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Ep. 81 - Keepin' Wetlands Wet: The Western NY Land Conservancy's Mission to Save Bear Lake

6/1/20261 hr 4 min

Every now and then, a conservation opportunity comes along that you can't pass up. The Western NY Land Conservancy (WNYLC) is currently in a race to permanently protect the Bear Lake Preserve, 311 acres of undeveloped shoreline, mature forest, and an array of critical wetland habitats linked to the Lake.

To break down what makes this property so special, the guys hit the trail with WNYLC Stewardship Director Josh Balisteri. He gives them a tour of the property, discussing the history and ecology of Bear Lake, the historical and global crisis of wetland loss, and why we need to start viewing the Great Lakes ecosystem through the lens of crucial "inland coasts."

Head over to wnylc.org/bearlake to check out maps of the new preserve and support their work!

This episode was recorded at Bear Lake in Stockton, NY (and Pomfret, NY) on May 18, 2026.

Episode Notes and Links

Lucy and Bear Lake:

During the episode, Bill boldly threw out a bit of local lore suggesting that WNY’s favorite daughter, Lucille Ball, once stayed at a cottage on Bear Lake. He diligently searched online for any evidence that this was true, but came up empty. Lucy did grow up on the shores of nearby Chautauqua Lake in Celoron and spent many summers during the peak of her popularity escaping to Chenango Lake in eastern NY, but there is no official record of her hiding out at Bear Lake.

Sorting Out Our Flight Paths:

Later in the conversation, Bill referenced Darryl McGrath’s excellent book Flight Paths: A Field Journal of Hope, Heartbreak, and Miracles with New York's Bird People and misidentified Hemlock Lake as one of the state's first eagle hacking (establishment) sites. While Bill was correct in remembering that Hemlock Lake was mentioned in the book, he was confused about the context. In reality, Hemlock Lake played a far more poignant role: it was the home of the very last known native nesting pair of bald eagles in New York State. By the late 1970s, chemical contamination from DDT had devastated the population, and that lonely Hemlock Lake pair was all that remained of our national bird in the entire state. (The pioneering hacking program Bill was thinking of launched nearby at the Montezuma National Wildlife Refuge).

Why the South Shore of Bear Lake Stayed Wild:

A major piece of that puzzle comes down to local history: from the 1920s through the 1970s, the land was home to a vibrant YMCA camp, and local authors Bob and Anne Deming (who Josh mentioned as key people in aiding the effort to save Bear Lake) published a book mapping out the camp’s history. Originally inspired by a single chapter in their debut book, A History of Bear Lake (recently updated and re-released), they dove deeper into the archives to publish Camp in the Woods, a collection of photos and first-hand accounts from nearly 500 former campers and staff members.

Find their books on Amazon: Bob and Anne Deming's Author & Book Page

Read more about the project: New Book Recounts Stories from Y Camp in the Woods

Special thanks to Andrew Gaerte, the Western New York Land Conservancy’s Director of Development and Communications, for sharing this history with us!

Find out more about the Western NY Land Conservancy, including the Bear Lake Project and their Western NY Wildway.

Sponsors and Ways to Support Us

Thank you to Always Wandering Art (Website and Etsy Shop) for providing the artwork for many of our episodes.

Support us on Patreon.

Works Cited

Peterjohn, W.T. and Correll, D.L., 1984. Nutrient dynamics in an agricultural watershed: the role of a riparian forest. Ecology, 65(5), pp.1466-1475.

Radomski, P. and Goeman, T.J., 2001. Consequences of human lakeshore development on emergent and floating-leaf vegetation abundance. North American Journal of Fisheries Management, 21(1), pp.46-61.

Schindler, D.E., Geib, S.I. and Williams, M.R., 2000. Patterns of fish growth along a gradient of shoreline development. Nature, 407(6801), pp.202-205.

This episode’s photo is from the WNYLC’s Bear Lake Project page!

Clips

Transcript preview

First 90 seconds
  1. Bill· Host0:00

    [footsteps] Hello, and welcome to The Field Guides. I'm Bill, and I'm here with Steve. Good e- afternoon, Steve.

  2. Steve· Host0:07

    Good evening- [laughs] ... Bill, I think.

  3. Bill· Host0:10

    We're kind of on the cusp right- Where do you...

  4. Steve· Host0:11

    Where does that, where does that change over, actually?

  5. Bill· Host0:13

    [laughs] So I stumbled a little there. And we're also here with Josh. Good evening, Josh.

  6. Josh Balestieri· Guest0:18

    Good evening.

  7. Bill· Host0:18

    And what we're gonna do today is give you the experience of what it's like to be in the woods, in the field, and on the trail. Each episode, we pick- [laughs] ... a natural history topic, research the science behind that topic, and then take you out to a natural spot and share with you everything that we've learned.

  8. Steve· Host0:31

    Yeah, because I think in May we've had three topics already.

  9. Bill· Host0:34

    [laughs] [laughs] It has been a busy month folks.

  10. Josh Balestieri· Guest0:35

    Yeah, you guys sound busy.

  11. Steve· Host0:36

    Yeah. [laughs] It's been- We got a lot of episodes in the can. Yeah.

  12. Bill· Host0:40

    [laughs] And this is one of those episodes that we love, 'cause we had to do very little research.

  13. Josh Balestieri· Guest0:43

    [laughs] Yeah.

  14. Bill· Host0:45

    So we w- we are here with- Ooh ... Josh Balestieri from the Western New York Land Conservancy. He is the stewardship director.

  15. Josh Balestieri· Guest0:50

    Correct.

  16. Bill· Host0:51

    And we are at a site that we hope is going to be the future Bear Lake Preserve. And the Western New York Land Conservancy, longtime listeners might remember that we've been on, we've had them on the podcast three times, and I like to say that, or like to point out that every episode that they've brought us on for has resulted in a successful acquisition of that property that we were talking about.

  17. Steve· Host1:18

    Yeah, we raise like millions sometimes.

  18. Josh Balestieri· Guest1:20

    Absolutely. You guys are fabulous. We appreciate it.

  19. Bill· Host1:22

    [laughs] Honestly, I think that would've happened completely without us. [laughs] [laughs] But we are happy to do our small part. So Josh,

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