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

Sunday, October 13, 2024

Steamboats, Seneca Lake, and the Haudenosaunee


A BOATHOUSE ON SENECA LAKE - Longtime Finger Lakes resident David Beardslee Schwartz has penned a clever collection of Seneca Lake-region tales from his view at his Lodi boathouse that will bring back memories and trigger a torrent of emotional remembrances in his newly released book, Waiting For The Steamboat at Lamoreaux Landing.

The memories and emotions certainly were there for me when I read his 19 entries beginning with a heart-wrenching tale about the first patient at the Willard Asylum titled Woman in the Crate. His finale, Waiting on the Steamboat,  engages the reader in a bit of time travel (as he does in other chapters) and ends a memorable book-long stroll down memory lane.

A bit of self-disclosure: David Beardslee Schwartz is my brother-in-law and although he has published other books, this very personal work is the book I have been waiting for him to write for decades. Sitting in the very boathouse to which he refers often in Waiting For The Steamboat, he has spun some of these stories as he and I chatted. He is a practiced story teller and it's great for me to see him publishing them in this volume for a wide audience. 

The ability to communicate in writing and music stretches across the Beardslee generations to whom this book is dedicated. Waiting For The Steamboat is introduced with a poem by Brett Beardslee, David's nephew known locally as Poet Laureate of Hector and for his musical performances around the Finger Lakes. The sentiments in Brett's poem, entitled The Old Outboard, will be familiar to anyone who has ever unsuccessful tinkered with an outboard motor with a carburetor. David writes wistfully himself about a 1958 outboard in the third chapter in which he skillfully describes the engine's aging - just like himself.

In addition to many personal memories linked to Seneca Lake and the region, David writes at length and with empathy about the Native American Haudenosaunee people, upon whose land virtually all people around Seneca Lake are living.

Across all 19 chapters, the author skillfully mixes his personal stories with current life in the Fingers Lakes. There's the sense of the slow-creeping shadow of age in Waiting For The Steamboat as time passedBut it's not wholly negative. David's writing offers more echoes of acceptance and contentment of a life well-lived.

The book will be officially released Monday, Oct. 21 at Rasta Ranch Winery on Route 414 in Hector from 5 to 8 p.m. to which the public is invited. During Monday Night Blues with Brett Beardslee, David will read from his new book and play some blues with his cousin.

Michael J. Fitzgerald Oct. 13 2024

 

Monday, April 23, 2012

Inergy industrial expansion - not 'business as usual'

SENECA LAKE, New York, USA - A project to store propane (and eventually natural gas) in salt caverns alongside and below Seneca Lake is making an ugly industrial mess on the shore of the lake, just a few miles north of Watkins Glen in the Town of Reading.

The project is actively opposed by thousands of area people and businesses. An application is currently under consideration by the NY State Department of Environmental Conservation.

While the application works it way through the system, however, Inergy (and its wholly owned subsidiary U.S. Salt) have been busy, carving up a huge swath of the Seneca Lake shoreline and creating an industrial mess that looks more like something from a Mad Max movie (Mad Max's World of Industry) than the sylvan shores people expect to see in the beautiful Finger Lakes.

The four aerial photos below show how far along the project is. The Inergy company has gone to great lengths claiming this is just business as usual, similar to earlier local efforts to store lesser amounts of propane in the salt caverns.

It is not. This is a huge expansion as the photos show.

And the Quantitative Risk Assessment done last fall - paid for by Inergy - is being kept under wraps by the company. Inquiring minds would like to know what that risk assessment says.

If the project is approved by the DEC and the Town of Reading, people of the area will have to worry about possible propane explosions, fires, heavy truck traffic, railroad tanker car accidents, brine pond spills into the lake, possible earthquakes and a host of other pollution problems still under study.

And the Inergy firm has made it clear in various SEC filings that if it all goes sideways (as in some of the scenarios listed) it might not have the resources to pay for the devastation, cleanup and the various legal claims that would be forthcoming.

Here's a link to Gas Free Seneca, the local group coordinating efforts to keep Inergy - a Kansas City, Missouri company - from being allowed to continue: Gas Free Seneca website

These photos of the site on the west side of Seneca Lake were all taken by Gas Free Seneca.