Hikes led by Springwater Trails are generally held on Sunday afternoons and appear in this calendar in green.
- Categories
- Tags Barry Childs and Kathy Cloonan barry@africabridge Bike Bill Cooke Bob & Cindy Wagner Bob Menz (bert6952@yahoo.com) Bristol Hills Branch CANCELED Clarks Gully CLWA Colorado Trail Dena Munsell Dog friendly Finger Lakes Trail FL FLT Gene & Georgia Binder (585) 236-5384 Gene and Georgia Binder (585) 236-5384 Greenway Gully Gypsy moth Hemlock Hike Jayne Affolter Jeanie Smith John L Katherine Humphrey? Kayak Kelly Rell Landowner Liability Leader: Mark Lehigh Valley Trail Mark & Linda Hopkins Mark and Laure Allen (585) 662-9305 Mark and Linda Mary Ann Devey (315) 573-0774 Mary Lou Wenthe (585) 208-4337 Melissa Mike and Jenny Johnson Mitchellsville mjkcloonan@frontiernet.net Mushroom Foray Naples Nunda POSTPONED Rick Henchen Saralinda Saralinda Hooker Schribner Sharon Boldt Sharon Boldt (boldtbs@yahoo.com) sugarbush hollow Summer Weekly Wendy Stevenson
Sun | Mon | Tue | Wed | Thu | Fri | Sat |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Lehigh Valley Trail Hike or Bike in Rush, NY 2:00 pm Lehigh Valley Trail Hike or Bike in Rush, NY @ Stevens-Connor Lehigh Valley Lodge Apr 6 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm Come join us for a leisurely hike or bike along the Lehigh Valley Trail on Sunday April 6th! With its flat even surface, the trail is a hidden gem for walking, hiking, jogging, biking. It is a vital link in … Continue reading → | ||||||
Ontario County Park at Gannett Hill Hike-Naples 2:00 pm Ontario County Park at Gannett Hill Hike-Naples @ Lookout Parking area Apr 13 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm ![]() This is one of our group’s favorite hikes! Ontario County Park at Gannett Hill is one of the highest points in Ontario County and located in the scenic Bristol Hills. At an elevation of 2,256 feet above sea level, you’ll … Continue reading → | ||||||
No Hike-Easter Break 2:00 pm No Hike-Easter Break Apr 20 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm No hike has been scheduled for this date due to the Easter Holiday. Enjoy the break, spend time with loved ones and eat chocolate bunnies. This will give you something to burn off next week | ||||||
Hike Rob’s Trail – Hemlock Lake side 2:00 pm Hike Rob’s Trail – Hemlock Lake side Apr 27 @ 2:00 pm – 4:00 pm Join us on Sunday April 27th to hike the west side of Rob’s Trail, the DEC/Nature Conservancy property in the northeast corner of Hemlock Lake! Options are to hike out and back to the south along the trail from the … Continue reading → |
-
Categories
-
Tags
Barry Childs and Kathy Cloonan barry@africabridge Bike Bill Cooke Bob & Cindy Wagner Bob Menz (bert6952@yahoo.com) Bristol Hills Branch CANCELED Clarks Gully CLWA Colorado Trail Dena Munsell Dog friendly Finger Lakes Trail FL FLT Gene & Georgia Binder (585) 236-5384 Gene and Georgia Binder (585) 236-5384 Greenway Gully Gypsy moth Hemlock Hike Jayne Affolter Jeanie Smith John L Katherine Humphrey? Kayak Kelly Rell Landowner Liability Leader: Mark Lehigh Valley Trail Mark & Linda Hopkins Mark and Laure Allen (585) 662-9305 Mark and Linda Mary Ann Devey (315) 573-0774 Mary Lou Wenthe (585) 208-4337 Melissa Mike and Jenny Johnson Mitchellsville mjkcloonan@frontiernet.net Mushroom Foray Naples Nunda POSTPONED Rick Henchen Saralinda Saralinda Hooker Schribner Sharon Boldt Sharon Boldt (boldtbs@yahoo.com) sugarbush hollow Summer Weekly Wendy Stevenson
Springwater Trails hikers and others may be interested in a number of program presentations (lectures) in the Mount Morris Winter Discovery Series 2017. In March, of particular salience in present day current events, as pertain to the Erie Railroad high bridge (Portage viaduct) spanning the Genesee River and constructon of a replacement bridge for this 140+ year old current trestle bridge, are the March 18th & 25th programs, among other programs of potential interest.
The annually recurrent Mount Morris Winter Discovery Series is offered January through March, on varying theme and topics. Each year holds about one dozen new program presentations.
The Mount Morris Winter Discovery Series 2017, is titled: “Life in America: Winter Discovery Series 2017”. Facilities provided by The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Mount Morris Dam and Recreation Area, located at the northern end (east side of the Genesee River) of Letchworth State Park. All lectures are free of charge and will be held in the Visitor Center on Saturdays at 1pm. The Visitor Center, aka the William B. Hoyt II Visitor Center, which opened in 1999, is an enclosed heated venue with indoor restrooms and is located adjacent the east side of the Army Corps of Engineers’ Mount Morris Flood Control Dam (which was constructed 1948-1952). Often light refreshments are served at programs of the Winter Discovery Series. [Please note, do not confuse this A.C.E. Visitor Center with the Letchworth State Park – Humphrey Nature Center which is located in Letchworth State Park on the west side of the Genesee River and further south of the A.C.E. Mt Morris flood control dam.]
Mount Morris Dam and Recreation Area Visitor Center is located at 6103 Visitor Center Road in Mount Morris, NY 14510. For more information call (585) 658-4790.
There are numerous exhibits and educational experiences in the Visitor Center, a brief opportunity may exist to view and experience some immediately prior to or after the Winter Discovery Series program. Albeit, the Visitor Center is generally not otherwise open in the winter season.
March 11th NON-TRADITIONAL 19th CENTURY NUNDA WOMEN
As the women’s rights movement gathered strength in the late 1800’s, Nunda women were leaders in business, politics, medicine, art, education, and more. Hear their stories. Presenter – JOAN SCHUMAKER, Local Historian
– – – 2017 Saturday Dates (all program MMWDS dates listed) – – –
Author Arch Merrill described Letchworth Park as the place where Nature touches the Genesee with a magic wand and like Cinderella, the river leaves behind its ordinary garb and dons robes of dazzling splendor. Discover this geological Cinderella — how it came to be and explore the many interactions between man, river, and land. Presenter – JIM POMEROY, Biologist
January14th THE IMPACT OF WWI ON LIVINGSTON COUNTY: Life on the Homefront
In commemoration of the World War One Centennial, this program will provide an overview of the prelude to U.S. involvement and local civilian efforts and sacrifice during the Great War. Presenter – AMIE ALDEN, Livingston County Historian
January 21st SUFFRAGISTS IN EVERY TOWN AND COUNTY: How NY Women Won the Vote
November 2017 marks 100 years since New York State signed woman’s suffrage into law, three years before the U.S. passed the 19th Amendment. This was a milestone for the state and a transformative moment in American democracy. Equal opportunity is as important today as it was when Susan B. Anthony was arrested in Rochester for attempting to vote. Presenter – CHRISTINE RIDARSKY, Rochester Historian
January 28th EARLY WOMEN PHYSICIANS OF THE GENESEE COUNTRY
Did you know that two of the female students and one professor at the first truly co-educational medical school in the country came from the Genesee Valley? Uncover a fascinating story which shows how our region contributed to women’s ability to study medicine alongside men -a radical theory at the time. Presenter – JANE OAKES, Local Historian
February 4th OUR NATIONAL PARKS
Our National Parks have been called “the greatest idea America ever had.” This program covers the background of our National Park Service from its official creation in 1916, but really starts with the formation of the world’s first National Park -Yellowstone. Presenter – CRAIG BRAACK, Allegany County Historian
February 11th THE BURNED OVER DISTRICT
In the 19th century, New Yorkers were gripped by waves of religious revivalism. New groups established churches and utopian experiments all vied for converts. Examine the Shakers, Millerites, Mormons, Spiritualist and Evangelists and the impact that they had on social change. Presenter – PETER WISEBY, Genesee Country Village and Museum
February 18th WATER-POWERED MILLING
Follow the development of water-powered milling from strong beginnings in a new nation to its appearance in the Genesee Valley. We’ll journey through the pioneering discovery of the natural resources of the mighty Genesee River that excited the early American settler to pursue mechanization and industrial innovation. Presenter – ALEX PIERCE, Local Historian
February 25th THE GIANT CARDIFF – America’s Greatest Hoax
A ten-foot tall petrified giant is unearthed on a farm near the small rural town of Cardiff, New York in 1869. The word of the discovery soon ‘echoed’ across the countryside and it was quickly sheltered from the weather by a canvas tent to protect paying gawkers from the whims of New York’s weather. Presenter – RICH HAMELL, Geologist
March 4th LEGACY OF MILITARY SERVICE
Join Steve on a journey of his family’s military connections to conflicts during King Henry IV’s usurpation of the English throne in 1399 to King Philip’s War (1675), the Revolution, War of 1812, Civil War and on to the modern era. Presenter – STEVE CLARKE, Genealogist
March 11th NON-TRADITIONAL 19th CENTURY NUNDA WOMEN
As the women’s rights movement gathered strength in the late 1800’s, Nunda women were leaders in business, politics, medicine, art, education, and more. Hear their stories. Presenter – JOAN SCHUMAKER, Local Historian
March 18th LIFE IN THE LAND OF LETCHWORTH FROM NATIVE TIMES TO MODERN DAY
People have lived along the Genesee River for thousands of years. Join Tom as he explores life in the Valley through local stories, maps, photographs, diaries, and more. Highlights include the experiences of the Jemison family, early pioneers, the Letchworths, and some 20th century park families. Presenter – TOM COOK, Local Historian
March 25th The ROLE OF CAMP PORTAGE AND THE ERIE RAILROAD IN THE AMERICAN CIVIL WAR
Learn about the creation of Camp Portage (a Civil War Training Camp in Letchworth State Park) and the use of the Erie Railroad to transport Union Soldiers to the front lines! Presenter – MAX SZEMPLENSKI, Railroad Historian
2:00 p.m. (Climbers: plan to arrive at 1:30 if wanting to help with a car pool to the parking lot at the bottom of Parrish Hill Road. Please see below).
Please note that the clocks go forward in the early hours of this day – don’t forget, or you’ll be there an hour late!
Come join us for Maple Weekend Fun! This event is fun for all ages from children to adults learning the process of making maple syrup.
We are located at 625 County Road 28 Palmyra, NY 14522 (address is Palmyra, but we actually live in Farmington). We are on the corner of 28 and Rushmore Road. The Sugar House driveway is off Rushmore Rd. Maple Weekend is over the course of two weekends: March 18, 19 & 25, 26 from 10am – 4pm.
ALL YOU CAN EAT PANCAKES (Buttermilk & Buckwheat) served onsite with maple sausage and Stoney Ridge Farms fresh Maple Syrup of course. Adults $7 & Kids 12 & under $5.
There are seveal activities for families to enjoy. Sugar House tours including an explanation of the sap to maple syrup process, history of making maple syrup, and history of our farm. We have an area where the tapping process is explained and kids have the chance to drill and hammer a tap. There are several stations in the sugar house tour with the chance to taste the four different grade of maple syrup, maple cookies, maple butter, and several different samples and recipes available. We will have a petting zoo including cows, goats, pony, and pigs. Also, we will have Barnyard Boggers monster truck truck and 4wd international tractor on display for pictures.
We will have heat and the event goes on no matter what the potential weather throws our way. Please wear appropriate clothing and footwear for the event.
We look forward to seeing you there! Please message or call (585-733-0814) with any questions.
Come join us for Maple Weekend Fun! This event is fun for all ages from children to adults learning the process of making maple syrup.
We are located at 625 County Road 28 Palmyra, NY 14522 (address is Palmyra, but we actually live in Farmington). We are on the corner of 28 and Rushmore Road. The Sugar House driveway is off Rushmore Rd. Maple Weekend is over the course of two weekends: March 18, 19 & 25, 26 from 10am – 4pm.
ALL YOU CAN EAT PANCAKES (Buttermilk & Buckwheat) served onsite with maple sausage and Stoney Ridge Farms fresh Maple Syrup of course. Adults $7 & Kids 12 & under $5.
There are seveal activities for families to enjoy. Sugar House tours including an explanation of the sap to maple syrup process, history of making maple syrup, and history of our farm. We have an area where the tapping process is explained and kids have the chance to drill and hammer a tap. There are several stations in the sugar house tour with the chance to taste the four different grade of maple syrup, maple cookies, maple butter, and several different samples and recipes available. We will have a petting zoo including cows, goats, pony, and pigs. Also, we will have Barnyard Boggers monster truck truck and 4wd international tractor on display for pictures.
We will have heat and the event goes on no matter what the potential weather throws our way. Please wear appropriate clothing and footwear for the event.
We look forward to seeing you there! Please message or call (585-733-0814) with any questions.
For the third year in a row, the Springwater Trails Annual Meeting will be held at the Springwater Center on Mill St Extension above the hamlet of Springwater. This scenic property overlooking the Springwater Valley, and half-way between Webster Crossing and the Hamlet is very appropriate for Springwater Trails. Our thanks to the entire staff of the center for their welcome.
Prior to the Annual Meeting. we will enjoy the many well marked trails that loop through open fields and forested areas. The trails through the fields are mowed and there are wonderful views of the surrounding hills and the valley below. Two of the trails parallel a creek bed and gorge and one loops to another seasonal creek. Keep your eyes open for the Marker Tree near the creek.
With a foot of snow having fallen Tuesday and Wednesday, this will be a true winter hike with snowshoes or skis being appropriate.
It looks like it will be a good day for spring cross country skiing – set your wax for 40 degrees, and come enjoy the open fields. We will plan one hike for skiers and the others for snowshoes or boots.
Following the hikes, we will set up a pot-luck dinner in the kitchen. Everyone interested in Springwater Trails is welcome to the pot-luck and the Annual Meeting, and to the hike.
There will be three hikes. Wayne Coger and Susan McCallum, longtime Center members, will be available to answer questions and help with directions. Well-mannered dogs are welcome to hike with us. Dogs should stay in cars during the social.
If you are able to join us for the social after the hike, please bring a dish to pass and a non-alcoholic beverage or consider making a cash donation. There is a complete kitchen to store and reheat the dishes as needed. Please bring slippers as shoes and boots will need to be removed at the door.
Directions
From Springwater: Take Rt 15 to the West from the flashing light at the intersection with Rt 15A. Follow Rt 15 up the hill. Turn right at the top of the hill on Mill St Ext (just across the road from Harpers Ferry Rd) – you will see a Dead End sign. Springwater Center is the third driveway to the left (0.1 mile along Mill St. Ext., you will see the sign). Follow the driveway for 0.6 miles to reach the Center parking lot. The main building is just past the parking lot.
Additional directions to the Center are here.
Following the Sunday hike, join us for the Springwater Trails, Inc, annual meeting. The purpose of the meeting is to elect officers for 2017 and to plan for the upcoming year. Following the business portion of the meeting, Fran Gotcsik of Lima, NY, will share some of the experiences she has had during 26 years of working to launch new hiking and multi-use trails across New York. In 1991 Fran became the Local Coordinator for the Genesee Valley Greenway, and in 1996, she became the Executive Director of the Friends of the Genesee Valley Greenway. In 2003, Fran joined Parks and Trails New York, where she is currently a Senior Consultant.
The Social and Annual Meeting is open to everyone interested in Springwater, trails and hiking. Your comments and advice are welcome during the meeting. Voting for officers and other business brought up at the meeting is limited to members of Springwater Trails. Honorary memberships are awarded to hikers who have completed 20 group activities during the previous calendar year, to members of the executive board who have served for a full year term, and to individual who have served as a seasonal hike coordinator during one season. Membership forms will also be available at the meeting and memberships for 2017 can be purchased for $10 ($15 for a family).
There are six elected officers: president, vice president, secretary, treasurer, VP of hiking, and trail master. We will be accepting nominations for all six offices during the annual meeting, and all members will be allowed to vote for one nominee for each office. The duties of each officer are described in Article IV of the By-Laws of the Springwater Trails, Inc.
Agenda
- Welcome to members and friends
- A review of 2016 and plans for 2017
- Nominations from the floor for Officers
- Election of Officers
- Trails of New York – Fran Gotcsik
- Adjournment
Victor Hiking Trails (VHT) will be leading a hike this Saturday 3/25/2017 at 8:00 a.m. from “the Apple Farm” to Boughton Park, around the two ponds (aka former reservoirs) in Boughton Park and back to “the Apple Farm”, a distance of 9 to 11 miles, rated as strenuous and hilly. Guesstimate of 3.5 – 4 hour hike (thus end time on 12;00 Noon listed in the heading of this hike event announcement is an approximation). **Traction Devices (TDs) will be very helpful for this hike (understated), given terrain and known conditions at this time of year.
The hike is part of the hike series of Genesee Valley Hiking Club (& GVHG Meetup). All hikers are welcome. Anyone who is interested is encouraged to sign up on the GVHG Meetup. – – For this hike, parking and hike start point is at the Apple Farm. – –
(Of note, Springwater Trails hikers have hiked a few of our weekly Sunday hikes in Boughton Park.)
As in part described, this hike will cover not only parts of Boughton Park but also substantial mileage on the Seneca Trail and the spur trail that is within “the Apple Farm” (aka the Victor Apple Farm).
FYI – as was in the news – “the Apple Farm” (in Victor), located at 1640 NYS Rt 444 (on the west side of Rt 444), sustained a fire in the sales and office building on November 4th 2016, a total loss. The remainder of the farm structures and orchard remain intact, and intent is to rebuild a sales and office building.
The Apple Farm is one of many property owners who grants access for hiking trails on privately owned property.
One thought for a possible future hike – – plan a hike in the autumn at the Apple Farm, and provide for post hike apple picking (perhaps as a social event itself, or as part of a social that may be held at the Apple farm where picnic tables are provided, or separate from a social). A symbiotic hike event, such that the Apple Farm as landowners provides hiking trails (and access thereto), and hikers support the business of the landowners by purchasing apples and other goodies.
– – Back in the day, if this author recalls correctly, Maple Syrup from Sugarbush Hollow located in Springwater (owned by dearly departed Chuck Winship, a ST hiker and avid supporter of ST) was offered for sale at the Apple Farm store. – –
Come join us for Maple Weekend Fun! This event is fun for all ages from children to adults learning the process of making maple syrup.
We are located at 625 County Road 28 Palmyra, NY 14522 (address is Palmyra, but we actually live in Farmington). We are on the corner of 28 and Rushmore Road. The Sugar House driveway is off Rushmore Rd. Maple Weekend is over the course of two weekends: March 18, 19 & 25, 26 from 10am – 4pm.
ALL YOU CAN EAT PANCAKES (Buttermilk & Buckwheat) served onsite with maple sausage and Stoney Ridge Farms fresh Maple Syrup of course. Adults $7 & Kids 12 & under $5.
There are seveal activities for families to enjoy. Sugar House tours including an explanation of the sap to maple syrup process, history of making maple syrup, and history of our farm. We have an area where the tapping process is explained and kids have the chance to drill and hammer a tap. There are several stations in the sugar house tour with the chance to taste the four different grade of maple syrup, maple cookies, maple butter, and several different samples and recipes available. We will have a petting zoo including cows, goats, pony, and pigs. Also, we will have Barnyard Boggers monster truck truck and 4wd international tractor on display for pictures.
We will have heat and the event goes on no matter what the potential weather throws our way. Please wear appropriate clothing and footwear for the event.
We look forward to seeing you there! Please message or call (585-733-0814) with any questions.
Looking for brochure.or mailing list so I can receive it in the mail.
Nothing opens up for mailing list.
There’s all kinds of very bizarre ads and post for viagra and other drugs above on calender page.
Please let me know if there’s a brochure available