Happy Birthday Hazel

Family and friends cheer Hazel on as she checks out her smash cake and later as she opens gifts (with lots of help from Big Sis).  I seems like it was just yesterday when I first held her.  There are flashbacks to Willa’s first birthday too.  It is wonderful to watch them come into their own but I do wish time would slow just a bit.  I’d like to savor these moments a little longer.

 

I have the honor of being baker.   A moist apple cinnamon cake (the flavor a nod to Hazel’s taste for apples) is covered with cinnamon buttercream icing.  Smash cake decoration is all Hazel too, a field of grass dotted with clover and dandelions­. She snatches up a fistful of grass anytime she can get close enough to it.  She seems to appreciate the buttercream version as well.  A three-tier layer cake wrapped in LOTS more cinnamon buttercream goes over well with the rest of the guests.  We step up the “party factor” of Willa’s slice with some sprinkles.

Kent continues his tradition of wooden toy building.   Check out Hazel with her duckie pull toy. Willa’s 1st b’day grasshopper makes an appearance for some cross-kitchen racing.   Willa presents her hand-made dolly and we a stuffed bat adopted as a symbol of support to Bat Conservation International and their work to preserve essential habitat for bats and other animals that share it.  A little unconventional I suppose but seems in line with her love of the outdoors.

Kingston Bound

It is 36F when we get up.  It is time to head south.  We will get as far as Kenneth Wilson near Kingston today and spend about a week.  We will help celebrate Hazel’s first birthday then it is on toward Texas for the winter.

One more booster!

We are rule followers and really hate to be sick, so off we go to get one more COVID booster.  It was just approved and the local Walgreens has time slots.  Let’s get this done.

Star Trek

Ok, I can’t resist the gas station lady’s invitation.  We are going to the Star Trek Museum.  Admittedly, my expectations are pretty low but I just have to see what they have.  I was sooooo wrong.  The place is amazing and everyone involved in it so enthusiastic and filled with series information that one can’t help but get pulled in.   The sets are not original but meticulously recreated versions of those used during the series filming . I get flashbacks from episodes as we walk set to set..a transporter room, the main saucer hall, Bone’s sick bay, Kirk’s quarters, engineering, a turbo-lift, and the bridge.  Take a look at me in the captain’s chair…Kent too!

Our guide reminds us that all the Trekkies have Lucille Ball to thank for Star Trek’s very existence.  She produced and pitched two very expensive pilots convinced the series was right for Desi-Lu Productions.  Her persistence paid off.  Star Trek the series came to be.

Incidentally, we met the guy who owns the place.  He was sitting in the front lobby literally watching paint dry as he was personally rebuilding one of the Enterprise Bridge sets.  Interestingly he also spent some 30 years as an Elvis impersonator.  He still sports the hairdo.  It takes all kinds!

If you have even a passing interest you have to check this place out.

We go for lunch out again today.  We try the Hot Biscuit Diner in Ticonderoga.  It is breakfast all day on Sundays.  Not bad.

Fort Ticonderoga

The fort has a long and interesting military history that ended in its destruction followed by years of neglect.  Fortunately, reconstruction is well underway and the enthusiastic kids giving tours seem well informed. We enjoy our walk through.  Some of the fort-life demonstrations are done for the season but they still have cooking, cannon and small arms demonstrations.

The big draw this weekend is the Horse and Harvest Festival.  There are craft booths and delicious food truck BBQ but the main theme is the role of horses in military life through the years.  A pair of oxen yoked and ready to work mostly model patience and serenity while chewing their cud.  We do see them drag a log up to the split rail fence demo area.  A team of Belgians is seemingly content to pull wagon loads of visitors.  Spirited saddle horses bravely demonstrate their role as transportation and as partners in battle as calvary men fire from the saddle.  The entire affair is a great primer on the evolution of American fighting forces from the French Indian War, through the War of 1812 on thru the Revolutionary War.

The final demo is a fox hunt; the modern, kinder version.  12 horsemen, 11 dogs, and a scent dragger person (they have a real name but I can’t recall it) take to the fields to show us how it is done.  There are a few hiccups but we get the gist of it.   The scent dragger takes a head start to lay out the trail.  Soon the hunt master shouts the hunt is on and the dogs set off yipping, fanning out then regrouping in search of the scent.  Once found, the real barking begins as they and all the horsemen take off at a full run zigging and zagging hot on the trail.  It all ends when the dogs find the scent dragger and get treats.  Beasts and riders all seemed to have great fun.  Today’s event is complicated by traffic crossing the scent trail, including the aforementioned BBQ truck, and the throng of ill-prepared spectators (including us) some accompanied by their own befuddled pets standing in the hunt path.  It is a first for us as Fox Hunt spectator.

We stop at a local soft serve place, the Wind-Chill Factory on the way home.  The sundaes are yummy.

Rogers Rock Trail

3.3 miles and an 800 foot elevation change…all rock clambering we discover.  The trailhead to Rogers Rock is right here in camp.  It is a climb to a rock promontory that overlooks the north end of Lake George and is rated as moderate.  It is 50 degrees when we head out.  We each don a couple layers plus gloves and hats and we are off.  An easy start is quickly replaced by a steep challenging climb.  Trail marking is a bit weathered and tough to follow.  We shed layers and meticulously route pick to find reasonable footing.   It is definitely a more challenging hike than I anticipated but we are rewarded with a lovely view and a perfect rock outcropping to relax in the mid-day sun.  We try an alternate path down but it is not any easier and we encounter a new hazard, snakes. The sun is warming rock surfaces just enough to coax them out.  All we see are harmless non venomous ribbon snakes.  We arrive back at the trailhead with no twists or sprains, just a wet butt (mine) from a slide down a particularly long steep rocky section.

A Nexgener?

We make a routine fuel stop and I run in to pay.  The gal at the register turns and the first words out of her mouth are, “I see you are a nextgener”.  I am befuddled then realize that I have my Star Trek/Charlie Brown T-shirt on.  Ah, I get it and she must be a series fan.  Next thing she says is, “Have you been to the museum?”.  I am at a loss once again but she continues.  “There is a museum here in Ticonderoga.  It houses the complete collection of Star Trek The Original Series original sets.”  Original series actors come here regularly and they have themed fan weeks throughout the year.  It is a Trekkie’s dream come true.   I am not a true fanatic but enough of a fan that I might have to go check it out.  I will let you know.

Our goal was kayaking!

The middle section of Adirondack State Park around Saranac and Tupper Lakes is dotted with interconnected lakes/ponds.  They bill it as a miniature Boundary Water suited for day tripping or overnight canoe adventures.  It is also a major summering and breeding area for the Common Loon.  The combination seems perfect: paddle quiet water and watch for loons with their young.

Not this trip.  It has been rainy and cool since we arrived.  We never even get the boats in the water.

We did manage some reconnaissance for a return trip.  We drove Floodwood road.  It is a recommended access area for the local ponds and the address of St Regis Outfitters, a resource for route planning and general paddling advice.  There are backcountry camp sites in the Forest Preserve along the route.  Some might just work for us.   We stroll around camp.  Nearly all sites are large with easy lake access.  Kent hung the past two years of my medallions.  We were a bit behind!   We head into Tupper Lake for pizza.

Weather didn’t entirely spoil the stay.  I heard loons one evening and saw one in muted juvenile plumage paddle by camp.  A doe and fawn munched their way across mowed fields in camp.  Energetic little red squirrels chattered and scrambled tirelessly up, down, and around the pines.  Leaves in the area are in near peak fall color.  Brilliant reds, yellows and oranges meld with evergreens.  We have watched the pallet change since we arrived.  It is beautiful.

The VIC

We climb out of bed around 8AM.  It is in the 50s and has been raining on and off much of the night.  It seems to have finally stopped and we gather up and head to check out the VIC or Visitor Information Center at Paul Smiths College.  It has been recommended as a place with great marsh and bog nature trails good for birding, wildlife and unique plant-life.  Rain holds off for much of the day and we complete the Heron Marsh and Boreal Life Trails.  We meander along the shores of ponds, through dense stands of stately pine, and among carnivorous pitcher plants and stunted pines along bog boardwalks. Sunlight streaks through the canopy of forest zones and splashes off the brilliant fall color of the surrounding mountains.  We spot a deer standing so still among the trees that she didn’t even seem to blink her eyes.  Turtles are sunning in the ponds.  A family of otters plays.  Great blue heron are out hunting, ducks dabble and quack, and woodland birds flit about overhead. The first raindrops fall just as we get back to the car.  Perfect timing for a beautiful walk.

Adirondack Balloon Festival

We are signed up with the Northeast Hot Air RV’ers to camp for the three days just off the festival grounds (the Floyd Bennett Memorial Airfield) in Queensbury NY.  Our fulltime travel complicates getting parking documents but hopefully its all worked out now.  Kent makes a reconnaissance run in the car to find the entrance gate we are to use and confirms, we are all set.

We roll in, park the car in the towed lot, and make our way to the front row on the crest of the hill overlooking the launch field.  It is a hay field, just recently bush hogged, so bumpy underfoot and tire but the location is prime!

Night one.  It is cold and winds gusting to 23 mph.  Launch is VERY unlikely but we take the shuttle down to the field to check things out anyway.   The crowds are surprisingly large.  We maneuver through the souvenir tent emerging with only my medallion.  We grab cider donuts and a gyro for diner.   We see that the balloon pilots are making their way to the briefing tent.  The answer is as anticipated.  There will be no flying tonight.  We are a bit disappointed but know we have a couple more chances to see a launch.  We head off to warm up and to bed early.  We need to be up at 5am.

Day two is perfect.  The early launch is a go.  We are down on the field again right among the balloons as they inflate and take flight.  We get a glimpse of the patterns and colors as the first hump on the ground forms then they pop upright like brightly colored lightbulbs.  Each one makes me smile as we are swallowed up by the action all around us.  Winds aloft move them off from the field quickly once they are airborne.  All but a couple colorful orbs are gone.  Left standing among them are a huge Panda Bear, an enormous Snowman, and a towering Tasmanian Devil; the lovable special shapes.

The evening launch is splendid. The air is calm and the balloons linger over the field.  We are among them again for the launch and revel in watching them overhead.  Two new special shapes come in; a lion and Mr. sun.  20 or so balloons, including the special shapes, stay grounded for a tethered moonglow.  The pilots pulse the burners to create a light pattern.  That part is not overly impressive tonight but it gives us a little more viewing time for the special shapes and a nice closing for a great day.

One more launch.  We sleep in a bit and watch the final mass ascension from the hilltop where we camped.  Weather is great for ballooning.  As they lift off, I am reminded that this perspective is great too. One gets a better feel for how grand the whole thing is.  The balloons swirl in the light currents over the field moving right, left, away, and toward as they mill about seeming to linger just so we can enjoy watching them.

This festival is great fun and I can’t imagine an easier way to experience it than with this group from this hilltop.  People are friendly, helpful and fun.  The shuttle runs regularly and smoothly.  They have activities and games for kids and adults.  There is no traffic to contend with and you can come and go through the day between the launch field and home.  There is free coffee and donuts in the mornings and bargain priced Stewart’s ice cream throughout the day.  What more could you want?

Sasquatch Festival and calling contest

Mid-day Saturday is quiet at the festival and we have our choice of two fun sounding local gatherings to attend, a Moose Festival in Indian Lake or the Sasquatch Festival in Whitehall.  Sasquatch wins out and just 30 minutes north in Whitehall we find the Sasquatch Festival. Who would miss a thing like that.  There are true believers; some giving a series of talks on the history of sasquatch, sightings, scientific investigations, investigative methods and more.  Others have booths exhibiting plaster cast of footprints and swatches of hair as proof.  You can buy state map stickers indicating every state where there have been “verified” sightings.  It’s a lot of states.  A few followers combine bigfoot with other non-worldly sightings and unexplainable phenomena…they are all aliens don’t you see.  Kent is excited to see that they include Mothman, the Point Pleasant WV legend, as a peer of Sasquatch.  They even have t-shirts!

 

On down the row of booths we find the more routine festival folks.  Local clubs and organizations with food booths.  The guys in the cub scout booth had bigfoot on their shirts in the middle of their club logo.   Artisans offering crafts of every type; candles, clothes, jewelry, lawn ornaments, home decor and more plus additional food offerings.  Many booths give a nod to the guest of honor offering bigfoot themed items in their collection of wares.  New this year, a beer garden.  Oddest festival-y thing offered here?  A   guy has a box truck with a target in it set up as a mobile axe throwing booth!  There is a bit of everything and it is great fun.  We depart with a couple shirts and some delicious local food.  Regrettably, we will miss the Sasquatch calling contest. We need to get back to the balloon festival to catch the evening launch.

We are going to have to go back to Whitehall one day.  Not so much for the Sasquatch fervor but to tour a marvelous castle perched above town.  A group of locals bought it for back taxes in near ruins, restored it, are maintaining it and offering tours.  The group had a booth at the festival and an enthusiastic 60 something docent sold me on having to see it.  Not sure when but I plan one day to have tea in their castle, Skene Manor.

For now, we are moving on to Fish Creek Pond campground near Saranac Lake in the Adirondack State Park.