An historic and iconic part of the development of New York |
I
admit I've been somewhat remiss in posting while I've been on this current
trek. I left you at Bradley International Airport in Windsor Locks, Connecticut
when I dropped my son off to fly back to Los Angeles. So, following is a quick
recap of this trip until tonight.
June
15 & 16, Sunday and Monday, Windsor Locks, Connecticut - another motel night,
completed a client project on Sunday and Monday morning. Monday afternoon
visited the New England Air Museum at Bradley International Airport -
definitely worth the time. Left Windsor Locks for the New London-Groton area.
June
17, Tuesday,
met and had breakfast with an old high school friend, Dave Marsh, who took me
on a tour of the area after breakfast including the New London U.S. Naval
Submarine Base and other interesting and historic sites. Great day. Left for
the Stamford area and met with John Florian, founder and publisher of
VoiceOverXtra, an online magazine for voice actors and voice-over professionals
(I've dabbled in that profession for over 30 years). Enjoyed a great seafood
dinner overlooking the Long Island Sound with John.
June
18, Wednesday,
drove from Connecticut into New York State and went to Cornwall on Hudson to
look up a part-time vandweller I met last winter in Florida. Found where she
lived, but she was on a trip to Vermont, so no meeting. Went on to Newburgh,
New York and spent the night there.
June
19, Thursday,
moved up to the Albany area where I spent the night, but not before attempting
to look up another old high school friend. Unfortunately, I learned he had
passed away about nine years ago.
June
20, Friday,
made my way further north to Saratoga Springs. I had exhibited there for my
fledgling recording business in 1968 at the Gideon Putnam Hotel. I also
recorded humor conferences in Saratoga Springs in the later 1980's and hoped to
visit the couple that ran the conferences. I was not able to connect on Friday
so I moved up to the Glen Falls area for the night.
June
21, Saturday,
dropped off a package at the post office that needed to be sent to a client in
Virginia. I then drove around Glen Falls where I had recorded a band festival
on March 29, 1969. I remember the date because I drove from and back to
Syracuse in a blizzard and it was my birthday. I then went back down to
Saratoga, drove through Skidmore College, went to the hotel where I recorded
the humor conferences and revisited the Gideon Putnam Hotel. I received a phone
call from Joel Goodman, the sponsor of the humor conferences and it turned out
he and his wife had been staying in Maryland to care for his mother. I headed
to Herkimer, New York for the night.
June
22, Sunday,
I explored part of the Erie Canal, the town of Herkimer and down to the Village
of Ilion. I discovered a beautiful little RV park and marina operated by the
Village of Ilion. So, I relaxed and stayed there for the afternoon. I stayed in
Herkimer again that night.
June
23, Monday.
I decided to go back over to the RV park and marina and do some housework on My
McVansion. Enjoyed a wonderful, relaxing day on the Erie Canal watching
pleasure boats pass by. I moved that night to New Hartford (just outside Utica,
New York.
June
24 - 26, Tuesday through Thursday, I took my time driving over to Syracuse going through
Clinton, and visiting Hamilton College, then Hamilton and visiting Colgate
University and then Cazenovia and visiting Cazenovia College. I had produced
record albums for all three of these colleges. Additionally, I provided sound
for a Richie Havens concert at Cazenovia College. This was all back in 1968 and
'69. I then made my way past Cazenovia Lake and made my way through East
Syracuse, Dewitt and finally Syracuse where I arrived at my friend, John and
Pat Hottenstein's home where I spent Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evening's
at their home parked in their driveway. John and I attended the Master's Degree
program in Television and Radio at Newhouse School of Communication at Syracuse
University from 1967 to the summer of 1968. John is also a United Church of
Christ Minister and officiated at my wedding to my first (and really, my only)
wife, Cynthia. John and Pat were wonderful hosts and helped me revisit and
remember my days at Syracuse, taking me around town and the university,
enjoying several meals at various restaurants, a minor league baseball game and
a dinner with their daughter, Kirsten, who I bounced on my knee when she was
six years old. This time I met Kirsten's daughter and her new granddaughter. I
even got to bounce three-month-old Caroline on my knee.
June
27, Friday,
I left John and Pat's after a wonderful reunion (after probably 30 years) and
began locating the places I lived while I was in Syracuse. I found three of the
four places on Friday. Sadly, two of them were in a nice, middle class area of
Syracuse. Those two places had declined considerably. One of them was about the
same or maybe slightly improved. I went back to the University and explored the
two Newhouse School buildings that had been added since I completed my degree 46
years ago. Impressive. I also met Dr. Rick Wright, a retired Newhouse professor
that John had mentioned to me on several occasions. It was serendipity. I
stayed in Liverpool, New York that night.
June
28, Saturday.
I explored downtown Syracuse and went to Camillus on the west side of town to
find the fourth place I had lived. Unfortunately, the brand new townhouse I
lived in at the Walnut West complex was now, also very seedy and not even close
to the new complex I lived at 46 years ago. I then went down through the
Village of Camillus and went to Marcellus where I had a friend who passed on
decades ago. From there I went over to Skaneateles, a beautiful, but very
touristy town at the northern tip of Skaneateles Lake, one of the Finger Lakes
of New York. I spent the afternoon on walking the town and relaxing on the
shore of the beautiful lake. I later took a ride down the eastern side of the
lake before returning back to Liverpool for the night again.
June
29, Sunday,
I met Dr. Rick Wright at the studio of what had been a legacy radio station,
WHEN, in Syracuse and enjoyed spending the day with him as his guest on the air
as he did his weekly six hour radio program. Once more I spent the night in
Liverpool planning to move on Monday morning.
June
30, Monday,
I drove north to Oswego New York, on the shore of Lake Ontario to see a city I
had only been to once before. It's an old city, but had a certain charm. It has
endured a couple hundred years of serious weather from Lake Ontario lake effect
storms. I then drove over to Fair Haven, New York. As a teenager in high
school, my parents took my sisters and me to Fair Haven for a couple summer
vacations. A family that attended the church we belonged to had a summer home
there. I learned to water ski on the Fair Haven inlet off Lake Ontario. That
night I moved to Greece, New York slightly northeast of Rochester where I spent
the night.
July
1, Tuesday,
I spent the part of the day at a State Park on the shore of Lake Ontario and
then made my way to Auburn, New York, a city between Rochester and Syracuse in
the Finger Lake region, where I spent the night.
July
2, Wednesday,
I drove around Auburn taking photos of numerous sites of interest to me
including one of the oldest penitentiaries in the U.S. and the cite of the
first death sentence carried out by electrocution in either the U.S. or the
world. I have to check my photos to confirm that.
July
3, Thursday,
I used my Gas Buddy application to find the best price on gasoline at the
Lakeside Trading Post in Seneca Falls, New York. The trading post is operated
by members of the Cayuga Indian tribe (numbering in the 400's in their native
land) and the gas was between 10 and 15 cents less expensive than the other
local stations. I spent the afternoon in Seneca Falls and met a very
knowledgeable museum curator at the Seneca Falls Visitor Center (and museum).
Tanya really made the history of the area come alive. I spent the night in
Waterloo, New York.
July
4, Friday.
I wandered around Seneca Falls a few more minutes, then Waterloo where I have a
connection, but she was visiting in the Pacific Northwest. My plan for the day
was to drive down the western shore of Seneca Lake from Geneva, New York (next
to Waterloo) at the northern end of the lake to Watkins Glen, a city at the
southern end of Seneca Lake. It's also the home of the iconic Watkins Glen
Grand Prix and Sports Car Club of America racetrack. And, of course, I visited
the racetrack and even shot some short video clips of some Grand Prix cars
doing time trials at probably 150 to 200 miles per hour. The next stop was
Ithaca, New York at the southern tip of Cayuga Lake where I spent the night.
Ithaca is the home of Cornell University and Ithaca College. I spent the night
in Ithaca.
July
5, Saturday,
I left Ithaca and traveled up the western shore of Cayuga Lake, fueled up at
the Lakeside Trading Post again when I reached Seneca Falls, then headed west
again with Macedon in my sights for a Saturday night layover. I was actually
backtracking to visit a museum I had passed several days before that was only
open three days a week and limited hours. Saturday and Sunday were two of those
days. So, my plan was to be relatively close to that museum on Sunday. I spent
the night in Macedon.
July
6, Sunday,
I went to the Antique Wireless Museum in Bloomfield, New York. I arrived in
Bloomfield about 12 noon, even though the museum was only open from 2 - 5 PM. I
found a nice shady place to park in the quaint village of Bloomfield. At 1:45
PM I pulled into the parking lot of the museum to await its opening at 2 PM.
Opening time came and went and no one ever showed up to open the museum. I
learned, by extenuating means, that the museum was not open this weekend. There
was no sign on the door and no notice on their fairly sophisticated Web site of
the closure. So, here is my thoughts on this place DO NOT WASTE YOUR TIME OR
MONEY TO GO THERE - IT'S AN EXPENSIVE HOBBY OPERATED BY SOME LOCAL HAM RADIO
OPERATORS WHO WANT LOTS OF TOYS TO PLAY WITH - AND HIDING BEHIND A 501c3
NON-PROFIT STATUS. I emailed my displeasure and anger about my time and fuel
money being wasted and the email address bounced back. This place is totally
not professional. I moved from there to Canandaigua, New York, another very pretty and old small city at the north end of Canandaigua Lake, another of the
Finger Lakes. I walked around the Main Street area and took photos then went to
the lakeshore and found a nice shady place to sit and relax while boat and
people watching. From there I drove to Geneseo where I spent the night.
July
7, Monday,
I made my way from Geneseo to a small town between Batavia and Lake Ontario
toward the western part of New York State. I walked around downtown Albion,
another old, small upper New York town. It was in pretty decrepit condition. I
made my way to the Walmart where I stayed for the night. A couple hours after I
had parked at the Walmart and as I was returning to My McVansion, a 40' Blue
Bird converted school bus (also, called a "schoolie" by other
vandwellers and RVers) was parked near my van. A young couple, Steven and
Lindsey from the Portland, Oregon area were the owners of this one of a kind
unit. We met and chatted. They had been living in Florida for the past year,
bought this bus in April, converted it and were on a long cross country trip
across the U.S. as they headed back to their home territory.
So,
that brings you up to date on my trek to this point. Most of the nights were
spent in Walmart parking lots on this trip other than the night in Ithaca when
I stayed in a Lowes parking lot and the three nights in my friend's driveway in
Syracuse. Of course, there were four nights my son and I stayed in motels since
My McVansion can't accommodate two.
There have been all kinds of sights, people and
places I've seen, met and learned about. I've taken hundreds of photos that I have
to edit. More will follow on some of my individual adventures on this trek in
later posts. This article only contains the highlights and chronology of the
travels. There is just too much to write about and far too many photos to
include in a post like this. Stay tuned.
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