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Showing posts with label Cayuga Lake. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cayuga Lake. Show all posts

Thursday, September 7, 2023

Cayuga Lake Loop


Did you guess Elaine?
friends


We set off this morning for an adventure going all the way around Cayuga Lake. Cayuga is one of the two largest Finger Lakes, 40 miles long and 2 miles wide. It's the lake I grew up on. It's "my" lake, even more than Lake Michigan. In this picture, the lake is down in the deep valley between the hill I'm on and the far one.
cayuga lake


We drove up the side of the lake opposite where we grew up. When we were kids, this was like the other side of the planet. We just never went there! This is at the north end of the lake looking south.
Cayuga Lake


We did so much stuff! All I can do is hit a sampler today. Maybe I'll share more in the future. We stopped and read almost every historical marker. We ate lunch at a park (picture above) by the railroad station of the Lake Cayuga Railway. I took pictures of many old buildings. One thing you sure don't find in Michigan is houses built in the 1700s and early 1800s.

However, the bulk of our time was at the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge. When we were kids, this was a refuge, but there was no public access. Now there is a drive you are allowed to take, with a few observation decks and a visitor center. Elaine is the super birdwatcher. I'm only mediocre. She's more interested in the birds; I do the plants. We got some of each. I'll only share the very best of the afternoon.

This was a new life list bird for me. It's a common gallinule. Gallinula galeata. Not a great picture. There were three of them, being very secretive. So I'm happy I even got this.
Common galliunle


Elaine got to add a sandhill crane to her life list.

The best of the day was this black-crowned night heron, Nycticorax nycticorax, was not new to either of us, but I'd sure never seen one this close. And we have no clue why it was so active during full daylight.
black crowned night heron


Switching to plants, by far the showiest is the swamp rose mallow, Hibiscus moscheutos. Many of them have a darker red center, but not all. These did not. The flowers are 4-5 inches across.
swamp rose mallow


Of the rest of the plants I pictured, I guess I'll share this one. This is a knapweed. If you are familiar with the totally obnoxious invasive spotted knapweed, you will recognize the shape of the flower. Now, however, we are in ID trouble. There are hundereds of Centaurea. It's easy to eliminate the yellow and blue and red ones, and the ones not in North America at all. This flower is about 2 or 2.5 inches across (much bigger than the spotted knapweed), and the leaves are very different. A lot of the ID of Centaurea has to do with the shape and texture of the bracts below the flower.

Checking for kinds found in New York, I think this is a hybrid of brown and black knapweed, called meadow knapweed. It grows in some counties in New York, including where we were today. This is my best guess. It doesn't even have an official taxonomic name. I've found it before in New York, and have had this same trouble identifying it. Now for the bad news. Even though it's much prettier than spotted knapweed, it's also alien.
meadow knapweed


Coming home on the west side of the lake, we stopped with Elaine's brother for a visit, drove through a short but interesting storm, and went out to dinner.

Long day! What will Joan do tomorrow?

See Abby Sends Me Off

Sunday, September 5, 2021

The Lake that I Love

  We are staying for a couple of days near enough to Cayuga Lake, where I grew up, to be able to see it. Just a wonderful place. Cayuga Lake

We took the day off and rested. This was a fine use of the day since it rained a lot. We played games, read, and visited some people. It was nice. So I'll share some more plants from yesterday. None of these four is commonly found in Michigan, so I was realy happy!

This is one I found last year in NY in Huckleberry Bog. White Wood Aster, Eurybia divaricata. This trip, the blooms are much more fully open, so the pictures are lots nicer. white wood aster

I've also found this one in New York before. It has been seen in Michigan, but not many places. I'll have to keep my eyes open. This is a white goldenrod called Siverrod, Solidago bicolor. It wasn't fully open, but you can see it's definitely white.
silverrod


The next one isn't in Michigan at all. I've seen it before, but I think only the leaves, which are distinctive. See how the leaves become winged and just flow into the stem? I didn't realize the flowers were white, but they can also be light blue. This is Lowrie's Aster, Symphyotrichum lowrieanum. lowrie's aster

Finally, we have a Mountain Mint. Sadly, I'm not sure which one, but the leaves are too wide for the common one, so I think this might be Hoary Mountain Mint, Pycnanthemum incanum. Again, not generally found in Michigan- mostly east and south. I was a victim of being in a hurry. I just looked at the flowers and said, "Oh, Mountain Mint," snapped a picture and hiked on without looking more closly. A glance at the photo, however, told me the leaves were wrong. hoary mountain mint

What a feast of plant treats!

Tomorrow, we'll be back on the trail.

See True Blue Gumby II

Friday, July 16, 2021

Camp Comstock 1958, Frontier Unit

  Tonight, I'll take you back to Camp Comstock. We'll talk about my first year at the overnight camp. This was the summer of 1958, and I'd just finished 5th grade. There were huge changes going on in my life.

Let's clear up one detail right away. These pictures are nothing wonderful. Their only claim to fame is that they are authentic. I had gotten a Brownie Camera for my birthday in April, so suddenly I was the one taking the pictures. I'm not in any of the camp pictures. I did find a couple from that school year, and I'll stick them at the end. This was labeled "the girls of the Frontier Unit."

I'm not sure what the cluster of people on the left is doing. This might have been some kind of first aid drill, since it looks as if there is someone on the ground. You can see Cayuga Lake in the background. And it sure looks like we had just had rain. (see note about Duchess) Camp Comstock 1958

Frontier was the first unit everyone went to. It was located on Crowbar Point at the southern boundary of Comstock. If you walked past that point, you entered Camp Bailiwick (see link below for the explanation of all this if you missed the earlier post and if you care). It wasn't until years later when I was a counselor at Bailiwick that I really understood you could connect the camps on foot. As campers we were definitely not allowed to stray.

Here's the campfire circle at the Frontier Unit. The lane leads north to the Lodge. Every girl in Frontier was either ten or eleven years old, and had just finished fifth grade. Somewhere, I have another picture of Crowbar Point from that unit, but I could not locate it today. It shows the Adirondack (three-sided) shelters. They had roll-down canvas fronts and standard metal camp bunk beds. This was one of the two cushiest units in the whole camp. I guess they wanted us to have a little more comfort since it was the first extended time away from home for most of us. The camp session lasted two weeks. Camp Comstock 1958

Here are my counselors that year. Pixi and Tommy taking a pose. Camp Comstock 1958

And Duchess. Of course, we never knew their real names. In the picture above you can see that Pixi is holding a ukelele. I'm sure at least half of the counselors played a ukulele. Probably most of them had instantly learned how when they were hired. How else would so many college girls have known how to play a ukulele?

I do remember Duchess. She knew lots of songs. Of course, almost all the camp songs were new to us that summer. Maybe we had sung a few of them in our troop meetings. Most of them were Girl Scout standards like "Make new friends, but keep the old, one is silver and the other gold." Of course that should be sung in a round. I remember huddling in our Adirondack shelter with the canvas front rolled down against the wind and rain while Duchess taught us "Tammy," a popular hit of 1957 which was actually nominated for Best Song, but I didn't know that! Camp Comstock 1958

As I continue this series, you'll get a tour of the units at Comstock. Each one had a song. This is how the one for Frontier went:
We live way down on Crowbar in a unit called Frontier. Where everybody wishes they could come back each year. We work, we sing, we play. We learn more every day. Oh, Frontier, Frontier, down on Crowbar, we know you're best by far."

We ate almost all our meals at the lodge (although I'm pretty sure even the little squirts on Frontier were allowed to cook out a few meals). I don't have a picture of the lodge from that year. But you'll see more of it later. The units would often have contests to see who could sing their song the loudest.

My album says this is Jay, the Assistant Director of the camp that summer. It amazes me to think that these counselors, who were barely more than kids themselves, have to be in their 80s if they are still alive. I wonder if they knew how much they were changing little lives. Camp Comstock 1958

As I said, it was a year of many changes for me. The previous summer, when I was nine, is the year I felt as if I grew up. My first dog had been killed in the road, which nearly did me in. My Granny moved to the town I lived in because my mother needed to take a job. That meant I now had to spend school days in town with Granny til Mom got home from work.

This did not go well. The grandmother I'd always adored, and who adored me, turned out to be pretty horrible. She wanted a little girl who would dote on her, and what she was stuck with was a 150% tomboy who wanted to jump off roofs and build fires.

In the fall of fifth grade, I broke my two front teeth off on the gym floor. Of course, they were my permanent teeth, so I spent a lot of that year in a dentist's chair which included having the nerves burned out of those broken teeth. Fun. Then I got glasses, which I proceeded to break about once a month because I was so rough and tumble. I had a bunch of warts burned off my feet. I also found out that I was going to have to wear orthopedic shoes, maybe forever.

And at the end of 5th grade, just before camp, Mom switched eye doctors and he said I didn't need glasses, but I did have amblyopia- lazy eye. So, days before I went to Comstock, only my second time away from home for more than a couple of days, I started wearing a patch over my right eye, the good one. The upshot of that was that I could see almost nothing. But I wasn't about to admit that! I remember starting camp and just barely being able to follow the road out to the Frontier Unit. I quickly learned that it was a great aid in getting people to feel sorry for me.

Interestingly enough, the sight in my left eye improved very quickly. It started just before Comstock at 20/200, and at the end of the summer was up to 20/30. I do know that within a few days, I was easily finding my way around camp and not having any trouble participating in the activities. We got to build fires without sneaking around to do it (I won the fire-building contest). We took swimming lessons (I was distressed that I was only a green cap that summer- which meant intermediate swimmer). We earned badges, we learned to row a boat (and were promised to learn how to canoe if we came back another year), we studied first aid, we did crafts, we sang and sang, we hiked, and we had campfires in the evening. No dresses were involved.

I knew I was in heaven. These two weeks of every summer at Comstock became my safe place. I could be "me," and no one taunted me, or told me to act like a girl.

Now for the Joan of 1958. Actually, this is 1957- first day of school for 5th grade. I remember this dress. It was actually one of my favorites. The darker portion was a blue-gray. It only looks like a jumper and blouse; it was all one garment. I'm wearing saddle shoes, so I hadn't yet gotten the orthopedic ones. I still have my own teeth.
5th grader 1958


I did find one other picture from 1957-58. I'm in the swing my dad installed in the cherry tree for me. I don't remember this dress at all, but the moccasins I have on were ones I made from a kit. They were some early form of vinyl, laced with plastic boondogle cord. I loved making things! Look how big my feet were! They were the same size they are now, which is actually quite small, but I hadn't yet grown into them. I was certainly all elbows and knees.
5th grader 1958


Don't spend time wondering about the dresses. Girls had to wear dresses to school back then, so I'm wearing one in a lot of pictures. But when I was on my own time, I'd already discovered blue jeans.

So now you've heard about my introduction to Camp Comstock. The next year's installment will appear on some slow blog news day in the future. There are a few places/people in my life that I describe as "they saved my life." I do not say that lightly, and Camp Comstock is one of those places.

In other news: I edited, I wrote a chapter, and I did a whole lot of putter-y things in the trailer. That included a run to Wal-Mart (which I hate) for three things I can only get there. They did not have any of them. Bother. So there will be yet another Amazon order in my future.

See Comstock and Bailiwick

Monday, July 27, 2020

The Lake that I Love

 
Cayuga Lake. My lake. This is home. 40 miles long, two miles wide. The big blocky building is the Miliken Power Plant (named for a former Michigan governor), now decommissioned. You could see this from my home.

Cayuga Lake

We did go swimming. It was so hot that this activity was almost a requirement rather than recreational. Actually, we went back to Sheldrake. Even though it is posted, all the locals still swim there. The sign is mostly because of the bad current off the point. We stayed well inside that. In my opinion all beaches should be small smooth flat stones like the Finger Lakes beaches, not sand. We picked up some pretty rocks, and I found one fossil, a crinoid. If I'd hunted longer there were possibilities of finding horn coral, brachiopods, and even trilobytes.

swimming in Cayuga Lake

And, I promised we'd get ice cream which we did. I had Sleeper Awake (coffee and chocolate), and Marie had Boomberry (raspberry ice cream with blueberries, raspberries, and strawberries). Definitely yummy, and it helped with the cooling.

ice cream

This is the school I attended from kindergarten to 12th grade. It's still in use as an elementary school, although the district is consolidated. It was built in 1924. My kindergarten room was on the first floor on the left. But the use patterns changed when an addition was built, so that was also my high school English room!

Interlaken Central School

And Dick finished the second of my trailer metalwork projects. The propane tank holder is now removed, and the spare tire is mounted on the hitch. Hooray!

spare tire mount on trailer hitch

Tomorrow more playtime. I promise there will be hiking eventually, but not quite yet.

See Memory Lane

Sunday, July 26, 2020

Memory Lane

 
We are in my hometown. I'm not sure that I actually mentioned that before. It's sad and weird and good to be here. The day began with going to church where I grew up. The good thing about that is that because of the virus, they are using the big sanctuary where there is enough room for people to keep appropriate distances. The church celebrated its 200th anniversary this summer.

Interlaken Baptist Church

We toured the entire town (which takes about 5 minutes), and also drove past the house (outside of town) I grew up in. It was built by my grandfather. I was really happy to see that it's being taken care of well. A lot of houses aren't. They are old and historic, and otherwise money pits.

craftsman bungalow

We also drove down to Sheldrake Point on Cayuga Lake. This is where I learned to swim. Swimming not allowed there now, but we went for a little wade. A very hot day, and tomorrow is supposed to be worse.

Sheldrake Point

We chilled, visited with Dick and Darla, and contemplated the places we want to hike. But we're not going to start that tomorrow in 90 degrees. I think swimming and ice cream might be on the agenda!

See Western NY and a Table