Daily Archives: July 21, 2011

Talkin’ Code: Modular, Mobile, Stick Construction: A look at how each stacks up

by Andrew Getty Webb Code Enforcement Officer

Modular, Mobile, Stick

Similar to a conventional on-site stick built home, a modular home is also stick built.

Usually constructed in sections, inside a controlled factory type environment, modular homes are in every way basically the same as a stick built home.

Both meet the same NYS Residential Code requirements.

This includes, but is not limited to, structural design, roof loads, energy code, emergency rescue and escape windows, smoke alarms, CO alarms, hand railings and guards, stairs, foundations, plumbing, heating, electric or any other provision of the code.

The obvious difference is that the structure is not built on site. So who does all the various stages of inspections?  Continue reading

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Herr-Story by Charles Herr

A Look at Local Days Gone By

Big Moose Landing: A once familiar spot on Fourth Lake

Before the automobile, the railroads and the steamers, those who traveled from “the Forge” to Big Moose Lake disembarked on the north shore of Fourth Lake at a location known as “Big Moose Landing.”

Another landing to the west was used that took the traveler past First (called Landon, then Rondaxe) and Second (called Foster, then Dart’s) Lakes to the Third (called Sherman, then Big Moose) Lake, north branch, Moose River.

But the guides with their sportsmen would usually head for Elba Island and bear north towards the shore where a landing developed that led to a trail through the woods.

This trail was called the “Carry Trail.”

After unloading at Big Moose Landing, you would carry your belongings up a hill and quickly come to what Edwin Wallace called “a lovely little pond” which we today call Continue reading

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Big Moose Chapel to celebrate 80th anniversary on July 24th

by Dick Williams

The Big Moose Community Chapel will celebrate its 80th anniversary on Sunday, July 24 during the two regular services at 9:30 and 11 a.m. A  birthday cake will be enjoyed during the coffee hour.

Rev. Dr. Richard McCaughey, who has returned for his 13th season as summer minister,  will officiate.

The early history of organized religion in the Big Moose area goes back to the early camps and hotels in the early 1900s after the train through Big Moose opened up the lake for development.

Several ministers were among the first hotel guests and provided worship services at the hotels or in boat houses.

The Old Forge Niccolls Church minister and Inlet Church of the Lakes minister at times would come to officiate Continue reading

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Stuart deCamp announces candidacy, plans to run for Webb supervisor

Stuart deCamp of Thendara has announced he is running as an Independent candidate for Supervisor of the Town of Webb in the November general election.Assessing waste, reducing spending and living within our means are at the top of his list of priorities if elected Supervisor, he said.Born and raised in Thendara, he is a 1982 graduate of the Town of Webb School, a graduate of SUNY Fredonia College, and The Universidad de Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain, where he studied the Spanish language and taught the English language. He is also a graduate of Cornell University’s School of Hotel Management.In 1987, he was hired by F. Eugene Romano of Old Forge and Utica to work at his Resort Hotel in San Juan, Puerto Rico, where he was responsible for the daily operations and for supervising 155 employees, which included staff and union workers in Reservations, Food and Beverage, Purchasing, Security, Pool and Human Resources. He was also in charge of a $44 million refurbishing project and was responsible for coordinating architects, engineers, designers, imports and exports, contractors and supplies, with full control of all construction materials and payments to contractors based on contract agreements. When the year-long project was completed in 1990, he continued to oversee various departments for quality and hospitality.He was assistant general manager of the hotel when he was called home in 1996 to care for his ailing father. At that time he was hired by Tricor Management in New Hartford, which completed a multi-million dollar home renovation over the next three years.In 1998 he earned his Insurance and Securities licenses, which he still holds today as an Independent Broker. He and his partner, Jimi Ortiz, are co-owners of three businesses in Thendara: Moose River House Bed and Breakfast, Feathers and Boughs, Inc. Pet Centers, and the Thendara Town Hall Wedding and Events Center.“I firmly believe my abilities to operate a 238 room Resort Hotel and Casino, 365 days a year, seven days a week, overseeing hundreds of employees, staff and cost controls, while being hospitable to guests and one another, gives me the unique ability to operate the Town of Webb, with its diverse needs and personalities,” he said.Since returning to Thendara and Old Forge 15 years ago, he has been involved in various construction projects. “I’ve worked with the Zoning Board, the Planning Board and the Codes Department getting projects done, and I feel that the town works very hard, but it could use additional help, and I think I can help the town significantly. “Having run hotels, casinos, restaurants and bars, I think that I could benefit the community as a whole, because we are a tourist community and all of us, whether we want to admit it or not, need tourism.”Old Forge and Thendara used to be a lumber town, he said, until it reinvented itself into a tourist and second home destination. “Now we are at a place where we need to ask: what can we do to better expose what we have to offer?”He has heard comments, he said, from people who are concerned about taxes and where the taxes are going in the next few years. “I want to get involved and help in any way that I can. There are many people in this community on fixed incomes who have lived here for 25 or 30 years who say, ‘Why all of a sudden am I taxed out when I’m 65 or 70 years old?’ That’s not fair. It’s just not fair,” said deCamp.“It’s a huge challenge, but every problem has a solution. You just have to work at it until you find the solution that works best for everyone. I have the energy to do it. I have the know-how, and I hope the community likes what they know about me and will support me for the position of Town Supervisor.deCamp is running on the Independent party line, “Voice of the People.”

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Youth Adventure Program Offers First-time Adirondack Experiences

For the past 15 summers, Camp Towanda, a private residential co-ed camp located in Honesdale, PA, has arranged for a local three-day Adirondack adventure excursion for its campers through area white water rafting outfit, Whitewater Challengers.

Marco Schmalze, a 30-year-plus veteran of the rafting company’s Hudson River division, coordinates the annual outdoor effort in partnership with Scott Locorini, who manages operation of the Okara Lakes division of Whitewater Challengers from his outdoor adventure store, Adirondack Exposure.

This year’s excursion began on Tuesday, July 12 when 78 Camp Towanda campers, along with their counselors, poured from their buses for an afternoon of tubing on the Moose River and paintball field play on the grounds of Adirondack Exposure.  Continue reading

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Symphony Syracuse: Inlet readies

It’s become a special night for many—a valued part of summer in the Adirondacks; it’s an evening where a great cross-section comes together in Inlet, New York to enjoy and ponder the genius of history’s great composers as arranged and performed by some of today’s finest musicians. It’s always a great night.”—Jerry Dupuis, chairman of the Fulton Chain of Lakes Performing Arts CouncilAnnual Arrowhead Park performance to return next weekend. Continue reading

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Mountainman Hosting Instructional Series

Mountainman Outdoor Supply Company on Rt. 28 in Old Forge will host a series of weekly outdoor instructional events.

On Mondays, free guided two-hour mountain bike trips will be available at 6 p.m.; and on Tuesdays, free kayak demos will take place from 6 to 8 p.m. at the Moose River Outpost.

Free whitewater paddling instructions will be available on Wednesdays from 6 p.m. until dark.

On Saturdays from 7 to 9 a.m., ACA kayak instructor and certified yoga instructor Nanette Shovea-Burke will conduct a free yoga and paddling session on the deck overlooking the Moose River.

Also from 7 to 9 a.m. on Saturdays, a free guided group road bike ride around the Fulton Chain of Lakes will be available.

Details on trips and instruction are available by calling (315) 369-6672 or visit: www.MountainmanOutdoors.com.

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