Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Jon Brooks At ESRM

Jon Brooks in Concert
for Flying Cat Music
Sunday, May 4
7:30 p.m. (sharp), door at 7:00
Empire State Railway Museum
70 Lower High Street, Phoenicia, NY 12464
Admission is $15 or $13 with RSVP
For information email as above
or call 845-688-9453
Link to artist's website:
http://www.jonbrooks.ca/

Flying Cat Music is proud to host the return of award-winning Canadian singer-songwriter Jon Brooks to New York's Hudson Valley on Sunday, May 4, in a concert at the Empire State Railway Museum located at 70 Lower High Street in Phoenicia. The show begins promptly at 7:30 p.m. with the door opening at 7:00. Admission is $15 at the door or $13 with RSVP to flyingcatmusic@gmail.com or by calling 845-688-9453.


Tuesday, April 29, 2014

Doris Regan Passes

I just got word that longtime Woodland Valley resident Doris Reagan passed away yesterday. Here is her obituary from the Gormley website. May she rest in peace.

Doris Regan, 90 of Woodland Valley Road died at her residence on Monday April 28, 2014. She formerly made her home in the NYC Metro area, having had worked for a magazine on Madison Avenue. She described herself as having "posh jobs" and loving to shop in THE city! She was a 40 year resident of Woodland Valley, who enjoyed gardening, and tending to all animals, whether is was her dog, cat, birds, or any of natures gifts. She and her late husband Walter enjoyed traveling. Doris was a member of the St. Francis de Sales Parish, and Our Lady's Sodality where she had formed life-long friendships. She was an active worker for the church. She was born July 7, 1923 in New York City, daughter of the late Richard and Mary Bowen Abbrecht. Her husband Walter predeceased her in 2000.
Surviving are her two nephews Russell and Richard Abbrecht, and Walter's niece Kathleen Roberts.
A Mass of Christian Burial will be celebrated on Wednesday at 5pm at the St. Francis de Sales Church . Burial will be at Mt. St. Mary's Cemetery Flushing. Friends will be received on Wednesday from 2 to 5pm at the E. B. Gormley Funeral Home 87 Main St. Phoenicia. You may share a condolence on Doris' Memorial Page at www.gormleyfuneralhome.com

Miriam Silver-Altman Performs With Symphony

WCA member Miriam Silver-Altman will be performing a solo with the College Youth Symphony at SUNY New Paltz this weekend. I have been to these concerts and they are great. If you are in the area I highly recommend seeing this talented group of young people.

COLLEGE YOUTH SYMPHONY

Spring Concert

Sunday May 4, 2014, 7PM

Julien J. Studley Theatre - State University at New Paltz

Love, Jealousy, and Despair in Music

Overture to Candide
by Leonard Bernstein, arr. by Walter Beeler

Zigeunerweisen
by Pablo de Sarasate
              with Gabrielle Bouissou, violin-CYS Competition winner

Romance
by Hellmesberger
Violin Soloists: Erica Yu, Miriam Silver-Altman, Julia Zambito, Xiao Mei Su

Two Elegiac Melodies
by Edvard Grieg

Love Music
by Modeste Moussorgsky

Romantic Symphony ~ Love Duet
by Howard Hanson

Overture to War and Peace
by Sergei Prokofiev

Carole Cowan, conductor College/Youth Symphony
Victor Izzo, CYS Wind Ensemble

presented by
The Department of Music, School of Fine and Performing ArtsState University at New Paltz
www.collegeyouthsymphony.org

Tickets available ($ 8, 6, 3) at the door


Sunday, April 27, 2014

Rick Altman Quartet At Harmony

If you are looking for some great music close to home check this out!

The Rick Altman Quartet
 Rich Syracuse, bass       
Peter O’Brien, drums
  Steve Raleigh, guitar

An evening of jazz classics and original compositions
with vibes, guitar, bass, and drums
Sunday, April 27, 2014
8 to 11 p.m.
*donation*
HARMONY
52 Mill Hill Rd. Woodstock, NY  (845) 679-3484

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Trying To Open WV Section Of The Long Path

As you may know, many people have been working to open up the section of The Long Path that runs along the head of Woodland Valley. WCA member Steven Heffner has been involved with the project and sent me along a scheduled of work parties from Andy Garrison. They will be gathering this weekend and for the next several weekends going forward. They want to finish in time to open this section by June 7th (National Trails Day). Below is Andy's letter. Reach out to him if you want to help.


Hi all,

I'll be at the end of Big William Way again both Saturday and Sunday. The race is still on to finish the trail. We want to open it on National Trails Day, June 7 and we really need help. Last weekend we again spent two beautiful days clearing the trail on Mount Pleasant. The snow was all gone. Information can be found in the links below. We have work for all levels and appreciate any help we get.

Andy Garrison
Home 845-888-0602
Cell 845-866-7201



Saturday May 3 -  Details coming soon.

Sunday May 4 -  Details coming soon.

Saturday May 10 -  Details coming soon.

Sunday May 11 -  Details coming soon.

Thursday May 15 - Need a hand bringing tools and gear up the mountain for a rock project. Contact me for information.




Also contact me if you are interested in our week long camp/work trip 5/31 to 6/7.
--
Andy Garrison
Home 845-888-0602
Cell 845-866-7201

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Reminder Saturday Book Event

This is to remind everyone that the book event for Jenny Milchman's new novel "Ruin Falls" is this Saturday 11am at the Golden Notebook in Woodstock. Hopefully this literary minded in Woodland Valley will turn out to meet the author. Below is a link for more information.

http://jennymilchman.com/tour/invitation/2014-04-26/the-golden-notebook

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

My Poor Rhododendron

I love my rhododendrons. I have six. One is in the back of my house and has been nibbled into a huge topiary by the deer. The others are off my front porch and have fared far better. They were probably at least 20 years old when I bought my house and 20 more years have passed since then. So I think they are between 40 and 50 years old at this point. They are very large and up until recently, very healthy.

Usually in the wintertime watching my rhododendron through the window proves to be the best way to tell how cold it is outside. When the temperature drops the leaves close up tightly. The colder it gets, the more they contract. This year they spent a lot of time closed up.























When the weather warms up, the plant opens it's leaves up fully again. It reminds me of the opening and closing of an umbrella.   And it is a fun and, though not precise, fairly accurate way to see how cold it is outside without looking at your thermometer or venturing outside.























Unfortunately, this spring I noticed that a lot of very large branches on the bushes were not only not opening anymore they were turning brown. This has never happened before. But we had such a very long, very cold winter that I guess they just couldn't handle the severity of the elements.























At first I was heartbroken. I thought that my beautiful bushes were destroyed but then I realized that, although there was a significant amount of damage, none of the bushes were completely dead. So I am going to wait until they bloom in the beginning of June and then severely prune them and hope that they come back to their former beauty. I guess only time will tell. I hope your plants fared better through the harsh winter of 2013-2014!

Tuesday, April 22, 2014

Woodland Trout Fund 2014

WCA member and troutmeister Mike O'Neil (aka Boreegard) sent me the annual Woodland Trout Fund letter. Every year Mike leads the effort to stock the Woodland Valley stream. Anyone who would like to donate to the effort can follow Mike's instructions below. Here is Mike's letter.


WOODLAND TROUT 2014
Guilty as Charged


Regarding Woodland Brook—were I to be brought up on the double charge of sentimentality and parochialism in the watery court of Piscatorial Correctness, I would plead Guilty as Charged.  And my barrister would happily inform the court that I was not the only guilty party.

Consider the words of old John Burroughs:  The trail to which we had committed ourselves led us down into Woodland Valley, a retreat which so took my eye by its fine trout brook, its superb mountain scenery, and its sweet seclusion, that I marked it for my own, and promised myself a return to it at no distant day.…the prettiest thing was the stream soliloquizing in such musical tones there amid the moss-covered rocks and boulders. How clean it looked.  What purity!

Paul O’Neil weighed in with this:  The hurricane and its accompanying deluge made a horrible mess of our Catskill streams; they poured down their valleys under opaque curtains of rain in roaring, muddy floods.  It made a mess of my house, too.  The roof leaked, and when I put pans under the drips, I was impelled to endure something very like a xylophone concert.  Forced into the open by this ungodly racket, I took my rod, drove five miles to the end of the Woodland Valley road and began walking upstream under the trees.  I was as wet, in five minutes, as if I had fallen into a swimming pool; but I pressed sternly on and, after two miles, came upon the splendid and gleaming phenomenon I had hoped but not actually expected to find.
     Under normal conditions Woodland Valley Creek betrays itself at this high point of its valley only in little skeins and trickles of water among shadowed, mossy rocks.  But now it was 10 feet wide and, since there were no clay banks to discolor the water, it ran clear as crystal.  The native brook trout of the Northeast had been extinct in 95% of the Esopus system for a long time—very probably since the tanners cut the hemlocks more than a century ago.  But brookies, which had somehow endured year after year in the shadowed trickles of water here, were feeding voraciously in the swollen creek.  They were absolutely beautiful fish with a sheen of electric blue, white piped fins, mottled backs and crimson spotted sides.  I hooked them for two hours, released all but five of the handsomest, since even a hungry man could hardly deny they had earned the right to freedom, and splashed back down through the rain feeling as though I had discovered the Mother Lode.

More recently, Betty Muehleck Love had these thoughts about our lovely stream: Woodland memories will remain with me always.  The Woodland brook trout Dad caught, swimming in its cold waters, lying in the sun on large bluestone rocks to soak enough heat so I could jump back in again.  Covering myself and my brother with clay, and always the sound of the water rushing over the rocks as we played during the day and as we fell asleep at night.  We could hardly wait to return in the spring and hated leaving in the fall.
     For me, change is one of the givens in life.  Change is not good nor is it bad, it simply can be counted on to happen.  It is my memories that I treasure for they are of the way it was.
It was good then.  It is good now.  May your first cast reap a fine reward!  


And since I’ve brought all this up in the first place, let me add my own two cents:


Trout for Helen and Phil                                                             
                                                              
Helen’s late husband Fred simply whistled it seemed,
And lithe browns and silvering rainbows leapt into his wicker creel.
He knew the brook better than most men know their way home.
He saw his swift upstream fly as a trout would,
And so caught many.

 Phil’s clan did not angle for trout, they went down to the brook
 And tickled them.  Stroking their flanks and bellies softly, softly, 
 They gulled the fish--hypnotized them,
 Heaved them up onto the bank, dispatched them quickly,  
 And carried them home for dinner in a burlap sack.  

 Sometimes when I catch a few extra, I deliver trout to one or the other,      
 Or both of them.  There are few appetites to match Phil’s or Helen’s
 Liking for this fresh-caught prize. I imagine it is not just the subtle taste 
 Of the flesh they savor, but the delicious memories and rare evocation 
 Of youth that each bite brings. There is no finer meal.



Dear reader, it can come as no surprise that there is a barb at the end of my hook—though not a painful or unexpected one I trust. So that you too might plead guilty in the matter of trout in the fly fishing stretch of Woodland Brook, I ask you to send a check made out to THE WOODLAND TROUT FUND, to Mike O’Neil, 101 Rambling Road, Vernon, CT 06066.  

With your help, my fellow prisoners and I will see to it that Woodland is stocked this spring and summer with the lovely trout that you’ve come to expect. 

                                                                                           Many thanks—
                                                                                            Mike 

Friday, April 18, 2014

People Helping People























Town Clerk, Joyce Grant has started a new neighbor response team. She is asking people to let her know if you are available to help your neighbor on a short term basis. She is looking for folks who are willing to drive people to doctor's appointments, pick up prescriptions, do small errands or a bit of yard work, that sort of thing. You can sign up in her office in town hall or by calling her at 845-688-5004.


Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Aww….Come On….This Is Unfair!





























Somebody controlling the Woodland Valley weather play station in the sky obviously does not know the rules! It is supposed to be spring! The weather is supposed to be sunny and warm, but no, that is not what happened overnight.

It rained yesterday but changed to snow about 8pm. I woke up to find 2 inches of snow covering the ground this morning. Grrrrr….we had a few awesome warm days and I had let my guard down weather-wise. I should know better. The bad news is that my daffodils are covered. The good news is that it seems to be melting fast. It is all very frustrating though. The winter of 2013-2014 has lasted way beyond it's expiration date as far as I am concerned.

Monday, April 14, 2014

Curry of Shrimp A La Boreegard


Here is a great recipe and it's back story from WCA member Mike O'Neil aka Boreegard (troutmeister, poet, chef, blog contributor, man about town). Thanks for sharing, Bo!

Curry of Shrimp

In its unobtrusive way Curry of Shrimp has been the signal meal of our married life.  I know the exact date and place I first had it, because life as I knew it was about to change utterly the next day.  Jeanne and I were in the Krafft Hotel situated on the banks of the Rhine in the Suisse Canton/Village of Basel.  It was a cold cloudy Monday evening—February 21, 1966—and it was the last evening meal I would ever have as a bachelor.  The next morning we marched up to the town hall (on Tuesdays they married Americans).  There a woman magistrate performed the civil ceremony that would make us all legal.  There were six couples, and as a matter of thrift and convenience she laid it on us all together.  “You are now married peoples,” I remember her saying at the end of a strict officially delivered set of words.  It was somewhat like the pledge I was required to take when I joined the Army in that at one point we were instructed to raise our right hands and repeat some sort of oath as well.

I digress.  The curry to which I refer did not have shrimp.  It had scampi—shrimp’s second cousin once removed.  And I’m sure the recipe that I give you here is not an exact replica of what we enjoyed that evening—but it’s close, and we own it in our hearts.

                                                                       Boreegard


Ingredients

1/3 cup butter
1 cup chopped onion
2 cloves of garlic, minced and chopped
1 cup chopped bell pepper
1 cup (or more) sour cream
2 tsp. fresh lemon juice
¾ tsp salt
dash chili powder
2 tsp. curry powder
½ tsp. ground ginger
ground black pepper to taste
1 pound cleaned cooked shrimp


TO DO

In a pan, melt butter—sauté onion, garlic, pepper until soft.

Stir in sour cream, lemon juice, and spices.  Heat, stirring occasionally, until it’s hot (but not boiling).

Add shrimp and stir until just heated.  You are warming this, not cooking it now.

Serve over rice.

Serve with traditional side condiments such as toasted slivered almonds (a must), shredded coconut, chutney, sliced ripe mango, raisins, orange slice, pineapple—and such.

Serves 4.  Dang good.

Saturday, April 12, 2014

The First Daffodils……FINALLY!















It is a GORGEOUS day here in Woodland Valley! The temperatures are in the 60's and it is a joy to be outside! And to add to the excitement of the temperate weather, the first daffodils of the 2014 season bloomed today……at last!! Usually by this time the little beauties on my hill are just about reaching their peak. Not this year! After the longest, coldest winter I can remember they are have just started to bloom. Depending on the weather moving forward, peak should be in the next couple of weeks. But the flower show has started and spring has returned to the valley at last!

Another Book Event

There is a book launch party tonight for neighbor Holly George Warren's new book "A Man Called Destruction - The Life & Music of Alex Chilton". There will be a reading, a discussion and some live music. Go check it out!


BOOK PARTY
for

A Man Called Destruction: 
The Life & Music of Alex Chilton
by Holly George-Warren

Reading, Discussion and
LIVE MUSIC
from Robert Burke Warren and Friends
                                                          
Saturday, April 12th
6:30 PM

Kleinert/James Center for the Arts, 
36 Tinker Street, Woodstock, NY 

FREE 

 Holly George-Warren's just-released A Man Called Destruction: The Life and Music of Alex Chilton, is receiving raves. Come join us for stories, discussion, and live music spanning Chilton's career from Robert Burke Warren, Mark Lerner, John Burdick, and other guest musicians, including Spike Priggen and Steve Koester.


Sponsored by the Golden Notebook

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Shandaken In Bloom 2014

I am marking this one on my calendar. The annual Shandaken garden tour. Save the date in your busy schedules too!

Save the Date!!

Shandaken In Bloom

Annual Garden Tour
June 29th 10-4 
Rain or Shine

6 Glorious Gardens
Advance Tickets $20.00
Day of Tickets $25.00
Friends of The Phoenicia Library

for more info call Susan at 688-7493

Monday, April 7, 2014

Another Author In Our Midst























Author and new Woodland Valley resident, Jenny Milchman just sent me this wonderful piece for the blog (see below). She just finished her second novel, Ruin Falls, right here in our midst. The kick off of her book tour will be at The Golden Notebook in Woodstock on April 26th. Here is a link to information about the event. http://jennymilchman.com/tour/invitation/2014-04-26/the-golden-notebook
Jenny told me that she would welcome any valley residents who can attend. Here is a little bit more about the author in her own words.


Home Again, Home Again, Jiggity Jig

I moved to Woodland Valley with my family last September, and whenever I meet some of the great folks who live here, they ask me where we came from.

That’s when I come to a great, screeching halt.

It might seem like a relatively easy question to answer, but for us it isn’t, and not because we’re in the Witness Protection Program and have forgotten some of the facts in our new biographies.

Instead, when asked this, we stop to consider. Should we say Pennsylvania, the last state we were in just before we crossed into New York? Or Oregon, the state we spent the largest block of time in? How about South Dakota, simply because we had so much fun there?

In 2013 my family and I lived on the road for seven months, driving a total of 35,000 miles. We didn’t really live anywhere. Or, we lived everywhere.

Let me explain.

I am an author who took a very long time to get published. Although my debut novel came out last year, it was actually the eighth book I had written. All told, it took thirteen years from the time I first began setting down words on a page to finally seeing a book of mine on the shelves. And during that decade-plus there were many near misses, close calls, and wretched disappointments.

There were also many changes in our lives. When I started trying to get published, my husband and I didn’t have kids yet. I remember loving grandparents-to-be raising concerns and leaving articles about falling fertility rates around in hard-to-miss places.

“Should we start trying?” I asked my husband back then.

“But you’re going to be published any day now,” he replied. “And then who will have time for a baby?”

Those babies were seven and five by the time I was finally offered my first book deal.

Since the only thing harder than getting published is trying to stay that way, my husband and I knew we would have to give this thing our all once my book finally came out. Hence was the idea for the World’s Longest Book Tour born.

We “car-schooled” our kids, visiting 45 states and about 500 bookstores, libraries, and book clubs. Oh, and of course, Mt. Rushmore, Gettysburg, and the Henry Ford Museum for the car buff in the backseat.

It was an unparalleled adventure, but the only thing that could top it was finding our way to a beautiful home in the Valley. We’re very glad to have settled here, and already looking forward to being back next September.

You see, I have another novel coming out at the end of April. And it’s time to hit the road again.

Jenny Milchman’s debut novel, Cover of Snow, was chosen as an IndieNext and Target Pick, and nominated for a Mary Higgins Clark award. Jenny’s second novel, Ruin Falls, is coming out in April and she will hit the road with her family on the second multi-month book tour, kicking it off at her new hometown bookstore, The Golden Notebook.


Thursday, April 3, 2014

Gone Fishin'

In honor of the opening of fishing season yesterday here is a great new local resource to help you find out all you need to know about fishing the world famous Esopus Creek. Check it out!

Angler Alert:
Now You Can Match the Hatch Digitally

Phoenicia, NY—Fly fishermen looking ahead to fishing the legendary Esopus Creek now have a single place to go to find out all they need to know to match the hatch.

Officially launched today, the interactive website, http://www.catskillanglingcollection.org, provides Catskill anglers with a comprehensive digital “hatch chart” of the insects the trout are eating, the artificial flies that best imitate those insects, and when and where to fish the trout.  It also offers a history of angling on the Esopus Creek, the natural history of local trout species, recipes for tieing the flies that match the hatch, and more. The content is available on all devices, so users can access it on a desktop or laptop, or carry it with them via tablet or smartphone.

The website, produced by the Jerry Bartlett Angling Collection housed in the Phoenicia Library in Phoenicia, New York, is a state-of-the-art marriage of art and science created by the Chichester, New York design firm of Stephanie Blackman Design and Mark Loete, a professional photographer and Esopus fly fishing guide.  It was sponsored by a grant to the Phoenicia Library from Cornell Cooperative Extension’s Ashokan Watershed Stream Management Program.

The project began after a fire at the Phoenicia Library in March 2011 damaged eight “Match the Hatch” panels housed in the library’s Jerry Bartlett Angling Collection. The panels had been created by fishing guide Jerry Bartlett in the early 1990s as part of his instruction and guiding program and included photos of 47 species of aquatic insects in various life stages, matched with the artificial flies that imitate each insect.  Project workers transcribed the information from the charred panels, then cross-correlated it with macro-invertebrate surveys of the Esopus Creek carried out by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation from 1995 to 2010 and with on-stream observations by experienced Esopus anglers during the 2013 angling season. The taxonomy was updated to reflect the most recent changes in the naming and classification of the listed insects brought about by advances in genetic DNA testing.

The resulting 2014 Match the Hatch digital edition is a listing of 33 insect species favored by hungry Esopus Creek trout, reflecting current conditions and arranged by month of their appearance. A photograph of the nymph and adult phase of each species is paired with studio photographs of the artificial flies that best imitate each insect. This information can be accessed by time of year, generic name of the insect, scientific Latin name of the insect, generic name of the artificial fly, and/or by a visual match of the photos with the live insects encountered on the stream.  The artificial flies are further categorized as drys, nymphs, attractors, terrestrials and streamers.  Included is the fly tyer’s original recipe for the fly, listing hook sizes and the materials used in making the fly, and identifying both the tyer and the originator of the fly.  Fourteen master fly tyers, recognized as among the best at the arcane craft of Catskill-style fly tying, contributed their artistry to the project.  Sixty-four original flies tied for the project are mounted in museum-quality shadow box mounts and placed on display in the Phoenicia Library (9 Ava Maria, Phoenicia, NY 12464).

The Jerry Bartlett Collection at the Phoenicia Library was created in 1995 in honor of local guide and angling instructor Jerry Bartlett (1939-1995), who worked tirelessly to conserve the cold water fisheries of the Catskills Mountains.  We celebrate the history and traditions of Catskill Angling with an extensive collection of books about fishing and fly tying as well as with collections of rods and reels, tackle, historical memorabilia, artworks, archives, and other resources.  Dedicated to Jerry’s memory, the collection is housed in the Phoenicia Library and is open to the public during library hours. 

Open House: Web Site Launch and Celebration, April 12, 1-3 PM, Phoenicia Library, 9 Ava Maria Drive, Phoenicia, NY 12464 - "To many afflicted Eastern fishermen, the 'Green Drake Hatch' is as irresistible and habit-forming as black jack, whiskey, or easy women (troutnut.com)." Green Drake mayflies used to be so numerous they blackened car windshields, but we hardly see them now on the Esopus. What happened? The answer to this and other tricky entomological questions will be revealed at an Open House in conjunction with a demonstration of the web site, fly tying by Catskill master tyers, and book sale.  For more information, see www.phoenicialibrary.org.
PHOTOS OF SCREEN SHOTS FROM THE WEBSITE ARE AVAILABLE

-- 


Elizabeth Potter
Director, Phoenicia Library
director@phoenicialibrary.org  
http://phoenicialibrary.org
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Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Help For Homeowners Effected By Hurricanes























Homeowners affected by Hurricane Irene or Superstorm Sandy may still be eligible for financial assistance. But applications must be filed by the April 11, 2014 deadline. Because of size limitations on this blog you may be unable to read all the details on the poster and there is far too much information for me to re-type. So I have put a link below to the full size jpeg on the Shandaken town website or you can call 855-697-7263 for more information.

http://www.shandaken.us/wp-content/uploads/2014/03/homeownersny.jpg