Bear at Casey and Kayla's House - Bear Sighting in Lake Luzerne, NY
Casey and Kayla have only been in their house for less than a week. We (the Jarrell's) were over with Kayla's family for a house warming dinner. Before Dinner, Colbie was taking their new puppy out to the restroom when she came running back in the house and said, there is a bear out there. To which our reply was, Colbie, Are you sure it was a bear. and she said, I know what a bear looks like! When we went out to investigate, this video is what we saw . . . a mama bear and two baby cubs in Casey and Kayla's back yard. The cubs ran up a tree and mama bear started hissing at us. They then ran off.
Sacandaga Outdoor Center Whitewater Rafting Trip
Lansing High School Class of 2018 High School seniors enjoy a fun filled whitewater rafting ride down the Sacandaga River in the Adirondack Park with the Sacandaga Outdoor Center, Hadley, on June 2, 2018. This is a video composite of the photo shoot I was doing that day for the Adirondack Explorer in the Lake George / Hadley / Luzerne corner of the Adirondacks
River monster 2019 Lake George Escape
Lazy River Floating with the family
Cooperstown NY - Bayside Inn
Bayside is located on Otsego Lake, just seven miles north of Cooperstown. Travelers can relax at the private beach, canoe, kayak or enjoy a lakeside cookout. Thirty rooms, 11 fully-equipped cottages and 60 boat slips complete this Cooperstown Lake Vacation.
more information at - ThisIsCooperstown.com
How New York can implement Great Lakes Compact (July 2009)
Folks will be surprised there are hundreds of diversions in the Great Lakes. Any removal of water from the Great Lakes for a consumptive use is considered a diversion, Dave White of New York Sea Grant said in this July 2009 clip from Syracuse's News 10 Now.
The eight states and two Canadian Provinces bordering the Great Lakes are looking to control where that water gets diverted to, if at all. That's how we got the Great Lakes Compact.
The bordering states and provinces want to be the ones making those decisions. There is pressure to share the water, but researchers say the Great Lakes only recharge themselves once every hundred years and the water needs to stay right where it is.