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02-02-2014, 06:37 PM | #13 | ||||||
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The larger finger lakes never freeze. I believe Seneca is 600 feet deep. So in a year like this all the shallow lakes including lake Erie freeze. So the birds head for open water. Seneca and Cayuga are lessor known than eastern shore but I bet they hold more birds.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Craig Larter For Your Post: |
02-02-2014, 08:07 PM | #14 | ||||||
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having grown up around the finger lakes, the variations are tremendous, In my sports car days in the Glen Region SCCA, there were solo races on Waneta, and the small lake my parents live on has frozen to over two feet thick more than once. But even Keuka takes a special winter to freeze solid around the bluff.
There was a story in the paper during a bitter winter several years ago about a very elderly man who walked his great grandson across Seneca around Hector, as his great granddad had done with him we he was a lad. the lake had frozen shore to shore at the shallower southern end only twice in about hundred years. I remember my father telling of some con artist who sold Seneca Lake water to folks in Corning for their radiators in the '20s- selling it on the fact that Seneca water never froze. there were plenty of birds in the little bays on Seneca when I ran down to see my parents during the recent cold snap.
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"If there is a heaven it must have thinning aspen gold, and flighting woodcock, and a bird dog" GBE |
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The Following User Says Thank You to Rick Losey For Your Post: |
02-02-2014, 08:10 PM | #15 | ||||||
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Dean- The photos of the lake you refer to may not be accurate. The lake is pretty locked up with ice at this point from what I have seen and talked to folks about.
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Daniel Webster once said ""Men hang out their signs indicative of their respective trades; shoemakers hang out a gigantic shoe; jewelers a monster watch, and the dentist hangs out a gold tooth; but in the mountains of New Hampshire, God Almighty has hung out a sign to show that there He makes men." |
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02-02-2014, 08:24 PM | #16 | ||||||
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Very nice. We are in withdrawal down here with the end of the duck season. It was a great one though
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02-05-2014, 03:52 PM | #17 | ||||||
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That's a fair bunch of redheads for sure, probably sounded like a cat convention if you were standing at the end of the dock.
DLH
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I was as virtuously given as a gentleman need to be; virtuous enough; swore little; diced not above seven times a week; went to a bawdy-house once in a quarter--of an hour; paid money that I borrowed, three of four times; lived well and in good compass: and now I live out of all order, out of all compass. Falstaff - Henry IV |
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02-05-2014, 05:59 PM | #18 | ||||||
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There were several large rafts of Red Heads and Cans at the north end of the Mackinaw bridge the first week of December. Other than a shipping lane i bet thats frozen now.
I used to enjoy hunting divers back in the day with a Browning A5 and lead shot. |
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