This section is a modification of the old News page.
I am hoping to go into detail about many issues, both positive and negative,
currently facing the Adirondack region. I have left some of the old news
items here for you to read through. I will hopefully be expanding many of
them into their own pages in the future. So check back soon, hopefully I'll
have some new information up.
Conversely, paddlers are victorious in the December, 1998 landmark
decision Adirondack League Club v. Sierra Club, which upheld the public's right to river access.
This sign, warning of avalanche dangers as well as
listing necessary items for a backcountry trip, can be found at many
trailheads in the High Peaks. This particular photograph was taken
January 8, 2000, at Adirondack Loj.
In a very well-publicized avalanche on Wright Peak in mid-February 2000,
one skier was killed and several others were wounded, one critically. The
slide the skiers were attempting to telemark on was unstable due to
Hurricane Floyd; there was no vegetation or soil of any kind to hold the
snowpack in place. The skiers, reportedly very experienced, were warned both
verbally and by signs posted at numerous trailheads. As a side note, many
trails affected by Floyd have been cleared due to massive efforts by
volunteers, the DEC, and the professional trail crew of the Adirondack
Mountain Club. However, there are still miles of trail covered in blowdown
that will not be cleared out until spring at the absolute earliest. Look for
signs posted at trailheads for more information.
The Whitney tract, recently acquired by the State for inclusion in the
Forest Preserve, was designated a Wilderness area in mid-January 2000. This
means the exclusion of motor vehicles from the large tract surrounding
Little Tupper Lake, what was previously the largest completely
privately-owned lake in the Adirondacks. Not only will motorized vehicles
such as ATV's, snowmobiles, and 4-wheel drive vehicles be forbidden from the
area, powerboats, personal watercraft, and airplanes will also be
prohibited. With this restriction in place, the 4-mile-long pristine lake
will remain a haven for loons and paddlers alike. On a kayaking day trip to
the lake in August 1999, I counted nearly a dozen loons in several hours,
attesting to the cleanliness of the waters. With the current designation of
a Wilderness area, hopefully the area will remain this way.
It was recently announced (3/2/99) at a meeting of my local chapter of
the Adirondack Mountain Club that
N.L. Industries, the owners of
the McIntyre Mine north of
Newcomb, may be interested in selling the mine property. The mine ceased
operations in 1982, and the land has been largely unused since then. The
holding of 11,000 acres of prime Adirondack real estate includes Lake
Henderson, the Preston Ponds, several miles of the upper Hudson River, some
of the Opalescent River, and several other smaller ponds, streams, and
hills. Several major trailheads into the High Peaks lie in this parcel,
including the Upper Works trailhead into Indian Pass, Lake Colden, and Mt.
Marcy, the trailhead for the Santanoni Range, and a trailhead frequently
used by those climbing Allen and also those looking for an alternate route
into Flowed Land. Hikers currently have the right to pass through the N.L.
Industries' lands, but cannot camp, build fires, canoe, or bushwhack on the
property. This would be a prime addition to the Forest Preserve, especially
considering that one of the primary reasons for the initial conservation
effort in the Adirondacks was to save the sources of the Hudson
River.
In one more of a string of conservation victories, Albany is closing up
a deal that will preserve all 139,000 acres of Champion Paper land within
the Blue Line. The State will pay $30 million for a conservation easement on
110,000 acres of the property and outright ownership (and inclusion into the
Forest Preserve) of the remaining 29,000. The entire property is divided
into three tracts: one just west of Stillwater Reservoir, one northwest of
Cranberry Lake along the South Branch of the Grass River, and the other
along the St. Regis River, just north of the St. Regis Canoe Area. According
to the periodical Adirondack Explorer, with the completion of this
land deal, 250,000 acres have been preserved at a price of $200 million
since George Pataki became Governor in 1995. The historic Whitney
acquisition, in which the State preserved 51,000 acres of prime real estate
surrounding Little Tupper Lake for $17 million, was also made under the
reigns of Pataki. Regarding the Whitney property: against the wishes of many
ATV'ers, Jet-Skiers, and snowmobilers, all the land that New York acquired
outright was declared a wilderness, meaning that the usage of any motorized
vehicle is prohibited.