Posted on 10/27/2006 6:42:23 PM PDT by neverdem
TUPPER LAKE, N.Y. Those who love the Adirondacks most are worried they are being loved too much.
Personal watercraft, all-terrain vehicles and snowmobiles shatter the stillness, from one season to the next. Nearly twice as many building permits were issued last year as in 1998, while home prices in some areas have doubled in less than three years. Two major development proposals that would resurrect defunct ski areas, one here and another in North Creek, could create a total of more than 1,000 units of housing and several hotels in what Peter Bauer, a leading environmentalist, described as an unprecedented building boom.
The Adirondack Park, an unusual mix of state-owned forest preserve and private land that is roughly the size of Vermont, has fallen in and out of favor for decades. Once a playground for the Vanderbilts, Rockefellers and Whitneys, who erected fabulous great camps at the turn of the last century, the park has been alternately viewed as a stunning refuge from overhyped second-home resorts and a remote backwater with black flies and bad food.
It has been more than a century since New York State created Adirondack Park, an expanse of rugged mountains and lakes that was, from the beginning, recognized for its magnificent scenery. The philosopher William James wrote to his brother, Henry, the novelist, that the sylvan beauty was probably unlike aught that Europe has to show.
Today, the park is clearly back in vogue, as shown by a spate of home building and boutiques peddling twig furnishings. While local officials embrace the boom for its anticipated tax windfall, environmental groups and others are anxious that New Yorks great wilderness is becoming overdeveloped.
In other parts of the country where they have 1,000-unit subdivisions, this may not seem like a big deal,...
(Excerpt) Read more at nytimes.com ...
For a second there, I almost thought a private-sector job or two was going to be created in upstate New York.
Fortunately, the ever-vigilant Times is on the case.
Thank God for the NYT, can't have ordinary people enjoying the woods.
I've never been there. But by the pictures, those look more like hills than mountains.
I worked at the Massewepie Scout Reservation in the summer of 1982...very near Tupper Lake.
Sure was a beautiful area - I have many found memories of my summer there.
I like their chairs.
Looks like the rolling hills of eastern Montana.
I agree. Very comfortable. I've got a couple I put out on the deck in the warmer months.
2. The Adirondack Mountain Loj (that's how its spelled) is the best hostel in the US.
Some places should be visited and not ruined and the Adirondaks is one of them. Seems like everyone who lives up north is in construction looking for a job from some developer who wants to rape the landscape. There are other professions.
LOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOLOL
Mt.Marcy is the highest at a little over 5000ft. So, no, it's not the Rockies, LOL, but it's a very beautiful area. I've climbed 5 high peaks and they were big enough for me!! :)
"Show me just what Mohammed brought that was new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached." -Manuel II Paleologus
A lot of people want to enjoy the wilderness. As long as someone else is paying for it...
> A lot of people want to enjoy the wilderness.
That's the problem. A 300M problem.
Maybe one day the NY Times will stop putting "Or Not." in their article titles. Or Not.
God, what an annoying meme.
It is God's country. It is my haven, my place to regain my strength and gather myself from the world which we have become.
Tupper Lake is placid in of itself. I am sick that developers have discovered the untouched world that I lived every summer.
I only get up there a couple of times a year - but it cleanses my soul.
John Denver called it his 'Rocky Mountain High'. I call it "Sailor's Delight" -- a name my Dad gave to the camp during World War II. (My Dad served in WWII, as did all his brothers and they found peace in our mountain retreat)
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