Westspit Braddock Bay

Sunday, December 12, 2010

December at dusk

Angles of geese coming into the bay on winds from the far west are finding little open water on the bay today at dusk in mid-December. Ice as far as the sandbar, endless roaring of waves with no break, it feels like it does just before we're about to get a storm from the prairies of Manitoba. Posted by Barbara

Saturday, November 27, 2010

Late November Day on the West Spit

Waves have been crashing and spray whipping up along the sand bar, wind now coming in from the northwest while deep blue L. Ontario churns and boils. The west spit of Braddock Bay is less than a mile trail through weathered and splintering cottonwood trees planted at least a half century ago. The trail winds through live trees interspersed with white snags looking a bit scraggled and lonely against the gray and white clouds. The roaring wind is a sign that more wild weather is coming. Today the cold wind brought in some horizontal snow and despite a warming trend predicted, it will likely be one of the last days of the fall.
Posted by Barb
ara

Sunday, November 14, 2010

Saturday, October 30, 2010

Looking downstream in October


October 19
Salmon Creek about a half mile upstream of crossroads at Hilton, NY

Saturday, October 09, 2010

cornstalks on curtis hill


Everyday I traverse the Curtis Road hill, the southside of which looks like a long esker, a gravel-deposited ridge running west to east for about five miles starting at Townline Road and ending at Manitou Road where it dives down into the Salmon Creek valley. It just disappears. Now October, field corn and soybeans have turned this peaceful yellow-tan color and are often whipped by the coming November winds. The hill is treeless today and looks strangely bare except for the cultivated fields and occasional home, old farmstead, and what intrigues me the most . . . the tenant-farmers dwellings.

Saturday, October 02, 2010

again a dawning

Saturday, October 2, 2010 ~ Six am . . . brilliant southern constellations in Orion and the planets followed by startling blue clouds and gold-hued rising sun. All the years we lived on the east side of this bay, we watched the sunset over corn fields, but since moving west, I now look directly east into the sunrise over shining water . . . . wonder if this having an effect on me?

Sunday, September 19, 2010

The Gate is Now



Japanese Arrow Bamboo is just too strong a plant for most people, but it's beautiful . . . .

"The underlying fabric of the world sustains us" . . . this is a statement from "The Buddha," a film that describes the origin of Buddhism, a world view with ideas that are deeply ecological, interdependent, linked. . . then take a turn toward the human condition.

"The gate is now" refers to the concept that paying attention opens the inner door ~ outer and inner life touch at this gate of attention. To the extent that you pay attention to this moment, you have access to the universe within. Though this back-and-forth process, reality reveals itself without reasoning.


The inner life, the spirituality, the 'religion' of the buddhist is only 'taught' through the living, human being who 'walks, talks and laughs.'

All of the benefits of this approach to life are available to everyone, every moment and forever without allegiance to a doctrine, a theory, a dogma.

"Strive on untiringly,' Buddha said. His ideas, more a philosophy than a religion, arose in the fifth century BCE. For most of my life I have been taught to rely on, depend on and turn to 'reasoning' to back up my observations. Reasoning's foundation, logic or coherence, helps observation become science, a textbook agreement among us to approach things with prior evidence-based thinking and recording.



Science can be a buddhist practice when approached as continuous striving and review.


Spirituality is mental . . . an inner peaceful place, a sanctuary for our feelings, thoughts and observations, where even suffering and torment find a place.


The gate is now . . .the world is revealing continually . . .inner peace is at hand.

Posted by Barbara

Sunday, September 05, 2010

immerse yourself . . . .


Take a look at this exceptional video clip of waves washing ashore in Wayne County, New York . . . .
Pultneyville shore --- ChristinelikeCamera

Posted by Barbara

Friday, September 03, 2010

Wednesday, September 01, 2010

Pea Soup: Great Lakes backstory

You be the judge. Photo take August 31, 2010 Braddock Bay, Lake Ontario southshore
Why we're in gridlock about what's happening to the Great Lakes and who is in charge . . . 





  • 2009: President Obama anoints a 'czar' to over see the "Great Lakes Restoration Initiative" which seeks to fund many, many studies, programs, etc. etc. - hey, NY, where are you on this list?



  • 2008: the Centers for Disease Control never released a report, "Great Lakes Danger Zone" indicating the long, sick relationship between the water, its pollution and human health.




  • 1990-1999: we were too busy putting in computers to notice what was going on, but in the long run, computers will probably pull us out of this 'transboundary' mess.


  • 1987: Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement of 1972 was amended by protocol -- US and Canadian governments sign this Protocol promising to report on progress and calling on the International Joint Commission to review "Remedial Action Plans" in what are described as 43 "Areas of Concern."


  • 1978: Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement addendum promised a commitment to work together to rid the Great Lakes of "persistent toxic substances."---Hmmm . . . same year Love Canal comes to light.




  • Meanwhile, for decades, we are at the behest of the shipping industry, the mining industry, the chemical and allied industries who were just 'getting rid of waste', the lack of water treatment, runoff from agriculture, lawns, etc. etc.



Tuesday, August 31, 2010

who is cameron davis, great lakes 'czar'?


Cameron Davis, is special advisor to the EPA Administrator, Lisa Jackson, appointed by President Obama June 4, 2009 to oversee the "Great Lakes Restoration Initiative" [GLRI is funded FY2010-2014]. . . which has $475M to distribute basically to scientists and others with a track-record of commitment to cleaning up the Great Lakes. Davis was originally the director of the Alliance for the Great Lakes in Chicago. To monitor the progress/results, the GLRI has also funded an Accountability System which has to keep track of that drop of water from L. Nipigon all the way to the Atlantic Ocean at it floats by Anticosti Island, right, in Quebec.

So . . . in 2007, journalist Peter Annin who works for the Institutes for Journalism and Natural Resources, wrote "Great Lakes Water Wars" which was at least somebody trying to fathom it out. Does anyone out there know about any of this???? -- Posted by Barbara

Great Lakes Restoration . . .




OK . . . . "President Obama's 2010 Budget contained $475 million within the EPA budget for a Great Lakes restoration initiative which targeted the most significant problems in the region including invasive aquatic species, non-point source pollution, and contaminated sediment." Here is is: US EPA Great Lakes Restoration Initiative . . . . . Follow the money . . . This whole thing is being run out of Chicago: U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, Great Lakes National Program Office, 77 W. Jackson Boulevard (G-17J), Chicago, Illinois 60604-3511. --- Who knew????

-- Posted by Barbara

Time to ask 'at what cost,' agriculture?



Where do we swim, what water do we drink, when the L. Ontario shoreline from Nine-Mile Point in Wayne County to Bogus Point in Monroe County/NYS is inundated with primarily agricultural runoff steadily building massive algal blooms in which toxic bacteria are thriving . . . not to mention Sodus Bay which is simmering under a toxic blue-green algae blanket. Take a look at the incredible north-running rivers and streams: Genesee River, right, Irondequoit Creek, Salmon Creek, Buttonwood Creek, left, Northrup Creek, Fleming Creek and those that flow into the Genesee R. - Black Creek, Oatka Creek . . . . Ask yourself, with this massive water movement, incredible waterfalls, wildlife, fish and birds and humanlife ringing these watercourses, for whatever purpose has the US governmental agencies [EPA, DEC, SeaGrant, etc.] given a 'free pass' to agriculture? How in god's name has this lobby remained so powerful into the third millenium? Take a gander: US EPA calls Rochester Embayment "Area of Concern." If you look long enough at the 'partners' and 'stakeholders' over the past 50 years, you come up with one conclusion: all of the attempts to clean up the Great Lakes have failed because they were nothing more than buying time and pushing the problem off onto the next generation. Are you ever going to adopt organic standards, farmers and landowners? -- posted by Barbara

blue-green cyanobacteria algae and swimming, drinking water

What does the NYS Department of Health say about the algae blooms in the bays and ponds along the southern shore of New York State? "Blue-green algae, technically known as cyanobacteria, are microscopic organisms that are naturally present in lakes and streams. They usually are present in low numbers. Blue-green algae can become very abundant in warm, shallow, undisturbed surface water that receives a lot of sunlight. When this occurs, they can form blooms that discolor the water or produce floating rafts or scums on the surface of the water."

"What are the potential health effects from drinking or coming in contact with water containing blue-green algae?"

"Some blue-green algae produce toxins that could pose a health risk to people and animals when they are exposed to them in large enough quantities. Health effects could occur when surface scums or water containing high levels of blue-green algal toxins are swallowed, through contact with the skin or when airborne droplets containing toxins are inhaled while swimming, bathing or showering.

Consuming water containing high levels of blue-green algal toxins has been associated with effects on the liver and on the nervous system in laboratory animals, pets, livestock and people. Livestock and pet deaths have occurred when animals consumed very large amounts of accumulated algal scum from along shorelines.

Direct contact or breathing airborne droplets containing high levels of blue-green algal toxins during swimming or showering can cause irritation of the skin, eyes, nose and throat and inflammation in the respiratory tract.

Recreational contact, such as swimming, and household contact, such as bathing or showering, with water not visibly affected by a bluegreen algae bloom is not expected to cause health effects. However, some individuals could be especially sensitive to even low levels of algal toxins and might experience mild symptoms such as skin, eye or throat irritation or allergic reactions." -- http://www.nyhealth.gov/environmental/water/drinking/bluegreenalgae.htm -- posted by Barbara

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

waterworld of invaders

Here is the underwater weed world in Braddock Bay, NY - a vast tangle of Eurasian watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum) . . . . water chestnut (Trapa natans) . . . Curlyleaf pondweed (Potamogeton crispus) . . . fanwort (Cabomba carolina). . . duck weed or something like little green floating dots. There are both invasive plants and animals and the USDA National Agricultural Library knows, so does Cornell Cooperative Extension's Sea Grant.

Besides the weeds, there are perch, carp, pike, bowfin and little minnows that are so cute. -- posted by Barbara

Friday, August 20, 2010

existence is a thing of variable intensity

These waves wash ashore on a remote, untrammeled beach on L. Ontario at the end of the 'Owl Trail' and as I write, I can hear the whooo who who hooooot of an owl who yesterday was in the west woods and now is down along Salmon Creek to the south. It's dark already in late August, moon almost full over the bay and frogs singing again. Quiet. cool at last, a summer of swelter and rain. While driving up to Ridge Road a little while ago, caught a classic rock playlist with 'Hey, you get offa my cloud' starting to get everybody in the mood. . .and then 'Landslide' but this time not by Fleetwood, but the Dixie Chicks.

Ah, dogs barking at the night . . . . calm down, Jackson, it's just Friday night.
-- posted by Barbara

Thursday, August 12, 2010

just below the surface


It's already getting to be mid-August and we can feel fall in the air -- different winds picking up off the lake. As beautiful as blue L. Ontario is, we know that there's more to this than scenery. There are chemicals still in the lake sediments, invasive mussels, snails, fish, eels, fluctuating lake levels which affect shoreline animals like mink and otter, as well as the marshes, impending wind farms and hydro-diversion in the Niagara R. and constant runoff from agriculture, lawn chemicals, waste water treatment. Blue-green algae blooms, giant green blobs of floating algae and now water lily beds which were never there before. Where have we been sleeping while the great lakes just seeped in this and we along the shore let it go on?

This image, right, was taken in early August when a powerful off-shore breeze pushed the waves even higher. Image taken by ChristineLikeCamera.
-- posted by Barbara

Lake Winnebago lake sturgeon almost at the edge of extinction


A fantastic group of fish biologists in the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources studied the centuries-long decline of sturgeon over a 20-year period and decided to do something about it: restore habitat, raise fry in hatcheries and release to a series of streams that feed into L. Michigan. The spawning sturgeon are coming back to the original streams after swimming long distances in the Great Lakes. The scientists are adept at this and developed imprinting techniques when they are about to be released. It's incredible -- see Sturgeon Underwater. Apparently, lake sturgeon are picky spawners. "In their spawning beds they like crushed limestone, stones of all sizes and coal cinders dumped by boats more than 100 years ago. They need depths of more than 15 feet and a swift current. It takes 15 years for males to reach sexual maturity and females won't lay eggs until they are 20 to 25 years old. The eggs can be a third of her weight so after spawning it takes two to seven years for the fish to spawn again." Sturgeon spawning is featured in "Mysteries of the Great Lakes" which is playing all around this summer.
-- posted by Barbara

Science North's "Mysteries of the Great Lakes" !!


Must see: Mysteries of the Great Lakes -- a large-format film produced by a consortium under Ontario's Science North with director and producer iMax expert David Lickley. Some of the sponsors of this film: Great Lakes Science Center in Cleveland, the Ontario Science Center in Toronto. It chronicles the history, geology and state of the lakes with special focus on the restoration of sturgeon accomplished by the Wisconsin DNR. Spectacular photography including images of Agawa Canyon petroglyphs and the woodland caribou of the Slate Islands in northern L. Superior are combined with the first person story of Ronald Bruch who spearheaded the sturgeon restoration project in Wisconsin. Go Wisconsin! And thank you David and crew. I saw this film today in Rochester, NY at the Rochester Museum and Science Center's Strasenburg Planetarium. -- posted by Barbara

Wednesday, August 11, 2010

Great Lakes, a mysterious fog

Not since Gordon Lightfoot sang of the wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald off Superior's southeast shores in 1971, has the true nature of the Great Lakes been captured. Lightfoot, a Canadian, who loved Georgian Bay, the "sixth great lake" [which is virtually unknown in the US] explored the history and drama of the lakes naming each lake and linking them back to native legends. At right: looking out onto L. Ontario from Salmon Ck. as it flows into Braddock Bay, NY.

Lake Huron rolls, Superior sings
In the ruins of her ice water mansion
Old Michigan steams like a young man's dreams,
The islands and bays are for sportsmen.


And farther below Lake Ontario
Takes in what Lake Erie can send her
And the iron boats go as the mariners all know
With the gales of November remembered.


In a musty old hall in Detroit they prayed
In the Maritime Sailors' Cathedral
The church bell chimed, 'til it rang 29 times
For each man on the Edmund Fitzgerald.


The legend lives on from the Chippewa on down
Of the big lake they call Gitche Gumee
Superior, they say, never gives up her dead
When the gales of November come early.


From "The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald" by Gordon Lightfoot

But the entire Great Lakes Basin with its continental divides, class five+ rapids and whirlpools in the Niagara River, the many, many islands, shoals, submerged wrecks, rivers, streams, creeks, beaches and rocky shores, is in serious need of a consciousness-updating. The Voyagers and their canoes did get some play in "Black Robe" which at least opened up the Huron history to contemporary thinking, a little. Oh, there is Hemingway's 1925 "Big Two-Hearted River" based on the real Two-Hearted River in upper peninsula Michigan; Paddle to the Sea by Holling Clancy Holling which actually is a true cross-border story; and Carl Sandburg who wrote this haunting poem . . . .



The Harbor



Passing through huddled and ugly walls

By doorways where women

Looked from their hunger-deep eyes,

Haunted with shadows of hunger-hands,

Out from the huddled and ugly walls,

I came sudden, at the city's edge,

On a blue burst of lake,

Long lake waves breaking under the sun

On a spray-flung curve of shore;

And a fluttering storm of gulls,

Masses of great gray wings

And flying white bellies

Veering and wheeling free in the open.
More!! Why not stories of both/either the "Thousand Islands" at the entrance to the St. Lawrence R. or the "Thirty-Thousand Islands" in Georgian Bay? Time to find what inspires, what tells the true tale. I'm on a journey, I know it. . . . . . .

Wednesday, August 04, 2010

Braddock Bay Swan Family


A lot of people don't like the mute swans on L. Ontario such as the NYS DEC. Cygnus olor do live here on the bay - this photo was taken on Salmon Creek which flows into Braddock Bay. In the winter occasional tundra swans - cygnus columbianus - visit. I think trumpeter swans - cygnus buccinator - are seen, too. But all in all, the nature of the mute swan is questioned by naturalists. In the winter I have seen entire flocks of swans in formation beating their wings as they take off from the bay seemingly flying to more inland marshes upstream. It's honestly breathtaking to see and hear.









Tuesday, August 03, 2010

Lake Sounds

"Rose Marsh" -- one of the last uninhabited, undeveloped
beaches along L. Ontario in Monroe County,
For more: ChristineLikeCamera
-- posted by Barbara

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Reawaken the Great Lakes Basin!

Reawaken the Great Lakes Basin ~ An Idea whose time has come . . . .
You can vote here: Ideas to be presented to President Obama in a national review of where we want to go environmentally
It is all part of an effort called America's Great Outdoors -- posted by Barbara

























More than enough recreation, beauty, history, trail potential and international understanding through linking with the always-enthusiastic Canadian hikers, etc., the Great Lakes Basin is powerful, under-rated and very accessible. Let's link trails, especially cycling trails, throughout the region. Give it a thorough review for possible national/international designation -- perhaps creating a new category for mutual agreement, interest and a world-model for cooperation. Already a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve - Niagara Escarpment, look at the whole picture and help educate on the formation of the basin, its resources and its future.

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Baby Trees by ChristineLikeCamera

Thanks to Christine for this amazing live action . . . . these look like American Beech. -- posted by Barbara

Dawn


Early bird

When the days are getting longer and the sun is arcing away from the northwest and coming to its most southerly point on the horizon, jump up at five am and check out the spectacle. Photo taken in June.

Today it's actually late July so the chicory and queen anne's lace are full out with white asters and fleabane in bud. A sandpiper keeps chasing us away from its nest and the absence of tenants at old Skinner's Marina has allowed more and more birds to take up residency on the docks. . . caspian terns, gulls, swallows . . . swan families are about . . . out farther into the bay, cormorants. The canadian geese are gone . . . heard about an eagle winging about. Today the sun moves more and more toward its winter station.
-- posted by Barbara

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Roamers, ramblers and trespassers demanded access to nature

Who owns what and who can walk where and why?

Look at what happened in the 1930s in England with a group of people who said 'it's our right to ramble' -- The Kinder Trespass which led to the establishment of national parks, trails and access to nature all over the UK.

We've got our own great trails nearby including the escarpment-hugging Bruce Trail from Niagara-on-the-Lake to Tobermory. Another fave, New York's Genesee Valley Greenway from Rochester to the Southern Tier.

It often seems as though there are more trails, bikepaths, etc. in Ontario, Canada around L. Ontario than on the US side. Although, the new multi-use trail along the L. Ontario State Parkway starting at Island Cottage to Sea Breeze along Durand-Eastman Park with connections to the 390 South cycling trail and the Genesee River Trail is an impressive start. We still need more cycling trails -- especially west to connect with the Robert Moses trail along the Niagara River, still under development through the Niagara River Greenway, to Canada at Rainbow Bridge and beyond.
-- posted by Barbara

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Lake of Shining Waters


West Spit Braddock Bay Summer 2010

L. Ontario translated from the Huron is "Lake of Shining Waters." Braddock Bay is located on the southshore west of Rochester's embayment. Photo taken at Braddock Bay, NY.

According to those who measure. . . "the Great Lakes contain roughly 22% of the world’s fresh surface water: 5,472 cubic miles
or 6.0×1015 U.S. gallons ~ enough water to cover the 48 contiguous U.S. states to a uniform depth of 9.5 feet. . . . ." wow, I say.

Oh! New Law Prohibits Phosphorus runoff into L. Ontario.

But just when you've had enough round gobys and zebra mussels, there's the threat of Asian Carp [
bighead, black, silver and grass], some growing up to 90-100 lb. and voracious eaters [even eat plankton] who may end up dominating all species, not to mention the pervasive impact of zebra mussels. Listen to this from Senator Stabenow [MI] on stopping the asian carp invasion: asking to close the locks which connect the Mississippi to L. Michigan. The Army Corps doesn't want to close the locks and instead is using electrical fields 30 miles away from L. Michigan to try and control the northern migration of the carp in the Chicago shipping lane.

What is the difference between fertile [diploid] and sterile [triploid] grass carp which are in local ponds?
-- posted by Barbara

Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Gardens

It's no coincidence that Eden was a garden.

At right is lavender in my garden and at the top of the blog is Buddellia or Buddleja ~ commonly known as 'butterfly bush.' It attracts both butterflies and hummingbirds including hummingbird hawk moths which look like birds, but are actually moths.

Remember LadyBird Johnson's legacy:
Wildflowers. -- posted by Barbara

Great images:
Wildflowers of New York