Monthly Archives: March 2011

Growing up Adirondack by Mitch Lee

Returning geese interrupt impending Indian attack

It was a late March day in 1970. I was sitting on my bed trying to balance some plastic cowboys on a stiff wool blanket.

I made a crease in the blanket to form a valley where my plastic Indians would descend in an assault.

I was irritated. Every time I made a move to set one of the toys upright, two would fall down. I finally got the soldiers into a good upright circle as a host of rich sunlight flooded into the room.

Just then, my dog “Dog” came in the room and rubbed her body against the side of the bed. The sudden earthquake sent the bed quivering and the soldiers plopped on their sides.

Frustrated, I just crossed my legs and reached over and gave her ears a scratch. She placed her chin into my hand so I itched her there too.

Her ears suddenly perked and she snuck her head forward over the edge of the bed so she could get a look out the window. Her eyes blinked in the spray of full sunlight.

I took a look outside too but saw no sign of anything that could have spooked her.

I turned to her and asked her what was wrong. Before she had a chance to respond, I heard something overhead. It was a faint sound of honking geese echoing over Limekiln Lake.

I pulled myself across the bed and strained my neck to look up into the sky.

“I don’t see them, but from the sounds of it there must be hundreds, maybe thousands of them,” I said looking back at Dog.

She whimpered a bit as if she was answering me. Then she rubbed herself against the bed again.

I had previously heard geese as they flew South in the fall but never before had I heard them on their return flight North.

I wondered where they were going, and which one was in charge of this group. Just a day earlier I was down by the Lake and noticed it was still frozen solid. There were no spots for a goose to land.

I thought to myself that the flock would never again follow that goose in the lead because they were going to have to just turn around and come back in a month or so when the lakes were thawed.

As I turned from the window I noticed that half a toy Indian was hanging out of Dog’s mouth. “Hey, don’t eat that!” I shouted.

I jumped up and wrestled it from her. I was glad to see it was not one of my favorites and that it had only sustained a little bit of damage.

Mitch Lee, Adirondack native & storyteller, lives at Big Moose Lake.ltmitch3rdny@aol.com

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Talkin’ Code with Andrew Getty

How do you measure the value of state & local building codes?

Value of Codes

It is true that compliance with all the different Building and Fire Safety Codes can sometimes seem to involve a high cost.

And contractors and building owners alike seem to spend more time and energy to find a “loop hole” or some way to get around certain requirements.

This is even more typical for the alteration, renovation, expansion and repair of existing buildings.

Trying to avoid Handicap Accessibility, sprinklers, additional exits, fire alarms, increased insulation, structural requirements, proper sewage control, exit signs, or an array of various standards and codes—all of which have been put in place to increase the level of personal and public safety, structural integrity and life safety—should not be a primary focus.

However, the perception that avoiding those requirements will save money drives way too many decisions.

A recent email received from the International Code Council helps to portray the benefit of code compliance.

And how it not only increases the level of life safety, but saves money…

ICC Code Council CEO Richard P. Weiland says Japan quake is sobering reminder

“The intensity of the March 11 earthquake and resulting tsunami off the coast of Japan is a sobering reminder of how building codes can save lives.

“The losses in Japan are tragic, yet much more was avoided due to their foresight in constructing resilient buildings.

“In our own country, as we near the bicentennial of the New Madrid quake in the south-central U.S., we must resist efforts to reduce seismic safety practices in our own country and make sure we share our tools with vulnerable nations around the world.

“The stark contrast between Haiti versus Chile and now Japan in the seismic arena shows that codes save money and lives over the entire life cycle of a building.

“As all of us continue to deal with the impacts of a challenged economy, let’s not forget that one ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

“Study after study tells us that for every dollar spent before a disaster we save four to eight dollars in response and recovery costs.

“The world can ill-afford a short-sighted approach to new construction and the retrofitting of existing structures that places our families, our businesses and our communities in harm’s way.

“The Code Council is proud to offer the state-of-the-art model codes including adaptable provisions for local hazards in all areas including seismic, wind, flood and fire.

“Across the U.S. and increasingly around the world, our codes are establishing safe and sustainable communities which recognize rather than avoid the hazards that can threaten our well-being.”

The development and implementation of codes of all kinds are founded on experience.

This has been the case for years…even thousands of years when some of the most basic codes said “if my structure [or house, cathedral, temple, castle] falls down we will knock down yours…if my family dies because the structure falls down, your family dies.”

That’s a pretty strong code, and explains why many old structures are just simply solid marble!

Watching the horrifying events in Japan is moving, to say the least.

In one video on TV, it showed tall high-rise buildings in a major city actually swaying, back and forth, which looked like a hundred feet or more.

Imagine being in that structure???

Those structures were intended and designed to meet certain code standards relative to seismic vibrations.

Whatever the cost of that seismic code compliant construction, not only were lives saved, but the cost of replacement, response, repair and damage to other structures and properties was substantially reduced or even avoided.

Yes, codes can be a pain-in-the-butt. However, they are there for many reasons.

All of which are based on the needs of society, as in energy conservation codes, or because of unfortunate experiences in structural failures or catastrophic fires.

One ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.

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Jake’s Pack Basket Blues by Sue Lemery (Adult)

Limp grey fox shawl,

Mothballs, glossy hatboxes,

Tossed on musty attic floor,

Cover the sun burnt wicker.

 

Jake lifts her gently,

Sets her on hickory workbench,

Wipes off fine attic dust,

Quietly talks to her.

 

She held all a man needed,

Thick red wool socks,

Brown knit deer sweater,

Quart of tomato beef stew.

 

Cold November, mid ‘50’s –

Jake, chilled and beaten,

Set her by campfire. Weary eyes,

Moist, saw her charred wicker.

 

April, 1958, he was old then,

A slick rock edge betrayed,

Stone bit man, pack—and wounded,

Her side, now feathered and torn.

 

Brown and frail, inside,

Woven into aged basket,

Autumn leaves remind him –

Forest trails that whispered.

 

Jake inhales longingly. He is there now,

Evergreens, morning rain,

Fiddleheads and cinnamon ferns,

Wood sorrel, evening campfire.

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Gentle as a Child by Sarah Lynn Beck (Grade 3)

It is gray and huge

sounds like a trumpet and has

legs like a tree trunk

(An Elephant)

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Just Because I’m Short by Kevin Albert (Grade 6)

When I was seven this really happened

 

Just because I’m short, doesn’t mean you

can pick on me.

Just because I have a cat and you have a

dog doesn’t mean you can yell at me.

Just because I have a sled and you don’t

doesn’t mean you have to frown at me

every time you see me.

Just because my dad owns a restaurant

and your dad owns a bowling alley,

doesn’t mean you can break stuff at my

dad’s restaurant

Just because you have a bowling ball and

I don’t, doesn’t mean you can push me.

Just because my poem is better than

yours doesn’t mean you can hit me.

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I Don’t Understand by Hunter Lawrence (Grade 9)

I don’t understand

the meaning of this poem

why I need to write it

or what I will gain

 

But most of all

why people must be stereotypical

so closed minded

or unwilling to even consider

 

What I understand most is

why I like to ski

on a hill or huge mountain

why the snow falls year after year.

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Winners named in library Poetry & Illustration Contest

The Opening Exhibit and Awards Presentation of the annual Poetry and Illustration Contest was held at the Old Forge Library on Tuesday, March 22.

The theme this year was, “Things Remembered.”

There were196 poetry entries and 110 illustration entries submitted to the event.

Residents of towns and villages within Herkimer, Oneida and Madison counties, and the Town of Inlet were eligible to enter.

This year’s poetry judges were author/poets Joseph Bruchac and Mary Sanders Shartle. Illustration judges were artists, Suzanne Firsching and Tom Yacovella.

Firsching, Yacovella and Shartle attended the ceremony to congratulate the entrants and present Award Certificates to the first place and honorable mention winners.

Library Director Izzie Worthen, who organizes the event every year, welcomed the gathering that filled the Judith Cohen Memorial Wing before introducing Master of Ceremonies Michael Cunningham, Town of Webb School English teacher, who presented the awards.

First prize winners in grades K-4, 5-8 and 9-12 categories received a $50 U.S. Savings Bond and an Award Certificate.

Honorable Mention winners were presented Award Certificates.

The Adult winners received a periodical subscription of their choice.

The prizes were donated by Friends of the Old Forge Library members who also served refreshments following the ceremony.

The event is made possible with funds from the Decentralization Program, a regrant program of the New York State Council on the arts, administered by the Stanley Theater and Friends of the Old Forge Library.

 

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