Tiny Discovery Could Prevent Huge Problems for our Lakes

Photo: Courtesy Roger Friedman

Photo: Courtesy Roger Friedman

The above photo appears to show two, tiny gravel shaped pieces, less than the size of a finger nail.

They are Zebra mussels, one of the most dangerous invasive species that threaten the lakes of the Adirondacks.

These two were discovered by lake Steward Molly Wisser at the Route 74 Boat Washing station, according to Roger Friedman, from the Schroon lake Association.

The station, established two years ago, is vital to fighting invasives. A hat tip to all three of our area lake associations: The Paradox Lake Association, The Schroon Lake Association and the East Shore Schroon Lake Association for initiating this effort.

And take a bow Molly: your eagle eyes saved what could have been a disastrous event.  More about these mollusks from the Lake Champlain Basin Atlas:

“The zebra mussel is a small freshwater mollusk native to the Black and Caspian Sea regions. First discovered in the Great Lakes in 1988, it is thought that they were transported to North America in the ballast tanks of ships. Since then, the mussels have spread throughout much of the eastern half of the United States.

Zebra mussels were first discovered in the southern part of Lake Champlain in 1993. Since then, the State of Vermont has tracked the spread of zebra mussels northward as part of the Long Term Water Quality and Biological Monitoring Program. Since 1993, zebra mussels have spread throughout nearly all of Lake Champlain. The Vermont Department of Environmental Conservation also monitors for zebra mussels on inland lakes”.

A Bright Future for North Hudson

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With the Frontier Town Campground, Equestrian and Day Use Area now ready for business -- and the summer opening of Paradox Brewery and Tasting Room – North Hudson will once again become a tourism destination, with a potential bump to the local economy.

The DEC’s Frontier Town Campground, Equestrian and Day Use Area, is expected to employ 13 staff and Paradox is expected to add several jobs once production launches.

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The new brewery will allow Paradox to quadruple output. At their current Schroon Lake digs they’re at capacity with about 2,000 barrels (30 gallons of beer per barrel) produced each year.

Two Roads Brewing Company make an additional 1,800 to 2,000 barrels a year in canned beer. Read more about the Paradox Brewery expansion here and the Frontier Town Campground here.

Keeping Greater Schroon Lake Pristine: It Takes A Village

Ellie Searles, of Schroon Lake, articulates what many of us see far too regularly in this letter To the Editor in the Sun Times. Thank you Ellie

“It saddens me to see trash strewn along our highways. A couple of weeks ago, I was driving up the Northway from Queensbury when I saw a couch and chair in the meridian. As I drove toward Schroon Lake, a tanker threw a coffee cup out the window. Then there were miles and miles of orange bags as the workers spend their days picking up trash in an effort to keep our area beautiful.

It’s a dangerous job, but do the litterbugs think of anyone other than themselves? These people may live like pigs at home and think it’s OK to litter our highways, but I wonder how they would feel if the cups, candy wrappers or even a couch and chair were thrown on their front lawn.

When we first moved to Schroon Lake, my husband and I spent seven years walking through the park in Schroon Lake picking up trash. It started with a grocery bag and each year the bags got bigger and bigger until I had to use my pull cart with a large trash bag in it to clean up the area. The problem seemed to get worse, not better.

We live in one of the most beautiful areas in the country but there are those who don’t appreciate it by littering. How much room does that coffee cup take on the floor of your car until you can find a trash can, folks? Is there a chance you can start to appreciate living on planet Earth by thinking before you roll that window down and toss your trash out? I would hope so!

And those of you who are doing this with your kids in the car, you are teaching them that it’s OK and then it becomes a never-ending cycle”.

- Ellie Searles, Schroon Lake