By the Ossining Boat and Canoe Club

I went down to the river the other day. It was really too cold to take photographs. I had to take a few photographs, put my camera and my hands in pocket (luckily, I was using a very small, pocketable camera). Wait until my hands warmed up. Then take a few more quick pictures and repeat the whole process until I’d taken as many pictures as I could.

The pictures were taken around the Ossining Boat and Canoe Club. According to the Club’s website:

The Ossining Boat and Canoe Club was founded in 1915. At first it doesn’t sound like it was that long ago, but then we realize that cars were not all that common and that the highways in our area were not yet built. There were no malls or shopping centers and all goods where bought on Main Street or from a catalogue. The Tappan Zee Bridge would not exist to take us to the other side of the river for another forty years. Canoeing was an active national sport in those days and the club put a group in the water called the “Black Hawks”. This team competed as far away as Canada in a four-man racing canoe.

Building. The original clubhouse was erected by the members on the present site, just south of the Ossining RR Station on Westerly Road, in 1921. With the exception of some minor changes to the façade, the structure remains identical to its original frame. Some recent renovations to the club property include: a newly constructed ramp from the clubhouse to the docks, ample docking space for visitors and boaters in distress, and a completely refurbished upper deck offering magnificent views of the Hudson River and its shores. In addition to these, heating and air-conditioning were added to the club building.

Today the clubhouse is owned by the Town of Ossining and is exclusively licensed to the boat club.

Function. The boat basin itself is not so different from the days of the original site though modern moorings have replaced the wooden tree poles of the past. The club’s location on the east bank of the Tappan Zee has always provided sailors with miles of open water and fishermen with ample fishing spots. The club was conceived so that members could have access to the river at a reasonable rate. In order to maintain these reasonable rates all clubhouse maintenance and repairs are completed by the membership. There have always been two classifications of membership – working and associate. To accommodate schedules that do not allow for volunteer work hours, a third status was added as non-working. Our application form requests that the applicant list his or her skills and professions – in that way we make use of an invaluable pool of resources.














Taken with a Sony RX100 M3

In Ossining again – Geese

In a number of posts on this blog I’ve described my frustration with never being able to find birds to photograph. Because of this I tend to take the opportunity to photograph any birds, no matter how plain or uninteresting. Hence the pictures of these Canada geese. However, I do like the way the trio in the first picture have arranged themselves. It’s almost as if they’re posing.

Taken with a Sony RX100 M7

Some of my favorite pictures of 2024 – Black and White


Self Portrait. Briarcliff Manor, NY. October 18, 2024.


Dove Silhouette. Briarcliff Manor, NY. April 28, 2024.


Railroad Tracks, Croton-Harmon Station. Croton-on-Hudson, NY. August 25, 2024.


Statue, All Souls Cemetery, Pleasantville, NY. February 7, 2024.


The Rising. Kensico Dam Plaza. March 13, 2024.


Luna. Sleepy Hollow, NY. October 13, 2024.


Building Facade in Manhattan. NY, NY. April 29, 2024.


Double-arched Bridge. Ossining, NY. November 17, 2024.


Sing Sing Prison. Ossining, NY. June 24, 2024.


Grasses in a vernal pond. Briarcliff Manor, NY. March 9, 2024.


Tree Trunks. Briarcliff Manor, NY. November 1, 2024.


Photographs inside “Mudville”. NY, NY. August 10, 2024

Taken with a variety of cameras and lenses

Some of my favorite pictures of 2024 – Color


Vermeeresque. Briarcliff Manor, February 17, 2024


Creepy hot dog man. Ossining, February 24, 2024


Benny Benack III at Django. NY, NY, August 8, 2024


Black Vulture on my roof. Briarcliff Manor, September 22, 2024.


Stone Bridge with Fall leaves. Briarcliff Manor, November 10, 2024


Red-winged Blackbird. Briarcliff Manor, June 17, 2024.


Rockefeller State Park. Pleasantville, NY, May 20, 2024.


Ice cream eaters. Peekskill, NY, July 28, 2024.


Pigeons. NY, NY, August 18, 2024


Paper Bird in a bookstore. Ossining, NY. November 17, 2024.


Clouds. Briarcliff Manor, NY. November 4, 2024.


Juno. West Rutland, Vermont. August 26, 2024.

Taken with a variety of cameras and lenses

A visit to upstate New York and Vermont – Saratoga Springs, Congress Park

Congress Park is a 17-acre (6.9 ha) site in Saratoga Springs, New York, United States. It was formerly the site of the Congress Hotel (also called Congress Hall), a large resort hotel, and the Congress Spring Bottling Plant, as well as Canfield Casino, which together brought Saratoga Springs international fame as a health spa and gambling site. At the peak of its popularity, it was a place where the wealthy, major gamblers and stars of the entertainment world mingled. The park’s artwork includes a statue by Daniel Chester French and landscape design by Frederick Law Olmsted, among others. The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) as the Casino-Congress Park-Circular Street Historic District in 1972 and was then declared a National Historic Landmark in 1987. The later listing excluded some of the property outside the park and halved the overall size of the district.

Congress Park is a City of Saratoga Springs Park, bounded by Broadway, Spring Street, and Circular Street. The Canfield Casino buildings, built in 1870, 1871 and 1902–03, house the Saratoga Springs History Museum, an art gallery and spaces which host public and private events. Gambling was ended by reformers in 1907.

It had been a long day, and I was feeling tired, so we didn’t spend much time in Congress Park. The limited time we had I spent mostly taking pictures of ducks.

For more information on Congress Park see here.






Taken with a Sony RX10 IV