Wednesday, September 11, 2019

Images of the Capital Region


Images of the Capital Region
 

This blog has focused on out-of-town and especially out-of-the-country travel. Albany and the Capital Region, my home since 1974, has received short shrift, tho views are sprinkled into some posts (e.g., Gardens, Religious Sites, Cemeteries, Holidays, Seasons). Having done an “Images of NYC” post, it seems time to bring some local views to the fore. 



 The Empire State Plaza, a vision of Nelson Rockefeller, has an unfortunate political history, razing neighborhoods for its construction, but it is, I suppose, the most “iconic” site in Albany, dominating the skyline. It houses State offices, a performing arts center (“the Egg”), and the State Museum. 




The site hosts a variety of festivals, and is decorated for holidays. 

The top of the Corning Tower offers views over the area.





The Plaza extends from the State Capitol, built in the 1880s and 1 of 11 state capitols w/o a domed roof. It provides many beautiful views, both outside 




and inside: fabulous staircases, 

beautiful skylights, recently "liberated" after being blacked out during WWII, 


and ornate legislative chambers.

Nearby State Street offers its own views, 

including at the base of the hill the former Delaware & Hudson RR headquarters, now belonging to SUNY, 


and City Hall.  


"Public art" can be found nearby.


And I should note other local "icons": the RCA dog "Nipper"





and Guptill's ice cream emporium.


Also near the Capitol is the Capital Center, providing space for conventions and other gatherings.

  The State Museum is at the other end of the Plaza from the Capitol, with a variety of exhibits and activities,

including a working carousel, 


sometimes floral arrangements interspersed in the exhibits,


and fundraising events like "CANstruction" for the Food Pantry


and "Taste of Albany" for the Interfaith Partnership for the Homeless. 






The University at Albany has been my work "home" for many years. 



Pretty in Winter


and Spring. 







And hosted NY Giants training camps for a while. 

Indian Pond offers a lovely stroll.

Siena College in Loudonville has a pretty campus







The Hudson River is an important part of Albany, of course. 

There's an Albany Yacht Club, tho it's across the river in Rensselaer,
and tours of the USS Slater, a destroyer escort. 

Views from a "Dutch Apple" cruise.



The Mohawk River flows into the Hudson at Waterford, the site of an annual "Tugboat Roundup." 



 
Cohoes is an old industrial city, the largest cotton mill complex in the world in 1872, now "high-end residential lofts." Cohoes Falls is a short distance up the Mohawk. 
 


and more Cohoes downtown, including Cohoes Music Hall





And other lovely views a bit further upstream. 



including Mabee Farm.







The Mohawk-Hudson Bike-Hike Trail is also very scenic. 













 and pretty in winter



The Town of Colonie Mohawk River Park is a bit to the east, and a pretty marina nearby..



And "Art on the Rail Trail" on Voorheesville.


The rivers have been venues for concerts by the Albany Symphony.


Back in Albany, Washington Park is the "Central Park" of the city. 

It's the site of the annual Tulip Festival








Park Playhouse in summer,

and the Capital Holiday Lights in the Park,


and pretty even without tulips.



Other plantings of tulips can be found around the city; 
 



Cook Park is also a spacious place for walking, picnics, concerts, boating.






The Albany area also has many beautiful houses of worship, detailed in my "Religious Sites" post. St. Pius X and First Presbyterian.


Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception.


Hindu Temple Society and Al-Hidaya Mosque.

          St. Thomas the Apostle

St. Francis of Assisi 


Cathedral of All Saints, decorated here for "Cathedral in Bloom"


St. Basil's Russian Orthodox 


Schenectady churches include St. George's Episcopal 


and 1st Reformed Church.



The Capital Region is also home to some lovely and photogenic cemeteries: Albany Rural and Oakwood; these and others can be found in my "Cemeteries" post..













Oakwood has the grave of "Uncle Sam," who was a local meatpacker.



There are some beautiful old homes, such as Ten Broeck Mansion
and Pruyn House in Colonie, which also has a barn, 

              an old schoolhouse, and lovely gardens. 




A venue for a summer Art Camp organized by the Colonie Art League and overseen several years by Marjorie,

summer Concerts in the Barn,


and an "Old Fashioned Sunday" at the end of summer



2020 uncovered pretty brick exterior

and pretty in the snow



  The area also has a variety of performance venues, the Palace Theater for the annual Melodies of Christmas, in which our son Matt performed for a number of years, Proctors Theater, where I once sang with Albany Pro Musica and the Albany Symphony, and Chancellor's Hall in the State Education Building, wjere I've sung with Mendelssohn Club.

Nearby to our home is favorite Curtain Call Theater for local productions. 



Local malls get decked out for holidays and other events, including the Empire State Youth Orchestra Playathon and a traveling LEGOs exhibit. 



There's also the Times Union Center hosting everything from rock concerts to dinosaurs.
     

And a local Renaissance Festival. 



Troy and Schenectady, part of the Tri-City area, have their own lovely sites. Here along the Mohawk by Schenectady's Stockade, site of the Stockade Art Show where Marjorie has exhibited her art for a number of years. 

  

 



 



The interesting MiSci (Museum of Innovation and Science) 


and Schenectady's Central Park.



Troy also has an annual Victorian Stroll






and festivals and farmers' markets. 



Troy's Victorian architecture was enhanced for filing of scenes for The Gilded Age in 2021.




and a colorful ice cream shop


Hudson has an interesting downtown that's become a mecca for antiques dealers. 









Lots of enjoyable amusement parks and county fairs in the summer.






The Crossings of Colonie is a lovely spot, with a farmers' market,

pretty plantings,




lots of geese, plus a forest trail & veterans memorial. 

Colonie also has a lovely gazebo behind Town Hall. 




Tucked into a suburban area is Bauer Environmental Park, named after a former Village of Colonie Mayor. A 0.9-mile boardwalk trail goes thru lovely forest and wildflowers, with plastic bugs, lizards, and frogs serving as "wildlife." 




A similar lovely walk can be had in Fox Preserve, a 70-acre Mohawk Hudson Land Conservancy in Niskayuna near the Mohawk River. 

Another is
Hand Hollow Conservation Area east near New Lebanon. A patchwork of small family properties with a variety of habitats ˗ woodlands, a lake & 2 ponds, streams & wetlands; 2 entrances offer easy to moderate trails. We begin with a well-maintained trail to Meizinger Lake. Beautiful woods, ferns & mosses abound among fallen trees & rocks. A pretty little lake, kayaks and a rustic bench, wetlands along the shore. 


A short drive to the 2nd entrance and a different ecology: open fields full of colorful flowers & weeds surrounded by woods, nearby pond with a beaver lodge. 

20 minutes up the Northway brings you to Zim Smith Trail.


 
The Huyck Preserve and Biological Research Station, in Rensselaerville on the site of a 19th C papermaking felt mill, has more than 12 miles of trails. Forests full of ferns & mosses, punctuated by ruins of the old mill and stone walls. Trails to lower & upper falls, and Lake Myosotis.








The Pine Hollow Arboretum in Slingerlands was begun by a pediatrician in 1966 and became a nonprofit in 2007. Trails highlight some 30 different trees on 22 acres, with 11 ponds.






A couple of other trails are outside of Saratoga: Ballston Creek Preserve 





and Wilton Wildlife Preserve
.



There is a variety of sports events and activities, both outdoors



and indoors. 

 
 

Plenty of nearby outdoor scenery; a few examples: Thacher State Park,


Pine Bush Preserve, 



5 Rivers Environmental Center, where we saw a very young fox cub near a trail,


and Art OMI sculpture park, 







including lovely nature trails. 


June Farms, a “small, gentleman’s farm” on 120 acres in West Sand Lake NY, specializes in "heritage breeds": Shire Horses, the largest breed of horses, Highland Cattle that originated in the Highlands and Western Isles of Scotland, 
 pigs, ducks,and goats, 

as well as scattered frog sculptures and pretty birds and birdhouses.  


Our July 4th weekend in 2020 was topped off on by a Champagne Brunch
Cruise on Lake George. The dock is below Prospect Mtn and across from Fort William Henry and the old D&H Railway Station.
Quite a few colorful parasailers as we headed up the West shore past fancy homes & resorts, some of the 200 islands on the lake, to Bolton Landing and the Sagamore Resort 11 miles up the 32-mile-long lake. Back down the less developed East shore.




I might as well finish with a couple the main transportation hubs in and out of the region: Albany International Airport, with some lovely art exhibits and new landscaping, 













and the Albany-Rensselaer Amtrak Station.



a variety of "underpass art" can be found near the train station.
















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