of Heroes." Be sure to get your children over to the Kids Club, as they have great giveaways every week. All weekly divisions will be in competition, plus the Slingshots.

Tonight, Albany-Saratoga Speedway will run off the rained-out Modified feature from last week and then go into their regularly scheduled program.

Modified driver Bobby Varin has a special offer for any racers who are looking to pick up some new or used parts at a good price. This Saturday and Sunday, from 12:00 p.m. until 4:00 p.m., you can pick through a wide selection of items at Varin Enterprises, located at 212 Stoner Trail Road in Johnstown. Available are race cars, tires, rims, engines, and many more parts. For more information, you can call 518-848-3231.

Coming up this week, Fonda Speedway will host the F.X. Caprara Car Companies-Thunder on the Thruway Series. The Modified, Crate 602 Sportsman, and Pro Stock divisions will run for Thunder points and increased purses. All weekly divisions will be in competition.

Lebanon Valley Speedway is celebrating with a Kentucky Derby theme on Saturday, including a $5,000-to-win Big Block Modified feature. All weekly divisions are on the schedule.

Sunday offers a few different choices. Glen Ridge Motorsports Park had a well-attended practice last Sunday and will open for their 22nd season on Sunday, with all weekly divisions on the program supported by Riley Mortuary.

Also on Sunday, Weedsport Speedway will open for the 2025 season with the Ice Breaker 50 for DIRTcar Big Block Modifieds. The DIRTcar Sportsman Series will race 30 laps for $1,000, and the NY6A Hoosier 600 Sprint Tour will also be on the program. Grandstands open at 4:00 p.m., racing at 6:00 p.m. Orange County Fair Speedway in Middletown will open Sunday with DIRTcar Big Block Modifieds, DIRT Sportsman, and Street Stocks, presented by Falanga Trucking. Grandstands open at 4:00 p.m., racing at 6:00 p.m.

Brookfield Speedway, located on the Madison County Fairgrounds, continues to make improvements. The corners and backstretch have been widened 12 feet, and many truckloads of fresh clay have been added this week to the surface to help make the racing better for both the racers and fans.

Results from last week start with Stewart Friesen earning his 95th Fonda Speedway Modified division victory on Wednesday night in the Jumpin' Jack Johnson 32-lap, $4,012-to-win Amsterdam Truck Center Modified feature. This was also Friesen's seventh opening night win and third Jack Johnson tribute win. Completing the top three were Matt Sheppard and Anthony Perrego. Marc Johnson received the Palmer's Service Center-Online Performance/Stone Motorsports gift certificate. Nineteen Modifieds were in the feature.

The Pro Stock division feature never disappoints, and that was true again on this night as the full-fendered cars were racing three-wide while competing for positions. In the end, Kenny Gates earned his 99th Fonda feature victory in the 20-lap Leatherstocking Credit Union Pro Stock feature. Jason Morrison and Cousin Luke Horning filled the podium. There were 14 Pro Stocks for the midweek race.

In the Swagger Factory Apparel Crate 602 Sportsman division 25-lap feature, Dylan Madsen earned his career-first Fonda win over Brett Mortensen and Chad Edwards. Mortensen received the Palmer's Service Center-Online Performance/Stone Motorsports gift certificate. Edwards earned the Greco's NAPA Hard Charger Award by advancing 8 positions during the feature. Twenty-seven Sportsman started the feature.

On Friday at Albany-Saratoga Speedway, the DIRTcar 358 Modified Series ran a special DiCarlo's Auto Body feature in memory of driver Jason Herrington, who passed away earlier this year. Felix Roy of Quebec scored his career-first Malta victory in the 31-lap 'Flyin' Farmer' feature. Chris Curtis finished second and Mike Coffey Jr. third. In the Saratoga Masonry Pro Stock division, Pete Stefanski won the 25-lap feature, with Kyle Hoard second and Kim Duell third. In the Haun Welding Limited Sportsman 20-lap feature, Gary English earned the win over Mike Block Sr. and Craig Coons. The Cornell's Auto Parts Street Stock division 20-lap feature was won by Mark Burch over Jeff Meltz and Matt Mosher. Unfortunately, the Big Block Modified feature was halted after two laps.

Utica-Rome Speedway was able to get their show in and do it quickly. In the 30-lap 3 Bastards Brewing Modified division feature, Matt Sheppard took the win ahead of Willy Decker and Anthony Perrego. The Taylor’s Trailer Crate 602 Sportsman division 25-lap feature was claimed by Tyler Peet over Payton Talbot and Dave Constantino. The Next Generation GraphiX Pro Stock division 20-lap feature was earned by Cousin Luke Horning over A.J. Walters and George Cushman. The M2 Metal RUSH Late Model Series division 20-lap feature saw a great battle for the lead between Brady Wonderling and Fultonville's A.J. Miller; Wonderling would hold off Miller for the win, with Chad Homan finishing third. The Fastline Performance Limited Sportsman division feature was won by Garrett Chillot, with Jayden Wust and Timmy Wilmot filling the podium. In the JB’s Sewer and Septic 4-Cylinder division feature, Jacob Kimball scored the victory over Steven Burka and Wayne Russell Jr.

Chase Moran of Fultonville finished 17th in the 25-lap URC Winged Sprint feature at Selinsgrove Speedway in Pennsylvania.

The track crew at Fonda Speedway gave it a valiant effort on Saturday in attempting to save the track surface after the overnight rain. Unfortunately, with the added rain that came late afternoon, it was too much, and Fonda would finally throw in the towel around 5:00 p.m.

 

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Arbor Day Celebration

By Alexis Pencar

SHARON SPRINGS — This year, the Village of Sharon Springs honored Arbor Day with a two day

commemoration on April 25th and April 26th. Arbor Day is an annual celebration, started in 1872, dedicated to planting and nurturing trees to promote environmental conservation and sustainability.

On April 25th, New York State’s official Arbor Day, the Village of Sharon Springs Tree

Board, in conjunction with Sharon Springs Central School, had the opportunity to plant two Silky

Dogwood trees on the school grounds in honor of this special day. 

Local Arborist Elliott Adams gave an educational presentation to Anne Allen’s Environmental Science and Agricultural Science Class at SSCS and then continued to plant the significant shrubs together afterwards.

Then, on April 26th, the Village of Sharon Springs, one of the newest “Tree City” recipients, held their 3rd Annual Tree Giveaway in the parking lot of the Sharon Community Building, to celebrate Arbor Day. The Official Arbor Day Proclamation for the Village of Sharon Springs was read by Mayor Denise Kelly. Fifty Silky Dogwood trees were given away to 22 Village of Sharon Springs and Town of Sharon residents. These trees all counted towards the ‘25

Million Trees by 2033’ initiative by Governor Kathy Hochul.

This Arbor Day celebration was a positive event for Sharon Springs overall and shows the commitment to conservation and sustainability by this small, yet dedicated community. If you are interested in joining the Village of Sharon Springs Tree Board and/or volunteering, please contact the Village Office at (518) 284-2625 for more information.

 

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