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Hard copies of the Tapestry will be available to those who do not receive the Tapestry electronically at Community Connections at Findley Lake in their office in the Community Center. These will be available from 10am to 3pm Monday-Friday.

FINDLEY LAKE HARVEST FESTIVAL

COME SPEND THE WEEKEND IN FINDLEY LAKE!

THIS IS A FREE EVENT

LIVE MUSIC - VENDORS - CRAFTERS - BEER TENT

FAMILY ZONE - BOOK SALE

Friday, Saturday and Sunday

 August 30, 31 and September 1

FINDLEY LAKE HARVEST FESTIVAL MADE THE ERIE NEWS WATCH CLICK HERE

HARVEST FESTIVAL PARKING AND SHUTTLE SERVICE - FREE

FAMILY ZONE IN THE FINDLEY LAKE FIREHALL

SATURDAY AND SUNDAY DURING HARVEST FESTIVAL

NOON - 4PM

Stop in and get a free balloon, play some games, do some crafts, jump in the bounce house, get your face painted, and love on some cuddly creatures!

ALL FREE!

Findley Lake Watershed Foundation News



FLWF FOOTBALL RAFFLES

GET YOUR TICKETS NOW!

Email: christinecraffey@verizon.net for tickets today, or stop by our table at this weekend's Fall Fest! All proceeds from the raffle will be put towards funds needed to treat the south end of the lake in 2025. A worthy cause if you saw the results from treating the north end this year!

WEEKLY HARVESTER REPORTS
Findley Lake Watershed Website HERE

FINDLEY LAKE VOLUNTEER OF THE WEEK

Ida, a wonderful resident at the Blair House on Shadyside Rd. She assists with pinching back our flower barrels on her walks to visit her grandkids living at the old Curly Maple. THANKS IDA. BB.

PURCHASE BICENTENNIAL MERCHANDISE HERE
BICENTENNIAL PHOTOS HERE
The Post-Journal Article about Findley Lake's Bicentennial CLICK HERE
MEANDERING, FORAGING AND BRINGING THE PAST INTO THE PRESENT
Written for The Tapestry by Destiny Kinal

Subtitled Reading and Writing



Dear readers,

 

I spent an afternoon with Judy Noble this week.

 

Judy and her husband Bud were the sparkplugs that put Findley Lake on a regional map for day trippers with their restaurant Curly Maple, that drew visitors from 100 miles out, to Findley Lake for home cooking and such rarities as elderberry pie on mismatched china.

 

Quitting when you’re at the apex is an art form  and when the hullabaloo grew to be too much for Bud and Judy, they opened Wonderments, an instantaneous “keystone” business---one of those one-of-a-kind curated shops “on trend”  in Findley Lake’s downtown, creating a vibrant triangle with Our Own Candle Shop and Secret Cubby.

 

After 12 columns starting in May, I am taking the “quitting while you’re ahead” example to heart. I have told my esteemed editor Robin Gross: this will be my last column for Tapestry.

 

Of course I have no evidence that I have readers (aside from my sister Candace in Hamburg,) despite leaving my email address at the bottom of each weekly column. I have tried to be provocative but not incendiary, to provoke thought in a readership along a political spectrum from right and center to left, readers who might be attracted to my request to “suspend their disbelief” and surrender to the rhythm of my meanders.


Like many of you, (women in particular the data clerks tell us,) I was a voracious and omnivorous reader in my salad days.  My mother Constance-the-wise supplied me with a bushel of sheep’s-nose apples every fall; I crunched through them as I devoured pages of story.

 

Interestingly, my parents never censored my reading. They, like many, subscribed to the Book of the Month Club.  To their collective credit, I read Autobiography of a Yogi by Paramhansa Yogananda when I was 12.

 

Since reading Mary Renault’s fiction written in the 50’s and 60’s about Crete, “The Bull from the Sea,” “The King Must Die,” and “Fire From Heaven,” spoon-feeding us the delicious details of our prehistory, I have a taste for trilogies and quartets, most certainly accounting for the reason I spent the last  thirty years of my life writing a trilogy of historical novels. 

 

My subject and place? Right here in the northeastern US during the 19th century, which I find as fascinating as stories about Crete or royalty.  World-shaking things occurred to us as a species here in the 19th century. It was my privilege (and a challenge) to make them come alive for contemporary readers.

 

As for being an avid reader, after a particularly big family dinner, say Thanksgiving, I would hide out in a favorite reading closet to get out of the dreary task of washing dishes and “cleaning up.”   My mother and grandmother would call my name throughout the house while I remained perfectly still, not to risk breaking the cocoon of story.

 

As I aged, my taste still leaned to trilogies, where the world of fantasies and adventure abound: Tolkien, Ursula Le Guin, CS Lewis, Pullman’s His Dark Materials.  And then, more recently—under the guise of keeping my younger grandchildren company in their worlds—Hunger Games as well as “Emergent/Detergent.”   (I could never get it straight so I waved my hands and said Emergent Detergent and everyone under fourteen  knew what I meant.)

 

More adult trilogies like the Alexandrian Quartet by Lawrence Durrell introduced me to a world I longed to inhabit, to know those codes like the Kaballah and other arcane practices from an insider’s point-of-view.

 

For modern readers Elena Ferrante burst upon the scene with her breezy conversational style.  I will always be a big fan of Tariq Ali’s even though we are contemporaries and have read back-to-back at the same bookstores…my hero because certain tour de force stand alone and can never be repeated or copied. His “Shadows of the Pomegranate Tree” about 15th century Spain where Christians, Muslims, and Jews lived side by side for an uncounted period of time, collaborating across the arts, conjures a world I enter every time I read this book.  The eloquence of the Alhambra stands as a testimony to that Golden Age until Queen Isabella (she who launched Columbus’ fleet) declared Jews and Muslims apostates and nonpersons before the law.

 

The first one into a subject will always be the pre-emptive model, never the copier.  My book on the mysterious world of silk for instance, or my second book on linen, were the first into these worlds of intense textile rigor.  I can still shiver remembering how close Alessandro Baricco’s “Silk” came, to becoming the pristine apex on silk,  forever the prime reference, rather than my “Burning Silk.”

 

And now that  I have whittled my audience down to those who can follow swift meanders coursing down a particular mountainside, Mount History Buffs, I can’t help but allow the swift current to drag me along! 

 

A similar thing happened in the 1200’s known as the Albigensian Heresy whose premise that good and evil are well matched, offended the Catholic Church, largely because “the good” was held to be unattainable without “prayer, indulgences and good works.” All of these aids to salvation were available for purchase from an often corrupt clergy.  

 

The sand in the ointment however was that—while the perfectii of the Cathars abstained from excessive consumption and made their lives a model of pure living, a rebuke to the clergy—the priests of Rome sold indulgences, kept wives, and were gourmands of every vice.   It made perfect sense when Crusaders were returning from unsuccessful missions to take down Constantinople, to turn them on to these heretics.  (Twenty thousand famously died by the sword in Beziers in one day.)

 

Three centuries later, these same people, popularly referred to as Huguenots, masters in the secrets of many crafts—book printing, silk making, annealing metals for strength and flexibility—were declared criminals in the eyes of France with the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes which had extended religious freedom to all peoples living inside France.  With one stroke, thousands of Huguenots ran to the borders, taking their knowledge to other countries, while thousands more were imprisoned inside France, pursued and tortured. 


I mention these examples—not to vilify any particular religion, not at all!—but to point out that extremists of any belief produce jihad, the notion that people with different beliefs must be destroyed by any means necessary for all of our salvation.  This lay behind the Nazis extermination of six million people in the generation just before mine…recent history. 

 

Irresistible bait for both a certain type of reader and writer! Is it any wonder historical fiction continues to be a force majeure in the literary world?  And now that speculative fiction—imagining a different outcome to our histories--is tantalizing our imaginations…?

 

My editor put it to me succinctly: “Do you really want to write yet another story where an intelligent and resourceful wife is brought down by a negligent or jealous husband?”  (Hear me roar.). 

“Do you really want to write another story where Native Americans are defrauded from their legacy of wealth (tobacco, land, oil) when so many native American writers have written it, and well?)”

(Of course not!—and I have no right to write their history.)

Of course my characters are Metis, the product of French, Dutch, European and Native heritages, and therefore fair game for an author like me from similar backgrounds.

 

During the thirty years when I was writing (one novel at a time) the Textile Trilogy, I confined my reading to contemporaries who were doing new things in fiction (female protagonists for instance) and to the research relevant to my own writing.

 

Now, in the quiet that can follow a long arduous endeavour (my life’s work as a writer), I was asked to write a weekly column for Tapestry.  This will be my last column, an even twelve on Labor Day weekend, as I hope to finally apply myself to a memoir for my descendants who might ask what kind of mischief this ancestor named Destiny found worth her while.

 

And I shall ever be the envy of other scribblers—Gene Cuneo, Brian Kinal, Mark Twain, Halcyon Mueller, Rebecca Brumagin—that I was given the assignment of writing whatever I wanted, weekly, in the summer of 2024 for the Tapestry, the long-running newsletter of my hometown Findley Lake. 

Black Gilliflower Apple Aka Sheep's Nose

Destiny has been writing a column for The Tapestry for the last twelve weeks. Destiny lives part of the year on her famly homestead outside of Findley Lake and the other part in the San Francisco Bay area. Her most recent work The Textile Trilogy of novels tells the true story of how our suffragist foremothers were influenced by their Seneca and Haudenosaunee neighbors, a matrilineal way-of-life where men and women have always shared power. You can reach Destiny at destinykin22@gmail.com.

Thank you Destiny for 12 weeks of Meandering, Foraging, and Bringing the Past into the Present. Your time and your talent have been appreciated by many.

We hoped to hear from you again!

MESSAGE FROM NYS DEC - Furbearer Sighting Survey

If you see a bobcat or other furbearer in "upstate New York", Chautauqua County is included in this catergory, please report your sighting using the furbearer sighting survey; including bobcat, otter, fisher, martin, weasel, snowshoe hare, gray fox and fox squirrel.

Furbearer Sighting Survey Link Here

MARK YOUR CALENDARS


Make sure to check Community Connections Facebook Page for scheduled events. Monday-Friday at 8:45 AM Zoom Yoga. In Person Yoga every Friday. Every Tuesday Mahjong at 1:00pm in the Community Tea Room.

NEW Cornhole Thursdays at 10AM in the Community Center Gym!

Please visit Community Connections website!

https://www.connectionsatfindleylake.org/

or on Facebook here:

https://www.facebook.com/CommunityConnectionsatFindleyLake.org


August 30, 31 September 1 Findley Lake Harvest Festival

Findley Lake Library Annual Book Sale During Harvest Fest

Music lineup so far: Friday evening Shady Side 5:30-8:30PM, Midnight Growlers at Alexanders 8-11PM; Saturday Jack Stephenson 11AM-1PM, Juvenile Characteristics 2-5PM, Theory of Evolution 6-9PM, Shani Bills 8:30-10:30 at Alexanders; Sunday Uncle Claud's Band with Lance Kinal and Friends noon-3PM, Gabe Stillman 4-7PM.


August 30 Peek'n Peak Gazebo Grill Singin' At the Peak Karaoke at the Gazebo Grill 6-9; Bistro 210 Live Music with Tyler McClain 9:30PM-12:30AM


August 31 NEW Free Freshwater Fishing Day. No Fishing license required! All regulations remain in effect. https://dec.ny.gov/things-to-do/freshwater-fishing/learn-to-fish


August 31 Findley Lake Library End of Summer Shindig 11AM-2PM.


August 31 Peek'n Peak Bonfires and Brews Live Music with Apple Jack 5-9PM


September 1 Peek'n Peak Bonfires and Brews Live Music with Theory of Evolution 5-9PM. Bistro 210 Erica & Jesse 9:30PM-12:30AM.


September 3 Alexander's OTL Live Music with Ion Sky 7-9PM


September 6 Community Connections BINGO 1PM in the Communi-Tea Room


September 7 Peek'n Peak Bistro 210 Interstate Daydream 9:30PM-12:30AM


September 8 PINE JUNCTION Myron Elkins 1PM and Smilo & The Ghost 2PM

Ticketed Event. BUY TICKETS CLICK HERE


September 14 Chautauqua County Household Hazardous Waste Drop-Off Day 9AM-2PM Chautauqua County DPF Building, 454 North Work, Falconer

MORE INFO HERE


September 14 Bsion Trace Luxury Camping Live Music with DUKE SHERMAN BAND. 6-9PM BYOB & Food Available to purchase. More info call 931-200-1735


September 14 Peek'n Peak Bistro 210 Dual Identity 9:30PM-12:30AM


September 20 Community Connections BINGO 1PM in the Communi-Tea Room


September 21 Peek'n Peak Bistro 210 Doug Philllips Duo 9:30PM-12:30AM


September 28 Free Fishing Day in NY State.


September 28 Peek'n Peak Bistro 210 Acoustic Jukebox 9:30PM-12:30AM


October 1 Alexander's OTL Halloween Trivia Night


October 5 Findley Lake Short Walk For Dwarfism Awareness - More Info to Come.


October 12-13 & 19-20 Peek'n Peak Fall Fest 2024 https://www.pknpk.com/special-events/fall-fest-2024/ Live music October 12 bistro 210 Hyde & Seek 9:30PM-12:30AM.


October 12-13 & 19-20 Compass Bar & Grille, Community Vendor & Craft Fair, and Compass catering showcase. 11AM-5PM, Taking vendor applications, $50 per weekend for more info contact compassbarandgrille@gmail.com deadline is October 1, 2024.


October 26 Findley Lake Artists In Residence (FLAIR) 9:30AM-11:30AM Artist Meet Up/PleinAir Experience. Findley Lake Historic Cemetery, Rt. 426 Findley Lake, NW corner at the blinking light). No bathroom at this location, use waterwheel building 2 blocks away. Historic cemetery with a view of the lake. Flair_FindleyLake@gogglegroups.com


November 2 Findley Lake Library Fall Craft Show 10AM-4PM in the Findley Lake Fire Hall.


November 2 Peek'n Peak Wurst Party Ever. Bistro 210 Music with Apple Jack 9:30PM-12:30AM. https://www.pknpk.com/special-events/wurst-party-ever-2024/


November 5 Alexander's OTL Thanksgiving Trivia Night


November 10 Findley Lake Nature Trails Veterans Day Dinner at the Community Center 1:00-3:00PM. RSVP 814-899-8228


November 11 Veterans Day Free Fishing Day in NY State


November 12 Alexander's OTL Celebrity Chef TBA


November 15, 16, 17, 22, 23, 24 Peek'n Peak Medieval Feast Dinner Theater

The Retreat Dinner Theater Info Here November 15 Bistro 210 Music DJ Felix, November 16 Bistro 210 Music Acoustic Jukebox, November 22 Bistor Music DJ Felix, November 23 Music Interstate Daydream - 9:30PM-12:30AM


November 23 & 24 Secret Cubby's 11th Annual Vintage Christmas


November 30 Alexander's OTL 2nd Annual Turkey Trot


December 3 Alexander's OTL Christmas Trivia Night


December 7 & 8 Findley Lake Christmas Through the Village


December 10 Alexander's OTL Celebrity Chef TBA


January 19, 2025 Findley Lake Annual Tree Burn at dusk.

Links to the Town of Mina

Upcoming Meetings, Agendas, Minutes

Laws, Forms, and Resolutions

can all be found on the Town of Mina Web Page.


Town of Mina Home Page

http://www.townofmina.info/


Minutes, Board and Zoning Board Meeting Packets & Agendas (not necessarily in order by date due to edits check date of report)

http://www.townofmina.info/minutes--agendas.html


Town of Mina Publications

http://www.townofmina.info/publications.html


Town of Mina Stormwater Retrofit Study Report -

CLICK HERE


Forms, Budgets and Laws

http://www.townofmina.info/forms-budgets-laws.html


Legal Notices and Resolutions.

This is where notices are recorded for meetings, resolutions.

http://www.townofmina.info/legal-notices--resolutions.html

Findley Lake Community Foundation Information - NEW WEBSITE

https://findleylakecf.org/


Findley Lake Forward Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61556008632813


Visit Findley Lake Community Website https://www.visitfindleylake.com/home


New York State Freshwater Fishing Regulations Guide

https://dec.ny.gov/sites/default/files/2024-03/fishguide.pdf


Little Yellow Cottage Lake Cam Link - Live camera link of the lake.

Link to Little Yellow Cottage Cam

Jack'n Sherri's Twin Docks Dam Cam - Live camera link

Link to Twin Docks Cam


Community Connections Website https://www.connectionsatfindleylake.org/


Findley Lake Volunteer Fire Company Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/FindleyLakeVolunteerFireDepartment/


Findley Lake Watershed Foundation Website https://www.findleylakewf.org/


Alexander Findley Community Library Website https://www.findleylibrary.org/


Findley Lake and Mina Historical Society http://findleylakehistory.weebly.com/

Link to New Facebook Page


NY Department of Environmental Conservation https://www.dec.ny.gov/outdoor/26958.html


Findley Lake Nature Trail Network Facebook https://www.facebook.com/FindleyLakeNatureCenter/


Events throughout Chautauqua County https://www.tourchautauqua.com/


Clymer Central School District https://www.clymercsd.org/


Sherman Central School District https://www.shermancsd.org/

Please check Visit Findley Lake Community Website https://www.visitfindleylake.com/home

or on Visit Findley Lake Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/visitfindleylake

Please contact The Tapestry at

TapestryFindleyLake@gmail.com

or write Town of Mina

Attn: The Tapestry

PO Box 38

Findley Lake, NY 14736


PLEASE FEEL FREE TO SEND MEMORIES, STORIES, PHOTOS, COMMUNITY INTEREST ITEMS, EVENTS TO tapestryfindleylake@gmail.com


Links for earlier editions of The Tapestry can be found on www.visitfindleylake.com

(not all of the back issue links are available at this time they will be available shortly. If you are looking for a specific Tapestry please email tapestryfindleylake@gmail.com and a link can be sent to you directly. Thank you.)