Category Archives: Uncategorized

Goodbye Building 240

The structure once known as Air Force Research Laboratory Building 240 during the days of Griffiss Air Force Base, is in the midst of being demolished at the corner of Floyd Avenue and Hill Road. Ancillary buildings have already come down and asbestos abatement has begun at the site, with the main building expected to be completely cleared by June. Construction of a Stewart’s Shop on two acres at the corner of Floyd Avenue and Hill Road, is slated to begin toward the end of the year and expected be completed sometime in 2017 in conjunction with the State Route 825 project.

I worked on Bldg 240 projects from 1981 – 2004 when the building was closed. With the demolition moving at a fast pace there was a call for another reunion.

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goodbye 240 flyer

June 2-5

Thursday I took Stone to Valley Pathways in Technology Early College High School (VP-TECH) convocation.   Students who will be ninth-graders in September 2015 are eligible to be part of the first class of VP-TECH. VP-TECH enables students to begin their college and professional lives more quickly and with more support than the typical school-to-work pathway. Graduates of VP-TECH earn an associate degree in quality assurance and leave the school with the skills and knowledge in the advanced manufacturing industry.

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Eric went to the Middle School dance on Friday night. Saturday we mostly did chores: cleaning out the wood box, the garage, and then finish mowing the pastures.  Saturday evening we had Cranes over for dinner.  It rained Sunday morning then we had a brief hiatus before the skies opened and it rained and rained and rained.  Eric had a soccer game in Hamilton and it rained hard.  At least it was warm.  HP got crushed, score-wise.  But afterwards we went out with some others for dinner and that was fun.

Memorial Day Weekend

On my way home from work I picked up a truck load of mulch (2 cubic yards) which we spread around the landscaping early Friday morning before it got too hot.  Kathryn found an old kitchen broom and a roller and we waterproofed the south deck and two stairways.  There wasn’t enough left over to treat the north porch, but that has a roof over it anyway and we waterproofed it last summer.

I planted Kale, yellow wax beans, 13 tomato plants, peas, cucumbers, 15 eggplant, brussel sprouts, and three type of potatoes.  Saturday we picked up Eric from an overnight with his friends Andrew and Dakota.  We stopped and got flowers for Kathryn which she planted on Sunday.  I completed the garden by planting pumpkin, acorn squash, and zucchini squash.

I retrieved an 8′ telephone post from our new property and hooked up the brush hog – removing the draw bar for the 1st time ever.  I mowed trails including our two new trails, which need a little more maintenance – removing a couple of stumps from the angle trail and making a turn around on the Kincaid trail.  I took a shot at mowing most of the new property before calling it quits at noon.  In the evening we went to a picnic at Chris and Jack Skelly’s.

Monday I sprayed Round-up along the fence line, cut willows around the pond and Eric and I re-seated the steps by the pond.  The pigeon that was nesting under the lean-to appears to be trying to start a 2nd brood, so I cleaned out the next – it was pretty nasty, but fortunately dry. I got almost all of the new property mowed – cleaning up a lot of wild rose bushes.  I also mowed around Kirkland’s field trying to keep the brush from infringing on the field.

Jessup River Through Indian Lake

Skip & I rendezvoused at the Stewart’s shop on Route 12 in Mapledale at 7am with the intentions of paddling down the Jessup to Indian Lake to the NYS boat launch.  This involves a roughly ten-mile paddle; down 2.5 miles of Jessup River, five miles down the fjord-like arm of Indian Lake, then back south on the lake to the NYS boat launch.  We met at 7:15am, drove to the Route 30 bridge over the Jessup, left our canoe at the put-in, left a car at the launch/take-out and were on the water paddling by 9:15.

We paddled downstream on flatwater for 1.25 miles crossing over a couple of small beaver dams and trees in the stream.  Based on previous trip reports we were looking for a set of rapids.  In our case the water level was just sufficient for us to pick our way through the rocks and avoid portaging the ¼ – ½ mile rapids along the right bank.  Two miles from the start was the scenic Dug Mountain Falls (site of a notorious winter camping prank).

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Reaching Indian Lake we paddled north on a narrow arm of Indian Lake.  We stopped for lunch at one of the designated NYS campsites at the the northern most extent of our fjord.

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After lunch we reversed our direction around Long Island and headed back south to the NYS boat launch to our car.   Our total trip time was 3.5 hours including our ~20 lunch break.

Map of Jessup to Indian Lake

Crown Point Bird Banding

2016-05-18 Crown Point Bird Banding

Kathryn took the pop up camper up to Port Henry and volunteered at the Crown Point Bird Banding Station for a few days.  She said “I’ve been pecked and clawed and pooped on. I saw up close and personal birds I’m familiar with, birds I’ve never seen before and even one I had never heard of. I’ve “picked,” banded, measured, and determined sex and age. The birds were amazing. The people were helpful and patient, interesting and easy to be with. I learned a lot and had a blast at Crown Point Bird Banding station.”

Adirondack Avian Expedition

2016-05-10 Adirondack Avian Adventures

For Christmas I got Kathryn a gift certificate for her and a friend to go birding in the Adirondacks with Joan Collins at Adirondack Avian Expeditions.  Joan Collins is a New York State licensed bird guide, bird walk leader, writer, and speaker on ornithology topics. She has led walks and made presentations for many organizations including Audubon, the Adirondack Mountain Club, and the New York State Ornithological Association. Joan also belongs to the ranks of the intrepid Adirondack 46ers (having climbed all 46 peaks in the Adirondacks over 4,000 feet). Joan is a serious ear-birder and is fascinated by bird vocalizations/sounds.  Bird behavior, migration, and the history of North American Ornithology are among the many topics that interest Joan. She enjoys bushwhacking and camping in the Adirondack wilderness year-round.

Kathryn had a wonderful day birding with long-time friend Jane Moon, guided by Joan Collins of Adirondack Avian Expeditions although Kathryn was still sick with a stomach bug. She and Jane stayed at the Adirondack Hotel in Long Lake….old and quaint. The heat was off (old steam radiators) so Jane asked them to turn it on. Kathryn was messing around with the kindle and heard the radiators – really loud! – and thought “That noise will be hard to sleep through!” A few minutes later the windows look fogged so she got up….steam billowing out of the bathroom. Went downstairs to tell the clerk (fortunately it happened at 9:03 because they all leave at 930) and by the time we got back to the room, steam clouds are flowing into the hall. Apparently there was something wrong with the steam radiators! But she had a nice steam bath for a few minutes. Got moved but didn’t sleep well (had eaten a small supper but was still sick so had cramps all night).

The group got an early start Tuesday but it was darn cold and she got a bit hypothermic. It warmed up by 10:30 and was much more comfortable although the black flies came out but they weren’t really biting. She saw a lot of birds – 62 species by visiting locations in Newcomb, Minerva, Long Lake, and Tupper Lake . While the goal seemed to have been seeing as many black backed woodpeckers, grey jays and boreal chickadees as possible, we also saw a broad winged hawk feeding his mate, eagle, sand hill crane, kinglets, evening grosbeaks, a zillion warblers including pine, palm, nashville, yellow rumped, yellow, blackburnian, and of course all the usual back yard birds.

Black Creek 2016

Canoe trip down Black Creek with Matt Hay, Skip Shoemaker, Jack Bell, Kathryn Skelly Muller, Eric Muller, Dave & Jack Crane, Matt got to initiate his new solo canoe. Skip got to take his new knee canoeing. Jack & Dave got to resurrect an heirloom canoe. We saw a large porcupine and heard a lot of birds.  A pair of Canada geese proceeded us for quite a ways.  A nice 1st outing for 2016.

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Three Minute Thesis

The Oral Communication Center hosted the second annual Three Minute Thesis competition on April 30. Open to all members of the senior class, the competition offers cash prizes for the students who can most effectively summarize their senior projects in three minutes or less. This year’s competition hosted 15 students whose majors and interests ranged from post-colonial economics to concussion management for athletes.

Oral Communication Center Director James Helmer noted the herculean efforts the students went through in order to compete in this competition. With many theses consisting of over 50 pages of analysis, each student was expected to demonstrate their understanding and passion by condensing the most significant elements of their year- or semester-long research into a bite-sized presentation with minimal use of notes and visual aids.

To further up the ante, all presentations were judged by a panel of non-specialists. This year’s judges included actor, writer and producer Chub Bailly, retired medical technologist Robbie Dancy, Hamilton’s Student Fellowships Coordinator Virginia Dosch, Clinton School Superintendent Dr. Stephen Grimm, Senior Program Manager at Northrop Grumman Corporation Jim Muller, and Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute Museum Education Coordinator Kirsten Swartz ’12.

After the concise presentations, Michael Nelson was named winner. His talk, titled “People-Centered Growth: The Role of Corporate Social Responsibility in Employee Satisfaction and the Service-Profit Chain,” detailed his research on the importance of corporations’ behavior on both employee satisfaction and profit margins.

Nelson examined whether there truly was any connection between the behavior of a company, employee happiness, and stockholder gains. After analyzing more than  40,000 data points, Nelson was able to understand that these tenets of good business ownership were closely tied.

A close second was Elisabeth MacColl with her presentation “Ecoimmunology in Golden Eagles.” To examine the impact of different environments on the immune systems of these birds, MacColl worked with blood samples from specimens in different states. She then introduced pathogens into these samples and observed the results to begin to understand what environmental factors impact immunity in all types of communities.

The second runner-up Lindsay Arader presented her research “Peer Perceptions of Individuals with ASD: Reducing Stigmatization through Diagnostic Disclosure.” Arader emphasized the immediacy of her research with autism, noting the local efforts to increase awareness.

Arader used this anecdotal information to springboard into a discussion on the continued stigmatization of the growing number of individuals diagnosed with this disorder. Her research primarily focused on the impact that disclosing a diagnosis had on a group of impartial individuals. Arader was able to conclude that individuals are generally more understanding of behavioral differences when they are aware of a diagnosis.

The 15 seniors who presented their research represented a class of strong students quickly preparing to enter the post-undergraduate world with a firm understanding of exactly what they are capable of and are able to communicate effectively. In three minutes or less, that is.

According to its website, “Three Minute Thesis (3MT®) celebrates the exciting research conducted by Ph.D. students. Developed by The University of Queensland, the exercise cultivates students’ academic, presentation, and research communication skills. The competition supports their capacity to effectively explain their research in three minutes, in a language appropriate to a non-specialist audience.”

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Team Bummer Volleyball Tournament

Kathryn organized a team to compete in the 4th Annual Bummer Volleyball Tournament held at Dolgeville HS.  There were close to 250 people participating with 12 teams in the competitive division, 6 in intermediate and 6 in recreational – where we played.   Eric and I shared a slot and took turns playing with Scott, Kathryn, Beth, Bill and Billie Jo.  Eric did really well for his 1st tournament play. The tournament used women’s height nets which meant that everyone on our team could be a hitter.  Only one female was required on each team.  We played each team two games using rally scoring to 15.  There was one team of middle school aged kids – we gave the kids a ‘do-over’ on serving faults. 

The first game was a little …tense…shall we say….as we were unaware that the “norm” in the Recreational division was not to make any calls at all – carries were ignored,  people were totally in the net, and at one point they called us for 4 hits when one of our guys blocked something then we played it!  This woman from another team who was doing lines  told us “If you want to play by the rules, you should have been in the intermediate division.”  We explained we were trying to teach a 13 year old how to play and there were two of us over 60, one with double hip replacements, who know enough to know that having people in the net is how people get hurt and she said – I swear she said this – “Then maybe you shouldn’t be playing volleyball”  and walked away before I could respond.   Once we knew “the rules” (or lack thereof) we could adjust our play and did well.  Overall, it was a good  day and a good introduction for Eric; our friend Beth used it as something of a training session for him  and he did well.

Billie Jo and Beth both had long serving runs. We had a couple of good games.  Most of the players for Team Four left early so they picked up 4 good male players and were disappointed when they still lost. The 1st team we played, “The Settlers”, asked to play another game to 25 again at the end of the schedule; fortunately Billie Jo managed to rip off a long serving run that gave us a big cushion and we ended with a good game on a good note.  There were no action photos taken of the recreational division, but we did pose for a picture with the championship t-shirts.

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