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Author: Kate Haggerty

Glens Falls Titans 18U Take Second Place in 2023 Miss Shen Summer Classic

It was a full softball weekend for the Glens Falls Titans 18u team… This was the first tournament of the summer season that was not rained out for the 18U! The Glens Falls Titans played a total of seven games, with a record of 5-2 to take second place at the Miss Shen Summer Classic Tournament.

The Titans welcomed back Lake George graduate and utility player Grace York, who will be attending Presbyterian College as part of their NCAA Division 1 Women’s Wrestling team. In a Facebook post, the York family thanked the Glens Falls Titans for inviting Grace to play one last time: “I didn’t think we’d have an opportunity to see Grace play softball again…This team was meant to play together. They shine through each other, and in turn, their connection shines through on the field,” the post read.  

Jaelyn Graham – who will be a senior for the Glens Falls Varsity Softball team – continued to be a force at the plate with a two-run double in the first game of the elimination round… She then provided a lift to the offense again with a double in the third game that day. Fellow Senior Gianna Endieveri provided pitching and offense throughout the tournament, platooning pitching duties with up-and-coming sophomore Izzy Johnson. Johnson, an effective pitcher and catcher, can also play any position in the field! Glens Falls senior Kiersten Stevens roamed center field, catching both wayward fly balls and hard hit shots… Her impact was also valuable at the plate and in the dugout, providing noticeable leadership. 

On championship Sunday, the Glens Falls Titans ranked as the 8th seed, beating the 9th-seeded Capital Region Reign. Glens Falls watched the next series of games, paying close attention as 1st seed Thunder Select Gold 18u was knocked out by 16th seed Rotterdam Gold. Glens Falls then took the field against the Rotterdam Gold… This match went into extra inning, utilizing the “international tie breaker” rule; this rule puts a runner on second base to bring the game to a speedier conclusion. Glens Falls Titans scored first in extra innings to win the game!

The Titans only had a short break before they took the field and beat the 5th-seeded Miss Shen Bombers, to move to the Championship game against an impressive Smash It Sports 16u team who won the day.   

Three of the Glens Falls Titans 18u players will be moving on to play in college… These bittersweet summer days are filled with competition and compassion, and are the building blocks for life-long friendships.

Glens Falls Titans 18u are looking to fill roster spots that will be vacant in the fall. For more information about Glens Falls Titans Softball, please visit titansfp.com

Glens Falls 10-Minute Parking Will Cost You

The parking spots that are in front of Glens Falls City Hall at 42 Ridge Street are 10-minute parking spots. The fine for violating the 10-minute limit is $30.00; this fine will double if the ticket is not paid within 10 calendar days of the violation. The City of Glens Falls reinstated parking regulations on January 1st, 2023, after these regulations had been suspended during the pandemic. 

There is a parking map for Glens Falls provided online by the City of Glens Falls, which outlines the on-street parking and lot parking throughout the city. There are several categories for on street parking, including 2-Hour, 4-Hour, Unrestricted with time considerations, all-day unrestricted parking, and Permit Parking only – the map can be seen above.

There is no category listed on the parking map for 10-minute parking.

No Criminal Prosecution in Queensbury Shooting Case

There will be no criminal charges filed for the shooting event that occurred on Friday, July 21st, at 13 Pershing Road, which left the shooter dead from self-inflicted wounds and at least two others injured.   

13 Pershing Road – near the Glens Falls-Queensbury border – is the home of Randy Strong, his wife, and his son. Police said that the suspect shot the people at the residence, then used the firearm to take his own life… The victims were known to the suspect, but the motivation of the shooting has not been addressed. 

One victim was taken to Glens Falls Hospital, and another victim was airlifted to Albany Medical Center. Warren County Sheriff Jim LaFarr said in a statement, “It’s a horrific tragedy from which the family will never recover… (But) all of the victims are stable and recovering.” 

Crandall Library Folklife Center Festival

The Folklife Center located on the lower level of Crandall Library will be celebrating its 30th anniversary on Tuesday, July 25th, 2023! This free festival will take place outside of Crandall library in City Park from 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM, and will feature live music, crafts, and specialty food.

Entering Crandall Library and walking down the stairs to the Folklife Center hooks you into the history and culture of our region instantly… The folklife gallery surrounds you with an intimate knowledge of the lives of the people who lived and worked in our communities. The gallery’s pieces harken back to a time not so long ago, and traditions both long forgotten and still engraved in our hearts and minds.

The Folklife Center was founded in 1993, as a place to catalog research culture, traditions and history in the southern Adirondacks and upper Hudson Valley. During the celebration, folk artists will be demonstrating their crafts and food traditions… There will be music all day, and hands-on activities for the entire family. 

Todd DeGarmo – Founding Director for the Folklife Center – said: “It’s our 30th anniversary as a department at the library. I have been here since 1986. I started out doing projects, like festivals, quilt shows and children activities on and off through grant funding… 30 years ago the board decided that we should consolidate all of this work into a department. We had a consultant come in from RPI, and he showed us the potential of growing the collection,” Todd said.

DeGarmo is an anthropologist/ folklorist who has been the director of the Folklife Center since its inception… The center began with a part-time archivist, and has only grown from there. Currently, DeGarmo works with Amanda Franzoni, who specializes in research and special collections; Trisha Dalton, who is a historian and librarian; and Kevin Rogan, a media specialist. 

In 1993, the Folklife Center took over an underutilized area in the library and created archives based on the local research, cultures, traditions, neighbors, and music… This research was consolidated and stored in the same space, and made available to the public. 

A portion of DeGarmo’s work is grant writing. Through grants, the Folklife Center has been able to shine a spotlight on cultural aspects of this area… For instance, “Battenkill Inspired”, a series of mini-video documentaries that tell the story of life and work along the Battenkill River. This series examines the impact of the Battenkill River on the history, local art and activities of the region, and features grassroots history with stories of the local communities.

Currently, the Folklife Center is featuring the Champlain Canal Stories: 200 Years from Waterford to Whitehall. This series is located in the main Folklife Gallery, and will be on display until December of 2023. 

“We like to sponsor a variety of events… Some big events, some more intimate. We seem to kind of fly under the radar… We have film festivals, we are starting a Ukulele Club, (and) we have the Shutter Squad,” DeGramo said. The Shutter Squad is a workshop for kids between the ages of 10 to 13… Over the course of six weeks, they learn the principles of photography.

For more information, please visit crandalllibrary.org

Queensbury Schools Are Hiring!

Queensbury Union Free School District has positions available in both instructional and support staff roles! Queensbury is looking to fill positions for a High School English Teacher, Kindergarten Teacher, and Modified Football Coach, as well as Substitute Teachers, Teachers’ Aids, and a School Nurse. Support Staff positions include roles as an IT Support, Typist, Bus Driver, Substitute Bus Driver, and Cleaner. 

Queensbury Union Free School District is ranked among the top school districts in the Capital Region for both academics and fiscal efficiency… There are about 3,000 students in grades K-12 that attend school on a single campus! The mission of Queensbury Union Free School district is to empower all students to be lifelong learners, inspired to pursue their dreams and contribute to the global community.

For more information, please visit queensburyschool.org

ARCC Ribbon Cutting for Go Play With Your Food

On Tuesday July 18th, 2023, Tricia Rogers and the ARCC crew worked their magic and hosted a ribbon cutting for Go Play With Your Food… Located at 126 Glen Street, Go Play With Your Food is owned by Kristen & Mark Shaw, and partners, and is open seven days a week for food and board-gaming fun!  This eatery gives patrons the opportunity to rent a table, and play with any of over 600 board games- all while offering a full menu of beer, wine and hard seltzers. 

In an industrial chic setting, an exposed brick wall frames the bar, comfortably spaced wood topped tables dapple the dining area – each with plenty of space to lay out a board game – and then there is the view… A view of a wall of games!

Go Play With Your Food creates an opportunity to play a variety of over 600 games, and enjoy menu offerings and beverages. With a variety of levels, there is something for everyone-games for beginners, family- friendly games, moderate to advanced level games and games that can have up to 20 players. This puzzling eatery features a menu with a variety of appetizers, flatbread pizzas, salads, and desserts. 

Go Play with Your Food has offers a variety of meads, six beers on tap, 24 canned beers, seven canned ciders, as well as a nice mix of hard seltzers, teas, and wine by the glass… So, if CandyLand has you craving something sweet, an eight-hour Risk conquest has left you absolutely famished, or a Jenga tower gets you oddly in the mood for a club sandwich, there is an opportunity to regroup, grab another game, and fall into a world of enchantment and adventure that’s been with us since childhood… Enjoy time with family and friends in this unique board-gaming eatery!

For more information, please visit goplaywithyourfood.com

Beech Leaf Disease Has Reached Adirondacks

The Adirondacks are one of the most popular tourist destinations in New York State. Hiking, camping, fishing and other outdoor activities attract millions of visitors to the Adirondack region every year, along with the beauty of the natural scenery… The visitors to the region represent an integral part of New York’s economy, generating hundreds of millions of tourism dollars each year. 

However, maintaining the delicate ecosystems that attract these visitors has its challenges… Invasive species threaten the Adirondack ecosystem. Currently, the American Beech Tree faces an uncertain future due to Beech Leaf Disease, which is lethal to the species – American Beech Trees are a dominant breed of trees in the Adirondack forest. The American Beech tree is the only native species of beech that grows in North America… The American Beech normally grows 50-70 feet tall with a rounded crown. The Adirondack region is home to Beech trees that are 150 to 200 years old. 

American Beech leaves are elliptical – they have pointed tips, many straight, parallel veins… These leaves are green in the summer, golden yellow and brown in the fall, and stay on the tree well into the winter. The characteristics of Beech Leaf Disease are striping, which is bands of thickened, dark green tissue between the leaf veins, and distorted puckering or curled leaves. The disease causes reduced leaf and bud production, and possible leaf loss as the disease progresses… This disease can kill mature trees in six to ten years, and young trees in two to three years.

The American Beech has value to the Adirondack wildlife… It is a welcoming host to caterpillars of the Early Hairstreak butterfly. These trees produce beechnuts, which are amongst the most important food for different species of wildlife – Raccoons, White-Tailed Deer, Porcupine, American Martens, Red Foxes, and Black Bears all consume beechnuts. Beechnuts are specifically important to Black Bear reproduction, because the females need the high protein content in their fall diet prior to hibernation… The American Beech also provides food and nesting sites for a variety of birds.

Beech Leaf Disease has been discovered in the Adirondacks, and is a lethal disease to Beech trees. This disease is believed to be caused by Nematode (Microscopic worm) Litylenchus crenatea mccannii. The full cause of the disease and how it spreads is still unknown… There are no known ways of managing this disease.

Tourism in the Adirondack region generates an estimated $387-million is direct labor income, and $644-million including direct and indirect income. The ecosystem of the Adirondack helps to support this tourism, and maintaining that ecosystem is crucial to the next generation of tourism, residents, and wildlife alike.

For more information, please visit wildadirondacks.org

Warren County and Washington County Real Estate Transactions June 30th 2023-July 7th 2023

Bolton 

Rudolph L. & Colleen E. Coletti sold property at 45 Skyline Drive to Jacob & Kathleen Altner for $840,000 

Chester

Estate of Phyllis W. Bogle sold property at 123 Pine Street to Robert R. Hill for $220,000

John S., Rachel L., & John H. Shafer sold property at 305 Stock Farm Road to Adam & Casey Rosen-Carole for $90,000 

David Figliuzzi & Robert Clark Phillios sold property at 68 Woodridge Road to Christie & Ian Maher for $332,500

Martin A. & Cindy M. Turcotte sold property at 254 Olmstedville Rd. to Kevin Lyons for $274,900

Glens Falls 

Kaelyn Miller (n.k.a. Kaelyn Nicholson) sold property at 61 Staple St. to Cary Frenchette for $245,000  

Thomas S. Osilka & Gina M. Scarano-Osilka Irrevocable trust 03/10/21 sold property at 5 Pine Street to Ali Caruso for $170,000

Horicon

The Bushek Living Trust dated May 20, 2015 sold property at Shaw Hill Road to Michael & Eileen Hinrichs for $185,000

John A. Bushek George K. Bushek, Virginia M Giaimo & Mary Ellen Duvernoy sold property at Shaw Hill Road to Michael & Eilleen Hinrich for $185,000 

Brant Lake Farm, LP sold property at Grassville Road to Christopher D. & Jacquelyn S. Debar for $19,000

Lake George

Judith M. Carr sold property at 175 Ottawa St. to Nathan Hall for $493,500

Bella Lago Cottages, LLC sold property at 3328 State Route 9 to Adirondack Cottages LLC. $350,000

Michael B., Linda L., Michael S., & Scott D. Lephart sold property at 3210 Lake Drive, to Vojac, LLC for $30,000 

Queensbury

Robert J. Stark sold property at 38 Richardson St. to Levi P. Sullinger & Ashley McKernon for $184,700

Catherine & Justin Beach sold property at 819 County Line Road to Connor G. Abbess & Marissa E. Chaffee for $475,000

JoAnna Sheridan sold property at 9 Queen Mary Dr. to Vivian Lee Lovier- Grant for $200,000

William Didlo sold property at 18 Masters Commons North to Tafhaim Quick for $475,000

Lorraine T. Chair sold property at 113 West Mountain Road to Christine C. Lewis $165,000

Robert & Nancy Murtha sold property at Fitzgerald Road to David Howard & Peter Davis for $50,000

Washington County

Argyle

Joseph Agostin sole property at 549 North Street Road to  William R. Sleezer & Barbara A Bardner for $280,000

Eric Wappett sold property at Pleasant Valley Road to Reuban J. Taylor & Tanner Flewelling for $20,000

Fort Ann

Richard A. Cholar: Richard A. Cholar as Trustee, Cholar-crerar Charitable Remainder Trust: Steven J. & Particia Labruto as Co-Exec. Of the Ancillary Estate of William T. Podworny  sold property at 2305 Comfort Point to Stock Home North, LLC for $2,500,000

Fort Edward 

Thomas M. Pollock sold property at 137 Williams Road to Jamie King for $199,000

Granville 

Load Zone F., LLC sold property at 33 Ritchie Road  to St. Empire Solar IV, LLC for $20,000

Greenwich 

Laura Lemoine fka Laura Alice Hall sold property at 4 John Street to Susan Wood & John Baldwin for $310,000

Hebron

Stephen R. Waite sold property at 3160 County Route 30 to Melissa Mclaughlin for $190,000

Roger F. Bloom sold property at 3659 County Route 30 to Mellissa Kelly for $125,000

Jeanine Morelli-Cary fka Jeanine Morelli sold property at 793 Chamberlin Mills Road to Christina Usack for $132,500 

Hempton 

Patricia J. Grady sold property at 273 Hickey Road to Heather & James Russell for $188,000

Kingsbury

Laura L Derrick, as exec. Of Estate of John W. Leppert sold property at 31 County Route 41 to Andrew Freebern for $112,500

Jeffrey McMorris, Esq., Ref.: Joseph G. Robarge, Jr. sold property at 5 Cherry Street to Deutsche Bank National Trust Company as Trustee for Morgan Stanley ABS Capital I Inc. Trust 2006-NC3

Joyce E. Conley sold property at 20 Washburn Drive to Matthew C. Lewis for $400,000

Salem

Ray Williams as Exec. of Estate of Wendy A Williams sold property at 4 Mountain View Way to Phillip Riley for $375,000

Whitehall

William Roy Golden, Jr., Ronald Lee Golden, Susan Kay Neddo sold property at 1 Benjamin Street to Paul Mechancik for $24,000

Jenine Macura sold property at 4 Pauline Street to Barry & Evelyn M. Dean for $115,000

Andre A Hagadorn sold property at 127 Poultney Street to Ernest J. Bishop for $50,000

Kiwanis Club of Glens Falls & Tri-County United Way Team Up For “A Putt Above” Golf Classic

On Friday, August 18th, 2023, the Kiwanis Club of Glens Falls and the Tri-County United Way will be hosting the “A Putt Above” Golf Classic at Cronin’s Golf Resort in Warrensburg. This event features a four-person scramble, with a shotgun start at 12:30 PM. Presenting sponsors for this event are Albany Med Health System, and Glens Falls Hospital. 

Sponsorship opportunities are still available! Teams and individuals are welcome, $125.00 per player or $500.00 per team – this includes cart rental, lunch from 11:30PM to 12:30 PM, beverages, prizes, and a steak dinner followed by awards. 

The Tri-County United Way as an organization is dedicated to helping people improve their lives and make a positive impact on communities. Tri-County United Way encourages volunteerism, and resolving community problems through identifying and communicating community priorities. 

The Kiwanis Club of Glens Falls is a service organization that contributes to the well being of the community through fundraising and community service.  For more information about the “A Putt Above” Golf Classic, please visit tricountyunitedway.org

Glens Falls 18U Titans Softball Travel To Saugerties: Endieveri & Stevens Attend Camp

Glens Falls Titans leaving the field after their win on Saturday

This past weekend, the Glens Falls 18u Titans team traveled to Cantine Field in Saugerties, New York for the annual softball tournament, and the opportunity to participate in an Elite College Skills/College Exposure Camp! The Elite College Skills Camp gives players the opportunity to experience what a college level practice is like, receive instruction from college coaches, and even potentially get recruited. 

This year, Gianna Endieveri and Kiesten Stevens attended the camp from Glens Falls. Stevens and Endieveri, as members of both Glens Falls Titans and the Glens Falls Varsity Softball team, have been playing together for years… Endieveri was named 2023 Section 2 All-Star, while Stevens earned second team honors.

Glens Falls has built a reputation for having quality softball programs both through their travel programs and school teams. The Glens Falls varsity softball team will be looking to continue the winning tradition in the spring when seniors Endieveri and Stevens take the field with fellow senior Jaelyn Graham; Graham earned first team honors last season, as she showed off her power at the plate and her impeccable defense.   

The coaching staff of the Glens Falls Titans is made up of Head Coach Scott Richards, and coaches Jonelle Bacon and Scott Endieveri. Bacon believes that the Elite College Skills Camp is a good fit for players from the Titans: “This is a good clinic and tournament for us because these are teams and schools that our girls can play for and be competitive,” she said.

Coaches from area schools including The College of Saint Rose, Russell Sage, and a variety of SUNY schools are amongst those that participate in the camp and watch the tournament over the weekend. As the games began early on Saturday morning, college coaches went from field to field to watch the players throughout the day… Unfortunately, the games were called on Sunday due to the weather conditions. 

The Glens Falls Titans were ranked as the seventh seed after their three games on Saturday, having lost their first two games and winning the third on Saturday. If games had been played on Sunday, the Titans would have had to win three games to make it to the championship game.

Both the Glens Falls varsity softball team and the Titans have players who play, or are planning to play, at the next level – 2022 Glens Falls graduate Avery Hill went on to play at SUNY Fredonia, 2023 graduate Lily Haggerty will be playing at SUNY Oswego, and Glens Falls graduate Emylou Richards will continue her softball career at SUNY Adirondack… And Titans player and Warrensburg graduate Kara Bacon will attend Le Moyne College, and play for the Dolphins.