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Adopt-A-Highway

To Pick or Not to Pick,

To Pick or Not to Pick,

Is This the Question?

 

Twice a year members of the Onondaga Ski Club head down to Tully to have a cup or two of coffee.  When we finish that, we gather our gear and head out to walk up and down Route 81.  As we amble along, we often encounter bits and pieces of non-natural items that just look out of place amongst the grass, bushes and small trees that dot the landscape.  With our rubber gloves on, we’ll pick up this trash and place it in the State provided plastic bags, leaving them by the highway for pickup by the DPW.  Yep, it’s the Club’s semi-annual Adopt-a-Highway program making the countryside just a little bit cleaner and prettier.

 

This year eight of us headed out to do our part…actually it was just seven pickers ‘cause we had along one member who took it upon himself to undertake another task.  Here, everyone else is picking up stuff, and this guy is putting things back on …or should I say…into the ground.  It was our own “Daffy Sachs”, carrying around a heavy bag filled with daffodil bulbs that he planted here and there to add some color to the median and shoulders on the south side of Route 80 in early spring.

 

For two hours the crew cleaned up the area, but this time we didn’t have any real “finds” as in the past (credit cards, cell phones, ‘hash’ pipes, license plates, etc.).  In fact, the area seemed fairly clean compared to other times we’ve gone out.  Is it possible that society is coming around and not letting things fly out vehicle windows?  Could be, but I can tell you there were quite a number of empty beer cans out there which is scary in it’s own right.  Empty cigarette packs here and there, along with plastic bottles (mostly water) were in presence.  On the north side of 80, we found lots of vehicle parts that didn’t look like they were simply discards.  Each one had a story I’m sure.  Many bits of exploded tires too, with the rusted steel belts still in the rubber.  I sure would not want to be next to one of those if it let go no matter what “Myth-Busters” said. 

 

We picked it all up, except for the millions of cig-butts.  That would take a life-time, or damn near.  It wouldn’t be too bad if it was the tobacco part ‘cause this will return to the soil soon…no, it’s the filter made of materials that will last, and last, right along with nuclear waste for length of time to decompose I think.

 

Hey, remember “Ralphi” from Paddlefest?  Well, the rest of the family was down in Tully getting ready for winter.  Pick up a piece of cardboard or plastic bag and there they were.  As Bob Wiley and Bill Goodwin know, the little suckers can move really fast.

 

Adopt-a-Highway
Fall, 2007

 

Our little crew was composed of Carole Adamec-Sachs, Remo Bianco, Bob Dewey, Mary Jo DiNuzzo, Oisin McGuinty, Neville Sachs, and Marilyn & Michael McCabe.  We were few, but we did mighty things.  Thank you all for your time and efforts.

 

Now, everyone ought to head down there next April to check out Neville’s handiwork, and while you’re there, stop in for coffee.  Oh yeah, bring some rubber gloves too…they will come in handy.

 

Michael McCabe



Adopt-a-Highway
April, 2006

The day dawned bright and sunny with temperatures in the lower fifties. Winds were low too. It looked like a good day to pick up the trash and all at the intersection of routes 80 and 81 in Tully. This is the area that members of the Onondaga Ski Club had chosen to do their part in the National Adopt-a-Highway program some years ago. Twice a year club members meet in the parking lot of a local fast food establishment, don safety vests and hard hats, grab a few large heavy-duty plastic garbage bags and head out North and South on Route 81 to pick up the trash that always there..

Route 81 is four lanes wide with a median, so there are three sections North and South that we clean. There are also the entrance and exit ramps. It's a lot of square footage to cover, but we move right along and do as much as we can in 2 to 2-1/2 hours. Ideally, we have enough members to do both the North and South sections, even breaking into sub groups that allow starting from the intersection and from the far ends of our responsibility. We tend to concentrate on the southern section as past history indicates this is where the heavier accumulation of trash seems to be.

Mary Jo DiNuzzo and Neville Sachs lead up this program. They along with our president and first lady Tom and Sue Button, members Doug Ahlsen, Remo Bianco, Oisin McGinty, Carol Ademec (Sachs), Bob Dewey, Marilyn and Michael McCabe picked up a lot of trash. While we didn't have any great finds to write about like in years past, we did make the area a bit greener and pleasing to the eye… at least our eyes. Maybe we'll find some good stuff this fall.

When we finished, we headed over to a local pizza shop where we refueled and discussed our finds. Then it was to the ice cream parlor nearby for dessert. Soon everyone departed to enjoy the rest of what turned out to be a good day to be outside. Why, M&M even went for a kayak paddle in Tully Lake…. really quite pleasant on quiet water.

Come on out and join these members of the Onondaga Ski Club this fall as they clean up an area where most of us pass through at least once per year. Watch for notices in the Boomer and in the Calendar section of this web site

Mike McCabe