Hudson River Almanac 7/14/16 - 7/20/16

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YOY striped bass - courtesy Steve Stanne 

Hudson River Almanac
July 14 - 20, 2016
Compiled by Tom Lake, Hudson River Estuary Program Consulting Naturalist

 

OVERVIEW

Hot weather and a warming estuary dominated a week which once more featured reports of small young-of-the-year fishes. Almanac readers and participants in events like our Great Hudson River Estuary Fish Count (see calendar below) often ask why so many of the fish recorded are small. In part, it is because the Hudson estuary provides critical nursery habitat for young fish, notably anadromous species like striped bass and river herring. These migratory species have evolved life cycles that bring them into the Hudson to spawn so that their offspring will find themselves in habitat favorable to their growth and survival…and in lots of Almanac observations as well.

HIGHLIGHT OF THE WEEK

7/16 – Norrie Point, HRM 85: Marist College graduate students came to the Norrie Point Environmental Center to seine and, despite the ever-encroaching water chestnut, we managed to make several sweeps through open water. Tessellated darters, many of them young-of-the-year [YOY], made up the bulk of the catch. We did catch a gorgeous yearling smallmouth bass, but the highlight was a YOY goldfish 41 millimeters [mm] long. At first glance it could have been a very close relative, the carp, but a look through a microscope revealed no barbels on its jaws (carp have four barbels, two on each side; goldfish have none; hybrid carp/goldfish have one to three). This goldfish, unlike those usually seen in the aquarium trade (orange), was a burnished gold. [Photo of young-of-the-year goldfish courtesy of Tom Lake.]
YOY goldfish      - Tom Lake, Colleen Bucci

[C.L. Smith’s Inland Fishes of New York (1985) noted that goldfish (Carassius auratus) are native to eastern Asia and were introduced into North America sometime before 1832. J.R. Greeley, in his A Biological Survey of the Lower Hudson Watershed (1937), called goldfish “moderately common” in the Hudson River watershed and allowed that “this species in the wild, constitutes a worthless although apparently not seriously destructive addition to the fish population.” Greeley also noted that goldfish are “... sold in winter for a small price for food; but are rarely purchased twice by the same individual, they are so exceedingly boney.” Tom Lake.]

NATURAL HISTORY NOTES

7/14 – Mohawk River, HRM 159: In the ongoing wading bird and shorebird migration, I counted a dozen great egrets foraging in the shallows of the Mohawk River at the base of the Ferry Road Bridge, visible from the Mohawk-Hudson bike path in Niskayuna, about 13 miles west of Cohoes.
      - Tom Williams, Hudson-Mohawk Bird Club

7/14 – Kowawese, HRM 59: We were seining against the clock as a thunderstorm was brewing over Storm King Mountain two miles downriver. Stumbling over hang-downs and rocks, we hastened our hauls and beached our net. The dominant fish in the seine was striped bass (35-45 millimeters) – YOY fish that had been hatched seven weeks ago about 75 miles upriver. A beautiful smallmouth bass (145 mm) popped out of the net as well, an emigrant from nearby Moodna Creek. The river was warm at 78 degrees Fahrenheit and the salinity was measurable at 2.0 parts-per-thousand [ppt].
      - Tom Lake, T.R. Jackson

[According to the scientific literature, YOY striped bass of this size are about 50-60 days old. Tom Lake.]

7/14 – Dutchess County: We investigated the report of an active Hudson River osprey nest in the Hudson Highlands. When we arrived there was an adult on the nest and then a nestling began moving around – but only one, or so we thought. Then a second adult arrived, smaller than the first so likely the male of the pair. It brought food that the female began feeding to the young. By now we could tell there were two nestlings. The amount of nest material on our first visit seemed to have been augmented by the next day, but it was still one of the smaller osprey nests we’ve seen.
      - Barbara Butler, Carena Pooth

7/14 – Croton River, HRM 34: For a week now, at the top of the flood tide, the surface of the tidewater Croton River has been scalloped by hundreds of little rings – “penny bunker” were here. From what I could see – a silver flash, they were all three to four inches long. Their appearance is one of the hallmarks of summer.
      - Christopher Letts

[Atlantic menhaden are a species of herring that spawn in salt-to-brackish water. Adults – also known regionally as bunker, mossbunker, or pogies – and their YOY – known colloquially as penny bunker or peanut bunker – are found by the millions in the estuary in summer, providing forage for striped bass, bluefish, osprey, harriers, eagles and seals. Tom Lake.]

7/14 – Manhattan, HRM 2: We had a surprise visitor today in our horseshoe crab tank at The River Project’s sampling station on Pier 40 in Hudson River Park. It was a naked goby. It most likely found its way in via our flow-through Hudson River water system.
      - Jacqueline Wu

[Naked gobies (Gobiosoma bosc) are small estuarine fish, usually less than 75 millimeters long, and are found in shallow, sandy inshore areas of the lower Hudson. Tom Lake.]

7/15 – Yonkers, HRM 18: Earlier this spring, we were delighted to see two muskrats take up residence along the banks of the day-lighted Saw Mill River at Van der Donck Park in downtown Yonkers. Today I saw one swimming under one of the bridges. We’ve put up “Muskrat Habitat” signs to alert the public. We also have had plenty of birds including a black-crowned heron that visits regularly, as well as large Hudson River carp that come in from the river to our tidal basin.
      - Ann-Marie Mitroff

7/15 – Bronx, New York City, HRM 13.5: I recently moved to the Spuyten Duyvil area of the Bronx. Looking out from our 17th story apartment, we’re able to look straight onto the Harlem River and also see where it joins the Hudson. A pair of peregrine falcons have been stunning us lately with their aerials, most recently flying at eye level. The other day we saw the Riverkeeper boat on the Harlem River, on its ways past the train platform to the Hudson. We waved and called to Captain John Lipscomb, cheering him on his way.
      - Ann-Marie Mitroff

7/15 – Manhattan, HRM 1: When Gabby Carmine checked our crab pots at The River Project’s station on the lighthouse tender Lilac at Hudson River Park’s Pier 25, she found four tautog, or blackfish (180-275 millimeters) all in one pot. The killifish traps held two small skilletfish (15 mm), an oyster toadfish (50 mm), and a northern puffer (Sphoeroides maculatus). It was all puffed up and we nearly mistook it for a sea squirt!
      - Jacqueline Wu

7/15 – Brooklyn, New York City: While seining at Brooklyn Bridge Park for their marine education program, we caught quite a few Atlantic menhaden and another herring that we hesitated on identifying. It was about 130 mm long and was released back into the East River. The water was 75 degrees F and the salinity was 27 ppt.
      - Peter J. Park, Eliza Phillips

[After viewing several photographs, a half-dozen expert opinions on the identity of this herring were split between blueback herring and American shad. Tom Lake.]

7/16 – Tivoli North Bay, HRM 100: Thirteen members of the Hackensack River Canoe and Kayak Club paddled out of the marsh at Tivoli North Bay just before high tide. When we got out around Magdalen Island, we got a wonderful look at an adult bald eagle as it left its perch on the north end and flew past. While it might seem like a simple pleasure, the highlight for us was hearing and getting several good looks at marsh wrens.
      - Bob Rancan, Al Grenley, Sumonnat Kongchatree, Skip Harrison.

pumpkinseed7/16 – Norrie Point, HRM 85: Staatsburg Library co-sponsored a public fishing day at the Norrie Point Environmental Center and nearly 50 people tried their luck with rod, reel, and nightcrawler. Despite the warm air (92 degrees F), warm water (79 degrees), and brilliant sunshine, all of which do not suggest good fishing, we caught 25 fish of six different species (bluegill, pumpkinseed, redbreast sunfish, yellow perch, white perch, and golden shiner.) All three sunfish species were represented by males in breeding colors. making our two temporary fish tanks look very “tropical.” [Photo of male pumpkinseed sunfish courtesy of Tom Lake.]
      - Gracie Ballou, Tom Lake

7/16 – Croton-on-Hudson, HRM 35: There was a flurry of activity this afternoon at the osprey nest at the Croton-Harmon train station. We spotted an adult perched on a post below the nest and saw some wing-flapping in the nest. Another adult flew in, possibly with a fish, and perched nearby. A nestling leaped up from of the nest, flapping its wings and attempting to follow the adult. We could see a second nestling moving around as well. We now know there are two nestlings and they seem close to fledging.
       - Dorothy Ferguson, Bob Ferguson

7/16 – Bedford, HRM 35: I visited the great blue heron rookery today and saw that the young herons were more actively moving about the branches that support their nests. There were 16 of them and, since I was sure that they were all capable of flying, they should be considered fledglings. Those I saw flying around the rookery and landing in nests were all strong flyers. The remaining fledglings very likely find it easier to wait for a parent to feed them than to hunt on their own.
      - Jim Steck

7/17 – Mechanicville, HRM 166: In late afternoon I investigated the area around Lock 2 of the Hudson-Champlain Canal after hearing of the little blue heron spotted there. Among the 36 species of birds counted were many shorebirds such as killdeer, spotted sandpiper, solitary sandpiper, and least sandpiper, as well as wading birds like lesser yellowlegs, great egrets, and great blue herons. Eventually I found the little blue heron. A cedar waxwing migration was underway; I counted 150 congregating on mats of marsh plants and poking their heads into the water foraging on berry-sized objects.
      - Ron Harrower, Hudson-Mohawk Bird Club

7/17 – Milan HRM 90: A large black bear, estimated at 300 pounds, visited our sunflower birdseed can this morning. The racket, right at sunrise, awoke me to see the bear flat on his stomach with his head in the can, enjoying himself.
      - Mary Otter

7/17 – Fishkill, HRM 61: Generally, I have seen only one northern flicker at a time during migration. However, this morning I witnessed a flurry of flickers when four of these woodpeckers flew from various perches to an area in my yard. I was unsure if this was a family group; a couple probed the ground while the others flew into a wooded area.
      - Ed Spaeth

7/17 – Beacon, HRM 61: The inshore shallows of the river were percolating at 86 degrees F, the warmest I have ever encountered short of a power generating facility’s outflow. Salinity had risen to 3.0 ppt. We began seining and caught many YOY striped bass (30-37 mm) but soon began snorkeling to cool off in the 88 degree air. Under the water and closer to the action we found small schools of YOY tessellated darters and spottail shiners. Visibility was an impressive three to four feet in places.
      - Tom Lake, B.J. Jackson

7/18 – Greene County: As I approached bald eagle nest NY203, cautiously paddling my kayak in from the south, I came upon an adult and two fledglings on driftwood along the shore. Both fledglings were flapping and hopping around. One of the fledglings began eating a fish, held by his talons, exactly like the adults do. Although it appeared that the fledglings were not going anywhere, they were being fed.
      - Kaare Christian

7/18 – George’s Island, HRM 39: The embayment surrounding George’s Island to the south and west were teeming with Atlantic menhaden. While many appeared to be 7-10 inches long, there were also vast numbers of other, smaller menhaden (“peanut bunker”) breaking the water across several acres. Bluefish and striped bass are well known to drive these huge schools into shallow water where they are easier to catch.
      - John Phillips

7/18 – Manhattan, HRM 2: We checked our sampling gear at The River Project’s site on Pier 40 and found three more very tiny skilletfish (10 millimeters), as well as a blackfish and an oyster toadfish.
      - Jacqueline Wu

7/19 – Beacon, HRM 61: It was early morning on the day after a series of violent thunderstorms (an inch of rain). The air temperature had dropped 15 degrees F and there was a stiff and cool westerly breeze. The water temperature had dropped eight degrees to 78 and the salinity was down to 2.0 ppt. The baby alewives we saw three weeks ago were still missing but YOY fishes, most notably striped bass (35-38 mm), were plentiful along with spottail shiners and tessellated darters.
      - Tom Lake, TR. Jackson, B.J. Jackson

7/19 – Manhattan, HRM 1: When we checked our killifish traps at The River Project’s station on the lighthouse tender Lilac at Pier 25, we found an oyster toadfish (85 mm). In a crab pot we found a blue crab missing its right claw. The river was 75 degrees F and the salinity was 14.5 ppt.
      - Jacqueline Wu

[Blue crabs have the ability to release an appendage (being a decapod, one of their ten “legs”) at will (autotomy), an adaptation for surviving battles with other crabs as well as an attack by a fish or a wading bird. They can regenerate the lost appendage, although this takes considerable time and it never fully recovers its original size. Tom Lake.]

7/20 – Greene County: I paddled my kayak over to monitor bald eagle nest NY203 this evening and found one of the two nestlings back on some shoreline driftwood. One of the adults was swimming a fish to shore. From descriptions of eagles doing the butterfly stroke in the Almanac, I knew what was going on. Once on shore, the adult began to eat; after a few minutes, the immature moved in to share the 18-inch-long channel catfish.
      - Kaare Christian

[Bald eagles are quite adept at short-term water navigation to procure a meal. It is not rare to see them “sitting” on the water, talons latched onto a big fish, assessing its options. If they are near shore, they use their wings like “paddles” to drag in and beach their prey. Tom Lake.]

young bald eagle from nest NY627/20 – Town of Poughkeepsie: Three of us were monitoring bald eagle nest NY62 on post-fledge Day 36 for the nestling we have called “Peep” (hatched on Easter). We often do not see Peep all day but he seems to have a schedule where he arrives back to the area of the nest tree about 7:45 each evening. After seven months of nest monitoring, every time we leave we wonder if it might be the last time we see Peep. [Photo of young eagle from NY62 courtesy of John Badura.]
      - Kathleen Courtney, Debbie Quick, Bob Rightmyer

7/20 – Town of Wappinger, HRM 67: As we slid our seine up on the sand yesterday we noticed a slew of fish, some tiny, some not so tiny, escaping out the back of the net. Upon inspection we found a number of tears in the seine, some silver dollar-sized. We immediately thought of Henry Gourdine, the legendary riverman from Ossining. Henry would have admonished us on the spot. “You have enough holes in that net already (meshes) without abiding more!” So this evening we took more than an hour to mend our net, all the while wondering how many special fishes have escaped out the back door of poorly tended seines.
      - Tom Lake

[Henry Gourdine was known as the “Net Doctor.” He carried a small satchel that contained needles, twine, and the rest of his net-making and net-mending gear. Henry was from an era when rivermen knitted their own gill nets and seines from cotton and linen, and then multifilament in more recent times. They would then hang or build their nets, fastening the knitted mesh to seam lines. Today gill nets and seines arrive in the mail fully assembled, ready to use. While the craftsmanship of net-making is largely lost, the labor of net-mending is still with us out of necessity. Tom Lake.]

7/20 – Hathaway’s Glen, HRM 63: Reaching the sandbar to seine here requires wading through the often icy waters of Hathaway’s Glen Brook. That was a welcome respite today (the air was 84 degrees F). As has been the case recently, YOY striped bass (33-44 millimeters) dominated the catch on every haul. YOY alewives (49-51 mm) and banded killifish were much in the minority.
      - Tom Lake, A. Danforth

[The beach at Hathaways’s Glen is the terminus of a small, cold water brook that spills down the fall line into a short run to the river. The water exiting Hathaway’s Glen today was 68 degrees. Not more than 150 feet away, the river was 82. Tom Lake.]

lined seahorse7/20 – Brooklyn, New York City: A fish that seems to be more abundant than usual this year is the lined seahorse. Besides all the reports from The River Project, and Fort Washington Park in June, today we caught a large pregnant male in the East River at Brooklyn Bridge Park. [Photo of lined seahorse courtesy of Rebecca Houser.]
      - Steve Stanne

7/20 – Manhattan, New York City: We netted two small mullet (65 mm) while seining in the Little Hell Gate salt marsh off the Harlem River on Randall’s Island. With the Peterson Guide to Atlantic Coast Fishes in hand, we decided that they were white mullet rather than striped mullet.
      - Steve Stanne

[Scientists believe that the white mullet (Mugil curema) is actually a species complex. Since the holotype of Mugil curema is from Brazil, the chances are that M. curema is only valid for the South Atlantic and South Caribbean. The Pacific, Gulf of Mexico, and Western North Atlantic populations are (probably) several species. My guess is that ultimately the Western North Atlantic “white” mullet will be reclassified. In our area, both white mullet and striped mullet are occasional summer and fall visitors into brackish water. Bob Schmidt.]

7/20 – Manhattan, HRM 2: The River Project’s Elisa Caref, our Education Programs Coordinator, and Melissa Rex, our educator, spotted a small school of fish close to the bulkhead at their Pier 40 sampling station. They described the fish as being about 100 mm long, dark banded top and sides with a white underbelly. They swam in a messy school, often swimming up and then going back down deeper. Elisa said they were reminiscent of the banded rudderfish from 2014.
      - Jacqueline Wu

[The banded rudderfish (Seriola zonata), a member of the jack family (Carangidae), and typically an offshore ocean species, was added to the Hudson River Checklist of Fishes in August 2014. A small school of banded rudderfish (estimated 250 mm long) was clearly photographed by Chris Anderson from The River Project’s Pier 40 sampling station in Hudson River Park. Tom Lake.]

7/20 – Manhattan, HRM 1: When we checked our killifish traps at The River Project’s station on the lighthouse tender Lilac at Pier 25 we found another lined seahorse (105 mm), and a small skilletfish (15 mm).
      - Jacqueline Wu

[The skilletfish (Gobiesox strumosus) is a small bottom-dwelling fish somewhat related to gobies and blennies. They find oyster reefs ideal habitat for both forage and safety. Their name comes from a dorsally-flattened body with a large, roundish head that – taken together – look like a skillet. The skilletfish was added to the Hudson River Checklist of Fishes in April of 2012, when a 52 millimeter individual was caught by The River Project from an artificial oyster reef. Tom Lake.]

SUMMER 2016 NATURAL HISTORY PROGRAMS

Trees and Shrubs Available for Planting Along Hudson Tributaries
Do you own or manage land along a stream? The Hudson Estuary Trees for Tribs Program offers free native trees and shrubs for planting along the tributary streams in the Hudson River Estuary watershed. Since 2007, Trees for Tribs has been responsible for planting more than 40,000 native trees and shrubs along 18 miles of stream with the help of over 7,500 local volunteers.
We are looking for new sites, and our staff can help you with a planting plan and work with your volunteers on site. Trees for Tribs is now accepting applications for fall 2016 planting projects. Applications received by August 1, 2016 will be given preference. For more information about the program including project applications and fact sheets, please visit the Trees for Tribs website, email the Hudson River Estuary Program's Stream Buffer Coordinator, Beth Roessler, or call (845) 256-2253 .

Saturday, August 13: The Fifth Annual Great Hudson River Estuary Fish Count
Using seine nets, minnow pots, crab traps, and fishing rods, DEC’s Hudson River Estuary Program and partners from river education groups will introduce visitors to the diversity of slippery, wriggly, and fascinating creatures usually hidden below the surface of the Hudson estuary. Below is a preliminary list of sites, times, and techniques to be employed during the count. Visit the Great Hudson River Estuary Fish Count website for more details and updated information as it becomes available.
Brooklyn
- Valentino Pier: 10:00-12:00 noon; seining at end of Coffey St, Red Hook
- Brooklyn Bridge Park: 10:30-12:00 noon; seining at 99 Plymouth St; beach under Manhattan Bridge
Manhattan
- The River Project: 11:00 AM-1:00 PM; minnow pots & crab traps at Steamship Lilac, Hudson River Park Pier 25 at West St & North Moore St
- Hudson River Park Trust: 12:00-4:00 PM; angling on Pier 84 at 12th Ave & 44th S
- Ft. Washington Park: 11:00 AM-1:00 PM; seining at beach near comfort station just south of Little Red Lighthouse
- Inwood Hill Park: 3:30-5:30 PM; seining in Washington Heights at West 218 St & Indian Rd
- Randall’s Island Park: 11:00 AM-2:00 PM; seining in a restored salt marsh
Yonkers - Sarah Lawrence Center for the Urban River at Beczak: 2:00-4:00 PM; seining at 35 Alexander St, 1 block from Yonkers Metro North Station (Hudson Line)
Piermont - Piermont Pier: 3:00-5:00 PM: seining at Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory blockhouse at pier’s end
Sleepy Hollow - Kingsland Pt. Park: 11:00 AM; seining at Kathryn W. Davis RiverWalk Center
Croton on Hudson - Croton Point Park: 1:00 PM; seining near swimming beach
Cold Spring - Little Stony Point: 12:30 PM: seining at north end of Sandy Beach
New Windsor - Kowawese Unique Area/Plum Point: 2:30 PM; seining on county park beach
Beacon - Scenic Hudson’s Long Dock Park: 10:00-12:00 noon; seining
Poughkeepsie - Quiet Cove Park: 3:00 PM: seining
Athens - Cohotate Preserve: 10:00-11:00 AM: seining
Stuyvesant - Nutten Hook: 3:00 PM; seining at Ice House Road entrance
Castleton-on-Hudson - Schodack Island State Park: 7:00-8:30 PM; seining at boat launch
Waterford - Peebles Island State Park: 10:00 AM-2:00 PM; seining near picnic pavilion

HUDSON RIVER MILES

The Hudson is measured north from Hudson River Mile 0 at the Battery at the southern tip of Manhattan. The George Washington Bridge is at HRM 12, the Tappan Zee 28, Bear Mountain 47, Beacon-Newburgh 62, Mid-Hudson 75, Kingston-Rhinecliff 95, Rip Van Winkle 114, and the Federal Dam at Troy, the head of tidewater, at 153. The tidal section of the Hudson constitutes a bit less than half the total distance – 315 miles – from Lake Tear of the Clouds to the Battery. Entries from points east and west in the watershed reference the corresponding river mile on the mainstem.

TO CONTRIBUTE YOUR OBSERVATIONS OR TO SUBSCRIBE

The Hudson River Almanac is compiled and edited by Tom Lake and emailed weekly by DEC's Hudson River Estuary Program. Share your observations by e-mailing them to trlake7@aol.com.

To subscribe to the Almanac (or to unsubscribe), go to DEC's Email Lists page, enter your email address, and click on "Submit." Fill in and submit the requested information on the “New Subscriber” page. This will take you to “Quick Subscriptions”. Scroll down; under the heading "Natural Areas and Wildlife" is the section "Lakes and Rivers" with a listing for the Hudson River Almanac. Click on the check box to subscribe. While there, you may wish to subscribe to RiverNet, which covers projects, events and actions related to the Hudson and its watershed, or to other DEC newsletters and information feeds.

The current year's issues are available at http://www.dec.ny.gov/lands/25611.html . To view older issues, visit the New York State Library's Hudson River Almanac Archive. If it asks you to login, click on "Guest." You may then need to reopen this page and click on the Almanac Archive link again to access the Almanac collection in the library's files.

Discover New York State Conservationist - the award-winning, advertisement-free magazine focusing on New York State's great outdoors and natural resources. Conservationist features stunning photography, informative articles and around-the-state coverage. Visit the Conservationist webpage for more information.

USEFUL LINKS

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration online tide and tidal current predictions are invaluable when planning Hudson River field trips.

For real-time information on Hudson River tides, weather and water conditions from twelve monitoring stations, visit the Hudson River Environmental Conditions Observing System website.

Information about the Hudson River Estuary Program is available on DEC's website at http://www.dec.ny.gov/lands/4920.html .

Smartphone app available for New York outdoor enthusiasts!
DEC, in partnership with ParksByNature Network®, is proud to announce the launch of the New York Fishing, Hunting & Wildlife App for iPhone and Android. This FREE, cutting-edge mobile app gives both novice and seasoned outdoorsmen and women essential information in the palm of their hands. Powered by Pocket Ranger® technology, this official app for DEC will provide up-to-date information on fishing, hunting and wildlife watching and serve as an interactive outdoor app using today's leading mobile devices. Using the app's advanced GPS features, users will be able identify and locate New York's many hunting, fishing and wildlife watching sites. They will also gain immediate access to species profiles, rules and regulations, and important permits and licensing details.

NY Open for Hunting and Fishing Initiative
Governor Cuomo's NY Open for Fishing and Hunting Initiative is an effort to improve recreational opportunities for sportsmen and women and to boost tourism activities throughout the state. This initiative includes streamlining fishing and hunting licenses, reducing license fees, improving access for fishing and increasing hunting opportunities in New York State.
In support of this initiative, this year's budget includes $6 million in NY Works funding to support creating 50 new land and water access projects to connect hunters, anglers, bird watchers and others who enjoy the outdoors to more than 380,000 acres of existing state and easement lands that have gone largely untapped until now. These 50 new access projects include building new boat launches, installing new hunting blinds and building new trails and parking areas. In addition, the 2014-15 budget includes $4 million to repair the state's fish hatcheries; and renews and allows expanded use of crossbows for hunting in New York State.
This year's budget also reduces short-term fishing licenses fees; increases the number of authorized statewide free fishing days to eight from two; authorizes DEC to offer 10 days of promotional prices for hunting, fishing and trapping licenses; and authorizes free Adventure Plates for new lifetime license holders, discounted Adventure Plates for existing lifetime license holders and regular fee Adventure Plates for annual license holders.

Copies of past issues of the Hudson River Almanac, Volumes II-VIII, are available for purchase from the publisher, Purple Mountain Press, (800) 325-2665, or email purple@catskill.net