Truesdale Lake  

South Salem, New York

January 21, 2010
by rob
Comments Off on Kaiser-Battistone Discount on Septic Pumping

Kaiser-Battistone Discount on Septic Pumping

Kaiser-Battistone offers a discount to Truesdale Lake residents for septic pumping service <http://www.kaiser-battistone.com/> (914-232-8818).  Once you are on their calendar they will call annually to schedule your appointment.

The discount in the past has been 10-15% I think.  If anyone knows the details or correct discount percentage, let me know.

January 5, 2010
by rob
Comments Off on No Snowmobiles, No ATVs Allowed On Lake

No Snowmobiles, No ATVs Allowed On Lake

The Lake is private property and deed restrictions dating back to the 1930’s prohibit the use of gas powered vehicles on the lake.  This includes all gas engines from boat motors to snowmobiles to ATVs.

To the person or people who have been seen over the weekend speeding around the lake with ATVs: please STOP!  There are over 70 homes directly on the lake and hundreds more houses who can see what you are doing.  It is rude, unpleasant, loud, and illegal.  Thank you for listening.

December 23, 2009
by rob
Comments Off on 2008 CSLAP Report Posted

2008 CSLAP Report Posted

cslaplogoThe 2008 Citizens Statewide Lake Assessment Program (CSLAP) report is available online now.  The Truesdale Lake Management Committee members (Gary Struve, Debbie Fink, and recently Vi Patek) have been monitoring the health of Lake Truesdale since 1999 through this program that tracks water clarity and quality during the spring and summer.

In addition to the 2008 report, we have all reports available from 1999-2008 in the Lake Management area of our Downloads section.

The Citizens Statewide Lake Assessment Program (CSLAP) is a volunteer lake monitoring program conducted by the NYS Department of Environmental Conservation (NYSDEC) and the NYS Federation of Lake Associations (FOLA). Founded in 1986 with 25 pilot lakes, the program involves more than 190 lakes, ponds, and reservoirs and 1000 volunteers from eastern Long Island to the Northern Adirondacks to the western-most lake in New York, including 10 acre ponds to several Finger Lakes, Lake Ontario, Lake George, and lakes within state parks. In this program, lay volunteers trained by the NYSDEC and FOLA collect water samples, observations, and perception data every other week in a fifteen-week interval between May and October. Water samples are analyzed by certified laboratories. Analytical results are interpreted by the NYSDEC and FOLA, and utilized for a variety of purposes by the State of New York, local governments, researchers, and, most importantly, participating lake associations.

December 22, 2009
by rob
Comments Off on EPA Releases National Lakes Assessment Report

EPA Releases National Lakes Assessment Report

epafiles_logo_epasealOn December 18th, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency released a nationwide lakes assessment study it has been undertaking for nearly 5 years.  While it is not specific to Truesdale Lake, the report has lots of relevant information about lakes and the lake communities around them. The report is at the EPA website here.

From the press release:

EPA Releases First-Ever Baseline Study of U.S. Lakes

WASHINGTON – The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency today released its most comprehensive study of the nation’s lakes to date. The draft study, which rated the condition of 56 percent of the lakes in the United States as good and the remainder as fair or poor, marked the first time EPA and its partners used a nationally consistent approach to survey the ecological and water quality of lakes. A total of 1,028 lakes were randomly sampled during 2007 by states, tribes and EPA.
“This survey serves as a first step in evaluating the success of efforts to protect, preserve, and restore the  quality of our nation’s lakes,” said Peter Silva, assistant administrator for EPA’s Office of Water. “Future  surveys will be able to track changes in lake water quality over time and advance our understanding of  important regional and national patterns in lake water quality.”

The National Lakes Assessment reveals that the remaining lakes are in fair or poor condition. Degraded  lakeshore habitat, rated “poor” in 36 percent of lakes, was the most significant of the problems assessed.  Removal of trees and shrubs and construction of docks, marinas, homes and other structures along  shorelines all contribute to degraded lakeshore habitat.

Nitrogen and phosphorous are found at high levels in 20 percent of lakes. Excess levels of these nutrients contribute to algae blooms, weed growth, reduced water clarity, and other lake problems. EPA is very concerned about the adverse impacts of nutrients on aquatic life, drinking water and recreation. The agency will continue to work with states to address water quality issues through effective nutrient management.

The survey included a comparison to a subset of lakes with wastewater impacts that were sampled in the 1970s. It finds that 75 percent show either improvements or no change in phosphorus levels. This suggests that the nation’s investments in wastewater treatment and other pollution control activities are working despite population increases across the country.

The results of this study describe the target population of the nation’s lakes as a whole and are not applicable to a particular lake.

from http://www.epa.gov/lakessurvey/

December 17, 2009
by rob
Comments Off on Bald Eagle Spotted Near Inlet of Lake

Bald Eagle Spotted Near Inlet of Lake

bald_eagle_jonathan_rodgers_picRay and Helen Morse spotted this adult bald eagle feasting on some of our lake’s fine fish yesterday.  The eagle was on the ice near the main inlet stream coming in from Boway.

Ray called Mark Patek who got in touch with neighbor Jonathan Rodgers who got out in time to get this shot with a high powered zoom lens.  Thanks to Ray, Helen, Mark and Jonathan for getting the news to us!

December 6, 2009
by rob
Comments Off on Paving Nearly Done

Paving Nearly Done

A crew of 12 worked from 6 am – 5 pm on Friday, December 4th to get the majority of the road and driveway paving completed.  The crew included 2 steamroller operators, a paving machine operator, a flame-fired curbing gizmo, a “patter-downer” (or whatever the true name is), many wheelbarrows, and multiple loads of blacktop.

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The crew will be back Monday for final paving and site cleanup.

Click the continue button below to see photo gallery.

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December 4, 2009
by rob
Comments Off on New Lifejacket Law in NY State

New Lifejacket Law in NY State

sailingStarting November 1, 2009 there is a new lifejacket law in New York State.

Essentially what the law says is that during the coldest months of the year (Nov 1 – May 1), anyone on the boat has to have a lifejacket, regardless of age.  This is a sensible change to the law that codifies what everyone is probably already (or should be doing) doing on their own.

The law states:

No owner or operator of a pleasure vessel less than twenty-one feet, including rowboats, canoes, and kayaks shall permit its operation, between November first and May first, unless each person on board such vessel is wearing a securely fastened United States Coast Guard approved wearable personal flotation device of an appropriate size when such vessel is underway.

Failure to wear a lifejacket on such vessels will be considered a violation under Section 73-c if the Navigation Law and is punishable by a fine of not less than $25 nor more than $100, applicable to either the operator and/or the owner of the vessel.

New York State Lifejacket laws for the warmer months require boaters under the age of 12 to wear PFDs (personal floatation devices).  In addition, all pleasure boats are required to have at least one PFD for each person on the boat.  Older boaters are not always required to actually wear their PFD, check the law for details.

December 3, 2009
by rob
Comments Off on Separator Installed – Paving Tomorrow

Separator Installed – Paving Tomorrow

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Loading the 10 ton separator

The final underground pieces of the “Site 3” puzzle arrived from their casting in New Hampshire and were installed on Tuesday December 1.  The crew came back on Wednesday morning to check the flows and fixed some minor issues.  The paver “Bessie” was delivered this morning (Dec 3) and will be underway tomorrow.

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After the paving is finished, the project will be complete.  Thanks to the guys at Landscape Unlimited for their work and expertise over the past 2 months.  Also thank you to Ryan and Daniel from Keller and Sessions (our town engineering firm) for their advice and keeping the project on track.

Site 3 is almost done!  Next up – sites 1, 2, 4, 5, and 6!

Click “Continue Reading…” below to see the complete photo gallery.

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