February 7, Thursday – Friends of Grafton Lakes State Park Winter Meeting at 7 pm. Join this diverse group of Park users in supporting Grafton Lakes State Park. Call to pre-register at 279-1155.
February 9, Saturday – Feed the birds at 9 am. Join our bird enthusiast Bob Davis to hear how to feed birds in your own backyard and discover the wonder of our feathered friends. Participants will receive information so they can sign up to do the Great Backyard Bird Count at their own homes over President’s Day Weekend. Meet at the Park Office; pre-register please at 279-1155.
February 10, Sunday – Animal Tracks and Traces Introduction – 1:30 pm. Meet at the Park office. Who left that trail in your backyard? Don’t assume it was your cat or your dog, but even if it is, they have stories to tell! Come on out to this introduction to reading stories left in the snow and transform your family into nature detectives. The cost is $2 per person or $5 per family. Snowshoes are available, if conditions permit, on a first come, first serve basis. Call to pre-register at 279-1155.
February 20, Wednesday – More Animal Tracks and Traces at 10 am. A second class for those who attended our intro to tracking on February 10 or who really want to go deeper into the art of animal tracking. The cost is $2 per person or $5 per family. Snowshoes are available, if conditions permit, on a first come, first serve basis. Call to pre-register at 279-1155.
February 22, Friday – Winter Survival Skills at 10 am. How do the animals survive the winter? What are some skills that would help us manage if we were out all night in the cold?
We’ll talk around a fire and build some shelters in the snow. The cost is $2 per person or $5 per family. Call to pre-register at 279-1155. Meet at Shaver Pond Center, 194 Shaver Pond Road.
February 23, Saturday – Cherry Plain State Park Outdoor Day from 10 am to 3 pm. Enjoy hot cocoa, snowshoeing and outdoor activities at this free Park event. Parking space is limited so please carpool.
February 25, Monday – Full Moon Hike at Grafton Lakes State Park at 6 pm. Come see the Park in a different light. Meet in the Main Parking lot, enter via the Winter Entrance. Call to pre-register at 279-1155.
February Programs At Dyken Pond Environmental Education Center
Sunday, February 3 – A Day on the Trail with Dan Yacobellis from 9:30 am to 3:30 pm. Choose one animal to follow for the day. By following one animal, you can learn many things about its behavior and possibly find den sites or the actual animal. Pre-registration is required and can be done by contacting Lisa at dykenpond@fairpoint.net. Enrollment is limited to 15 people; the spaces fill quickly. We need a minimum of six people, so please register early. The cost is $20, $15 for members.
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Hubbard Hall Opera Theater Presents La Traviata
Hubbard Hall Opera Theater (HHOT) will present Verdi’s most popular opera, La Traviata, in six performances February 7 to 17 in the GE Theater at Proctors, 432 State Street, Schenectady, NY. Performances are fully costumed and staged, sung in Italian with supertitles and feature a 22 piece orchestra and live singers in front of a fifty foot hi-definition screen with stunning projection design by Caite Hevner.
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Barbara A. Brown
Stephentown – Barbara A. Brown, 58, passed away on Tuesday, January 29, 2013, at Berkshire Medical Center in Pittsfield, MA, after a long, courageous battle with cancer.
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Janette M. Moseley
Hoosick – Janette Marion Brix Moseley of West Hoosick, NY, passed away peacefully in her home on Saturday, January 26, 2013. Born March 6, 1922, on the Indian Hill Farm in Hoosick NY, Janette was the daughter of Marius Brix Kjelgaard and Stella (Hendricksen) Kjelgaard. For sixty-eight years she was the loving wife of Paul Raymond Moseley, who died in 2011. She was almost ninety-one years old when she passed.
She spent her childhood growing up in the Hoosick/Breese Hollow area during the depression. Her father and mother were farmers who had moved to the area from North Dakota. Janette was the youngest of three children; her older sister and brother, Erland and Genevieve, both pre-deceased her. The early school years were spent attending a one room country schoolhouse in Breese Hollow, walking to and from it during the fall, winter and spring. It was during this time period that she became acquainted with her life-long best friend, Marion (Goodermote) Hynick, who lived nearby. Later, she attended Walter A. Wood High School in Hoosick Falls, graduating in 1938. While in high school she fancied a boy by the name of Paul Raymond Moseley, but it wasn’t until a few years after graduation, when her brother Erland introduced them, that she got to know the one she would soon marry and spend the rest of her life with. Paul and Janette were wedded in Holy Matrimony on August 29, 1942, after which they moved to a parcel of farmland located in West Hoosick. It was there that they settled and raised five children, Paula, Gerry, Harold, Ann and Scott. She had various interests and hobbies that ranged from horseback riding and raising Boston terriers to co-piloting a Cessna 172. She was a member of the International Flying Farmers, and she organized a ceramic business that she ran on the farm. This latter venture turned into a more particular pastime, porcelain doll making. Dolls became a tremendous passion of hers, and she quickly became an avid collector and adorer. Occasionally, she would travel to different community establishments, such as the Danforth Center, Health Center or the Senior Center to give “doll talks” and demonstrations of doll fabrication and history.
Janette definitely loved and enjoyed her life to the fullest, always happy and always positive, but what she really cherished the most was the simple time spent with her husband, family and friends and the get-together at Christmas for the group dinner, fellowship and the celebration of her Lord – Jesus Christ. She was a proud and devoted member of the West Hoosick Baptist Church for over 50 years; when in her later years she was sometimes referred to as the “Matriarch of West Hoosick,” she would play along and give the queen’s wave.
Janette is survived by her children, Paula and husband Don Baker, Gerry and wife Donna Moseley. Harold Moseley, Ann and husband John Mayhew, Scott and wife Terry Moseley, along with 13 grand children and 12 great-grandchildren. She is pre-deceased by two grandsons, Timothy Scott Moseley and Glenn Edward Baker, and Harold Moseley’s wife, Lucy Springer Moseley.
Visitation hour is on Thursday, January 31, from 1 to 2 pm at the West Hoosick Baplist Church. The Funeral Service follows immediately at 2 pm in the same location. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made in her memory to the West Hoosick Baptist Church, 1339 Buskirk-West Hoosick Road,Buskirk, NY, 12028. Arrangements arc under the care of the Mahar Funeral Home, 43 Main Street in Hoosick Falls, NY.
Marilynn Thurber
Hoosick/Hoosick Falls – Marilynn (Hill) Thurber, 72, passed away on Monday, January 28, 2013, at the Southwestern Vermont Medical Center in Bennington, VT. She had resided on Windy Hill Road in the Town of Hoosick, NY.
Born on December 10, 1940, Marilyn was the daughter of Malcolm Hill of Hoosick Falls, NY, and the late Cretta (Benway) Hill. She graduated from Hoosick Falls High School. In her earlier years Marilyn was a hairdresser; she later worked at St. Gobain in Hoosick Falls. Marilyn was a member of the First Baptist Church in Hoosick Falls.
She is survived by her father, Malcolm, and friends, Wendy and James Larson.
Funeral services were Wednesday, January 30, at 11 am from the Mahar Funeral Home, 43 Main Street in Hoossick Falls. Burial followed the service at Woodlands Cemetery in Cambridge, NY. Friends called at the funeral home on Wednesday from 10 to 11 am.
Kevin Harding Jensen
Stephentown – Kevin Harding Jensen, 45, of Grottoes, VA, died suddenly on Sunday, January 20, from injuries received in a two car accident in the Town of Stephentown, NY. Born December 19, 1967, in Detroit, MI, he was the son of Barbara Harding Farah of Lompoc, CA, and Paul C. Jensen.
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The Life Of George Holcomb – Taking Care of Crazy Gideon
Tuesday, May 9, 1826: We worked on said Rodgers Farm sowing oats. At night I took the single wagon and my wife went and carried our babe George Pease to Lebanon to Doctor Right’s and he looked at the swelling on my child’s cheek and let us have some salve to put on it. I called home by way of John Bull’s and got a chest of cake.
Thursday: Today I went to election to Simon Cranston’s and supported Archibald Bull in preference of Lane. I carried gingerbread and pies, cider and egg cider for sale. I cleared about six dollars.
Sunday: Today my wife and I rode to Dr. Wright’s with our child to see if the swelling was fit to open, but it was not.
Monday: Today we cross plowed our flax ground with our mares but at sunset the bay mare lost her colt. Today we began to plow sward land for corn. We plowed but very little for it was too warm for our oxen.
Wednesday: Today I sent to H. Platt’s store and paid nine cents for one pound of salts for our bay mare. Wm got them, and tameric bark to give said mare.
Thursday: Today I took the single wagon and my wife went and carried our babe George Pease to Doctor Wright’s and had his cheek lanced. This forenoon I rode up to the Shakers and got trusted four dollars and 76 cents of Monson’s office and agreed to pay in corn at 63 cents per bushel.
Saturday, May 20: Today old Mrs. Barnhart was thrown from a wagon. Her horse ran away. She was returning home to Hoosic from brother Wm’s and two of her daughters, but they were not hurt, and Wm took our single wagon and put her and a bed and fetched her from Calvin Carpenter’s home to his house.
Sunday: Today Wm took said Barnhart wagon and horse and carried the two Barnhart girls home and returned home tonight and rode one of their horses.
Tuesday: Today Gideon Barnhart came here from Hoosic. He is crazy. He came without a hat or shoes. Tonight I had him come up from Wm and I took him in a chamber and we were fastened in and we went to bed and slept very well.
Thursday, May 25: Today old Mr. Barnhart and his son Joseph came here with a double wagon after Gideon, but he had cleared out this morning.
Friday, May 26: Today old Mr. Barnhart returned home without his son Gideon.
Tuesday, May 30: Today Mr. John Mott’s wife died. It is thought that her death was caused by a family fight, bruised and took cold.
Tuesday, June 6: This afternoon Wm went after his wife’s brother Gideon that was crazy and had gone to Lebanon a disturbing the school and others. Tonight I stayed to Wm’s and helped take care of him. He was no particular trouble only to watch him.
Wednesday: Today brother Wm’s wife’s mother had got well enough to ride home with the mail carrier.
Thursday: Today Wm stayed home to take care of crazy Gideon and this afternoon his brother came and took our single wagon and carried him home to Hoosic.
Many Attend The Grafton Lakes State Park Winter Festival
submitted by Liz Wagner
The 28th Annual Winter Festival and Ice Fishing contest at Grafton Lakes State Park was a big success with an estimated 2,500 people in attendance over the course of the day’s activities.
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Fatal Collision On Route 22 In Stephentown
by David Flint
A head-on collision in Stephentown on Sunday evening, January 20, resulted in the death of a Virginia man. Three people from New York City in the other car were seriously injured. State Police reported that Kevin H. Jensen, 45, of Grottoes, VA, was driving a white 2000 Plymouth Voyager north on Route 22 when for some unknown reason he crossed the double yellow line and collided head-on with a gray 2011 Lexus SUV. Jensen was pronounced dead at the scene by the Rensselaer County Medical Examiner’s office.
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