Sunday, November 17, 2024

Five Great But Little Known Hikes in the Central Adirondacks

In this video I share five of my favorite lesser known hikes in the central Adirondacks. 




Maps and driving directions to help with getting there are found at www.hikelonglake.com.

Wednesday, December 13, 2023

Adirondack Conservation Easements: What You Need to Know





Conservation easements have existed in the Adirondacks for decades but it has not always been clear what public access was allowed. Recent improvements in signage and the Department of Environmental Conservation website have greatly improved the situation. Along with protecting open space, and keeping working forests working, many (but not all) easements offer some amount of public access. Enjoy!


Recreate on DEC Conservation Easement Lands


Adirondack Old Growth Forests - A National Treasure




The Adirondack Mountain region of New York State contains hundreds of thousands of acres of old growth forest; by far the largest reserve of old growth in the Eastern United States. Explore the Adirondack old growth in this, the first of a series of videos on this topic.



References:

Minnesota Lost 40 - https://www.dnr.state.mn.us/snas/deta...

Adirondack Old Growth: The Great Forest of the Adirondacks, Barbara McMartin

Eastern Old-Growth Forests: Prospects For Rediscovery And Recovery, Mary Byrd Davis


Tuesday, December 12, 2023

The Bridge that Makes No Sense: Blowdown and Salvage in the Adirondack Forest Preserve




Change is the one constant in the forests of Adirondack Forest Preserve. Blowdowns, floods and fires can alter large areas in hours or days. In 1950, a storm knocked down trees on an estimated 400,000 acres and, in that case, New York State authorized a large-scale timber salvage operation to reduce the fire risk and produce revenue for the State. The problem was, the New York State Constitution specifically prohibits that sort of thing. In 1995, when another storm brought down trees in the Five Ponds Wilderness the possibility of allowing for salvage logging was again raised. No salvage was allowed, but the specific circumstances made it impractical, so that might not represent the final word on the issue. 


Clear information around these events, and the value of salvage logging, is hard to find, but we've tried to present the whole story here. The information used to support our view of it comes from numerous sources listed below. 

Issues of The New York State Conservationist Magazine from 1951 through 1955 are a primary source.
Thanks to Jenny Ambrose, Director of Archives & Special Collections at the Adirondack Experience  for her help in locating some of these resources. 
 
The New York State Conservationist, Jan. 1951 - Dec. 1955
Most Issues available online at the HathiTrust https://www.hathitrust.org/
Search the hathitrust website like this: new york conservationist 1951


Notes on the Adirondack Blowdown of July 15th, 1995 Scientific Background, Observations, and Policy Issues

Jerry Jenkins, The Wildlife Conservation Society Working Paper Series, 1995
https://s3.amazonaws.com/WCSResources...

Conservation Policy in Time and Space: Lessons from Divergent Approaches to Salvage Logging on Public Lands, George Robinson and Jeffrey Zappieri, Ecology and Society, Vol. 3 No. 1
https://ecologyandsociety.org/vol3/is..., 

Remembering the Big Blowdown of 1950, John Warren, 11/30/2020, The New York Almanack
https://www.newyorkalmanack.com/2020/...

The Big Blow-Down of 1950, John Duquette, The Adirondack Daily Enterprise
Retrieved from the Historic Saranac Lake Wiki
https://localwiki.org/hsl/The_Big_Blo...

The Great Blowdown, Joan Potter, Adirondack Life
https://www.adirondacklife.com/2019/0...

The Forest Preserve of New York State, a Handbook for Conservationists, Eleanor brown, The Adirondack Mountain Club, 1985

Truck trails in the Adirondacks? / by Lithgow Osborne ; and comments on Commission's truck trail policy by Robert Marshall.
Pamphlet Reprinted from American Forests, January, 1936
Retrieved from the Adirondack Experience Online Library, 

Monday, December 11, 2023

Dam Building Rodents Gone Wild: Beaver In the Adirondacks

The first of two videos looking at the role that beavers play in the Adirondacks.  For this video and others please visit our youtube channel, www.youtube.com/@hikelonglake




References, sources of information used in this video:

Beaver in the Adirondacks, Roosevelt WildLife Bulletin

Vol 4 no. 4, 1927

https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/199162#page/11/mode/1up


Annual reports of the Forest, Fish and Game Commissioner. 10th (1904-1906) https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=hvd.32044072184047&seq=383
Page 286