Honeoye Inlet

On a very warm January day, 20 hikers from Springwater Trails met to explore the Honeoye Inlet area.

The Springwater Trails Hiking Group

The Springwater Trails Hiking Group

Part of the group stayed in the lowlands, exploring the high waters flowing through this Class 1 wetland that helps to protect the waters of Honeoye Lake.

WebN8249We all noticed how high the water was.  Sixty five degree weather two weeks after 18 inches of snow will do that.  When the water rushed through a culvert, whirlpools were formed, all rotating in the same direction. If you investigate, you will learn that in the northern hemisphere, the spinning earth causes whirlpools and hurricanes to spin in the counter-clockwise direction. But look at the movie again.  Aren’t the whirlpools going clockwise?  Clearly there are many more forces at work in addition to the spin of the earth.

Web_0260 The water was flowing down Blueberry Hill The rest of the group headed up Blueberry Hill to the east of the inlet. With the warm weather, the streams and the parts of the road were filled with water. We also enjoyed looking through the trees at the ridge across the valley, from Hunt Hollow, all of the way to Harriet Hollister.

Extreme Skiers in Hemlock Park – A Great spirit of adventure

Who would ever think you would find extreme down hill skiers who travel all around the world looking for snow in our very own Hemlock Park!  Level I skiers were spotted on the steps videorecording a shoot for this year’s movie.

At the Hemlock Lake hike on January 6, while the Climber and Tourist groups was hiking the outlet area, Chuck and I (the naturalistswere attracted by seeing a young man apparently skiing at high speed up the hill toward the lake.  Upon going to the berm by the lake, we found a group of 4 very polite professional young adults, probably in their 20s.  2 of them were recording motion pictures from 2 different angles.  One was operating a gas powered winch and the other was trying to perform the most amazing and difficult stunt we’ve ever seen on skis, and doing it, right here at Hemlock Lake.  I guess our two feet of snow caught their attention.

The skier took a rope, coming from the winch, and went to a spot, several dozen feet in front of the staircase leading to the berm.  The winch operator then turned on the motor and, when he engaged the gear, the skier, holding the rope, was pulled, at high speed, toward the staircase.  At a point before the staircase, the skier released the rope and, using Newton’s first law of motion, his forward momentum took him to a pre-made snow hill on the left side of the staircase and, from there, on the staircase railing, going up to the flat top of the upper staircase post.  There he turned to ski down the railing to the top of the lower post, do a 180, and jump off.  He did about a dozen attempts and then, the skiier and winch operator would switch.  Seem easy?  Think you could do it?  The 2 skiiers, who had excellant ski control, made over 100 attempts to perform the stunt, and one of them performed it successfully, and he, just once.  He did it when we weren’t there but we saw the movie of it on the camera.

This group travels all over the world, looking for opportunities to perform difficult and unusual stunts which the camera operators record and earn their income through the sale of CDs.  That day, one of the camera operators interviewed Chuck and recorded his very favorable impressions so now, with everything else, our Chuck is also a movie star, and they presented him with a complimentary CD.  In this country, it is often illegal to perform some of their stunts on public lands and they are often evicted by authorities.  They said that other countries are not as paranoid about “liability”.  That’s why they were doing this on a Sunday, when Smokey was not as likely to be around.

We left with the feeling of how great it is to be able to support yourself by enjoying doing something adventurous and challenging and looking forward to “going to work” each day.  I have a son who does this.  He runs a paragliding school in Maui and does what he loves to do.  He told me that we have only one life so, make it an enjoyable one.

Chuck was provided with a copy of last year’s video which can be watched at next week’s social at Melissa’s house after our hike in the Honeoye Inlet.

 

No Two Snowflakes are Identical

As we are all hoping that more snow will fall before our next hike, I wax040219a034s thinking about the history of the question “Are snowflakes all alike”?  You probably already know that under some conditions, flakes are simple shapes so of course some can be the same.  Check out MSNBC.

Wilson Bentley photographed snowflakes starting back in 1885.  It is his photographs of very complex snowflakes that started the slogan No two snowflakes are alike.  Have fun browsing the official site from the Jericho VT historical society.

If you are interested in growing your own snowflakes you might want to go work at Caltech.  Of course the research reported in Wired in 2001 may already be complete.

Honeoye Inlet Parking Area – West Lake Rd – Directions

Honeoye Inlet Parking west lake rdDEC Parking Area on West Lake Rd CR-36 (Honeoye Inlet),
Canadice, NY 14471
42.689380, -77.500197

The parking area is a small area on the east side of the road.

From Honeoye:  From Route 20A head south on CR 36 for 7.2 miles. Parking is on the left side.

From Naples: head north on CR 36 for about 8.5 miles.  Parking is on the right side.

From Springwater: Head north of Rt 15A and turn right onto Wheaton Hill Rd.  Take the first left on Canadice Rd (Co Rd 42).  Turn right after 0.8 miles to stay on Canadice Rd (Co Rd 42).  At the county line, this becomes Ontario County Rd 37.  At the white church in Canadice, turn left to stay on Co Rd 37.  Take the second right on Jersey Hill Rd.  At the bottom, turn right onto W Lake Rd (Co Rd 36).  The parking area is on the left about 4.5 miles south of Jersey Hill Rd.