More than three dozen hikers joined the Catskill Mountain Club and New York City Department of Environmental Protection on July 29 to celebrate the opening of a new trail to the summit of Bramley Mountain in Delhi.
Read MoreThe Catskill Center is thrilled to share this reprint of an article recently published by Lengua y Migracion, which publishes original, theoretical, empirical and methodological papers that analyze the linguistic and communicative reality of migration, considering the study of all social and linguistic elements which contribute to the process of socio - linguistic integration, including procurement processes of second languages.
The article was authored by the Catskills' own, Julian Rauter, who is completing his undergraduate work with the Department of Linguistics at Harvard University. Julian is a graduate of Margaretville Central School.
Read MoreAbout a year ago the former executive director of the Catskill Center, Alan White, casually complained to me that the Catskills are a grossly undervalued destination for birders, despite the wealth of birding opportunities here. Later I was meeting with Peggy DiBenedetto, a Catskill Center board member and a bird specialist with the New York City Department of Environmental Protection. Peg was interested in adding bird displays and programming to the Catskill Interpretive Center. I casually mentioned the idea of a Catskill birding conference to her, and like robins on a spring lawn, Peg was all over the idea.
Read MoreWay back in 1999 the Catskill Center alongside a dedicated corps of volunteers who've been with us ever since, began restoring and reopening five fire towers across the Catskill Park and Forest Preserve. Overlook Mountain, Mt. Temper, Red Hill, Balsam Lake and Hunter fire towers were in the past the Department of Environmental Conservation's first line of defense in protecting the region from forest fires.
Read MoreWhen he started to plan his thru-hike of the Appalachian Trail earlier this year, it wasn't just logistics that Moe Lemire was thinking about. He was also thinking about the good that he could do as he hiked from Georgia to Maine.
Read MoreAn excellent short film (link below) describing the importance of the hemlock forest to the Catskills and beyond, and a complex invasive species that could have devastating effects on everything from water quality to the habitat and ecosystems of New York state, not to mention the Catskills.
Read MoreThe Catskill Center is pleased to announce a new project in cooperation with The Painter's Gallery in Fleischmanns, NY, the CATSKILLS PINHOLE CAMERA PROJECT. The public is invited to create an image using Nicéphore Niépce's photographic method from 1816.
Free camera kits are now available for pickup at either the Painter's Gallery in Fleischmanns (1109 Main St., Fleischmanns, NY, 646.627.5155) or at the Catskill Center in Arkville (43355 State Highway 28, Arkville, NY 12406, 845.586.2611).
Read MoreThe Catskill Center is pleased to see significant funding and support for the Catskills in the recently enacted New York state budget (2016-17). We are also thrilled to see the Environmental Protection Fund (EPF) at $300M. This historic level of funding continues our state's proud and leading legacy of first in the nation conservation and environmental protection, allowing for better investment in our environmental resources across New York state.
Read MoreThe New York State Senate version of the 2016-17 State Budget includes language which would allow state agencies to open state lands to ATV use, including on the 'Forever Wild' Forest Preserve Lands of the Adirondack Park and the Catskill Park, as well as on other state lands including State Forests, and State Parks!! You Can Help Keep Damaging ATVs Off State Lands.
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