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Books > Sport & Leisure > Travel & holiday > Travel & holiday guides > Hotel & holiday accommodation guides
This book transports you into the wilderness of New York State's
Adirondack Park; a protected area not unlike what the Native
Americans first encountered. Between 1998 and 2013, the author made
twenty-four canoe excursions into the back reaches of the park;
two-thirds of the time as a solo explorer and the rest with family.
Most of the trips were in the off seasons, when few other campers
were encountered, but wildlife abounded. Starting in 2005, at the
age of 62, and with very little previous artistic experience, the
author began a series of twenty-four exquisitely detailed pencil
and graphite pictures drawn onsite during his treks into the wild.
Each adventure is a short story onto itself, but interwoven within
the narrative are the struggles everyone faces as they age.
Hand-drawn maps and detailed descriptions of each trip, make this
book a useful travel guide for future Adirondack adventurers.
The Assateague Beach Coast Guard Station station house, garage, and
boathouse are part of the Assateague Island National Seashore (NS).
The station house and the garage (the original boathouse) were
built in 1922 when U.S. Coast Guard Station 150 was established at
the southern end of Assateague Island in Assateague, Virginia. When
the boathouse was constructed in 1938- 39 on Tom's Cove to the
north of the station house, the original boathouse was converted to
a garage. The Assateague Beach Coast Guard station was
decommissioned in 1967, and the same year the site became part of
the Assateague Island (ASIS) NS. Lack of park operating funds and
infrequent usage of the site has resulted in increased deferred
maintenance and a resulting loss of historic fabric. The buildings
will require significant work that would potentially affect
important features, necessitating the identification of the
character- defining features to ensure the preservation of the
structures' integrity, and to provide guidance for the reuse and
preservation of the structures. This draft historic structure
report for the Assateague Beach Coast Guard Station structures is
an abbreviated Level II report. It was prepared for Assateague
Island NS by the Building Conservation Branch (BCB) of the National
Park Service's Northeast Cultural Resources Center. Preparation of
this report began with historical and archival research, and
physical and photographic documentation of the structures, which
was conducted by BCB Architectural Conservators Maureen K. Phillips
and John A. Scott. According to the terms of the project agreement,
no fabric analysis (e.g., paint analysis, mortar analysis, etc.)
was performed. The report was written by Architectural Conservator
Maureen K. Phillips.
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