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  • Kathleen Moser named assistant DEC commissioner

    Posted on December 21st, 2011 Phil Add a comment >>

    A longtime conservationist has been named assistant commissioner for natural resources at the state Department of Environmental Conservation.

    Kathleen Moser was picked to replace Christopher Amato, who left the post earlier this month after four and a half years on the job.

    Kathleen Moser

    Kathleen Moser

    Moser’s new responsibilities include oversight of the Forest Preserve in the Adirondacks and Catskills.

    Adirondack Council spokesman John Sheehan applauded the appointment.

    “She’s a capable person and has a good knowledge of the Forest Preserve, especially in the Adirondacks,” he said.

    Neil Woodworth, executive director of the Adirondack Mountain Club, got to know Moser when she was head of the eastern New York chapter of the Nature Conservancy.

    “She worked very hard with us to promote the Environmental Protection Fund and was an important ally as we tried to secure funds for land protection,” Woodworth said.

    In recent years, Moser has worked for the World Wildlife Fund as well, according to her LinkedIn profile. Just before taking the DEC job, she had served on the boards of the Mohawk Hudson Land Conservancy and the Capital District chapter of the New York League of Conservation Voters.

    Moser has two degrees from Duke University, a bachelor’s in botany and a master’s in forest productivity.

  • Help the world; watch a ski film

    Posted on December 12th, 2011 Phil 2 comments Add a comment >>

    Want to do something good for the world? Then watch the new Teton Gravity Research ski film at the Lake Placid Center for the Arts this Friday night.oftr-box2

    Proceeds from the ticket sales will benefit the Adirondack Ski Touring Council and the Barkeater Trails Alliance, two nonprofit organizations that maintain trails for cross-country skiing and mountain biking in and around Lake Placid.

    The film, One for the Road, follows some of the world’s best skiers on the road and on the slopes, whether in Jackson Hole, Japan, Iceland, or Alaska.

    The doors open at 7 p.m., and the movie starts at 7:30 p.m. There will be prizes and a raffle.

    Tickets at the door cost $12 (or $6 for children under 12), but you can purchase them in advance for $10 (or $5) by clicking this link.

  • Ex-IP official to head DEC Region 5

    Posted on December 9th, 2011 Phil 2 comments Add a comment >>

    A former International Paper official has been named director of the Region 5 office of the state Department of Environmental Conservation.

    In his new post, Robert Stegemann will oversee an office that, among other things, manages the eastern two-thirds of the Adirondack Park. He begins on Monday, replacing Betsy Lowe, who  resigned last month.

    “Bob’s impressive record in working to create a sustainable society and to preserve New York’s resources make him a natural fit for DEC,” said state Environmental Conservation Commissioner Joseph Martens. “In both professional and volunteer capacities, Bob has proven to be an exceptional environmental steward. Bob will be a valuable asset to DEC and the eastern Adirondacks community.”

    For the past two years Stegemann served as a natural-resources and public affairs adviser for nonprofit groups, according to a DEC news release. He had worked at International Paper for eighteen years, holding a variety of roles, including spokesman and manager of sustainability. He also served as spokesman for the Empire State Forest Products Association.

    Adirondack Council spokesman John Sheehan applauded the appointment.

    “He was the most outspoken of environmentalists among the timber-industry representatives in the Park,” Sheehan said. “And he has a good relationship with the commissioner.”

    DEC says Stegemann also has been a senior policy analyst for the Tug Hill Commission and has held volunteer positions with the Rensselaer Plateau Alliance, the Adirondack Research Consortium, the Adirondack Nature Conservancy and Land Trust, and the Northern Forest Lands Council.

    Stegemann earned a master’s degree from State College of Environmental Science and Forestry and a bachelor’s degree from Union College.

  • View exhibits work of seven photographers

    Posted on December 8th, 2011 Phil Add a comment >>
    View from Hurricane Mountain. Photo by Johnathan Esper.

    View from Hurricane Mountain. Photo by Johnathan Esper.

    Quick, think of an Adirondack photographer. What name jumps to mind? Is it Nancie Battaglia? Carl Heilman II? Mark Bowie? Nathan Farb? Perhaps the up-and-coming Johnathan Esper?

    If you’re a fan of any or all of these pros, you should love the Adirondack View Finders exhibit at View, the new arts center in Old Forge.

    View will be exhibiting the work of all five—and two other photographers, Clark Lubbs and Lesley Dixon—through March 3.

    The Explorer frequently runs photographs by Nancie, Carl, and Mark, and we once ran a spread of Johnathan’s photos, including the one above. We could say a thousand words in praise of their work, but we’ll let their pictures do the talking.

    Click their names to see the work of Carl Heilman, Mark Bowie, Johnathan Esper, Lesley Dixon and Nathan Farb. (Nancie and Clark do not have websites.)

    View is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Thursday; 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Friday and Saturday; and noon to 4 p.m. Sunday. Admission is $10 (no charge for children twelve).

    Adirondack chairs. Photo by Mark Bowie.

    Mark Bowie recently published a book of nighttime photography.

  • Adirondack Council: Protect Poke-o tract

    Posted on December 1st, 2011 Phil 3 comments Add a comment >>
    Burnt Pond cropped

    A view across Burnt Pond. Photo courtesy of LandVest.

    The Adirondack Council wants the state to purchase or otherwise protect a 2,257-acre parcel near Poke-o-Moonshine Mountain that is on the market for $2,275,000.

    Dubbed Burnt Pond Forest, the tract lies just southwest of Poke-o-Moonshine, bordering state Forest Preserve. It is being marketed by LandVest, a real-estate company that deals in timberlands the Northeast.

    Inside the fire tower on Poke-o-Moonshine Mountain. Photo by Phil Brown.

    Inside the fire tower on Poke-o-Moonshine Mountain. Photo by Phil Brown.

    In an online brochure, LandVest says the property contains six peaks, several trout streams, an eighteen-acre pond, and a trail system. The brochure touts the property’s timber value but also suggests that the pond would be suitable “for the development of a recreational cabin or second home.”

    Adirondack Council spokesman John Sheehan said the environmental group would like the state to either purchase the property outright or buy an easement that would forbid development. “We would like to see it protected as forestland with public recreation,” he told the Explorer.

    The council first called for the protection of this land in 1990, in one of its “2020 Vision” reports, subtitled “Realizing the Recreational Potential of Adirondack Wild Forests.” Written by the guidebook author Barbara McMartin, the report recommended a variety of land acquisitions to expand the Preserve’s Wild Forest Areas. (A companion report focused on Wilderness Areas.)

    McMartin, who died in 2005, recommended that the state purchase 3,660 acres north and west of Poke-o-Moonshine Mountain, a popular hiking and rock-climbing venue. She said Poke-o, which the state owns, “is just one of a cluster of mountains with exposed rock ledges, the nucleus of what could be a splendid hiking and climbing area.”

    The Commission on the Adirondacks in the Twenty-First Century also recommended in 1990 that the state acquire land around Poke-o. The commission was headed by George Davis, who also oversaw the publication of the council’s 2020 Vision reports.

    Burnt Pond Forest overlaps the tract eyed by McMartin and the commission. A comparison of maps suggests that more than half of Burnt Pond Forest’s acreage was targeted for the Forest Preserve.

    Champlain Area Trails (CATS) also wants the state to purchase or protect the land on the market. Chris Maron, the group’s executive director, said the property is ideal for hiking and cross-country skiing. He noted that it would provide an alternative hiking route to the fire tower on Poke-o-Moonshine’s summit.

    Dave Spiers, a LandVest broker, said the investment group that owns the property would be willing to sell tract to the state. “They’d be open to anybody who wants to make an offer,” he said.

    It appears, though, that Burnt Pond Forest is not on the radar screen of the state Department of Environmental Conservation. Asked if DEC would have any interest in purchasing the property, spokesman David Winchell replied in an e-mail that the department is not familiar with it.

     “The owner has not approached us about selling it to the state,” Winchell said, “nor is the parcel listed as a specific priority project in the Open Space Conservation Plan.”

    Sheehan, however, noted that the state has expressed interest in protecting land in the Champlain Valley, where Poke-o sits. He said the council will urge DEC’s regional open-space committee to take steps to protect Burnt Pond Forest.

    Given the state’s dismal fiscal condition, some Adirondack politicians have called for a moratorium on the acquisition of land for the Forest Preserve. Sheehan, however, said the parcel in question is small enough that the state may be able to afford it. If not, he said, an easement could be acquired for less than half of the purchase price.

    Click here to read LandVest’s marketing materials and view photos of the property.

    Click here to read my article on Adirondack Almanack about other timberlands marketed by LandVest.