Happy Thanksgiving to you!
What do you have planned for the day?
What about your Thanksgiving feast?
Which are your favorite dishes, without which the holiday wouldn't quite be right?
What special traditions do you have for the holiday?
Ted's family liked to do family walks between the main course and desert.
My sister makes a really yummy fresh cranberry relish. It's a great addition to turkey sandwiches the next day.
For Emma, Thanksgiving sets the stage for her birthday in a few days...
What makes your Thanksgiving special?
Have a wonderful Thanksgiving and thanks for being part of the Smoke Rise & Kinnelon Blog!
Best,
Ted, Emma and
Image credit: Emma
Showing posts with label About Us. Show all posts
Showing posts with label About Us. Show all posts
Thursday, November 24, 2011
Thursday, November 25, 2010
Happy Thanksgiving 2010!
No, this isn't a turkey, but it is a real Heron photographed in Smoke Rise and with it we wish you and your families a very Happy Thanksgiving!
Many thanks for being part of the Smoke Rise & Kinnelon Blog. We truly appreciate it.
Best,
Christine, Ted & Emma
PS: If you are cooking for the Thanksgiving Holiday, what is your favorite recipe?
Many thanks for being part of the Smoke Rise & Kinnelon Blog. We truly appreciate it.
Best,
Christine, Ted & Emma
PS: If you are cooking for the Thanksgiving Holiday, what is your favorite recipe?
Saturday, July 10, 2010
The Smoke Rise & Kinnelon Blog: 2 Years Old Today!
It's our second birthday today! That's right. The Smoke Rise & Kinnelon Blog is 2 years old. That means we are on our third year...
Wow!
This is also our 200th post.
Thank you for being part of our shared experience.
If you'd like to celebrate with us, then please tell family and friends about The Smoke Rise & Kinnelon Blog. Invite them to subscribe and to share stories. More is better!
Christine, Ted & Emma
Wow!
This is also our 200th post.
Thank you for being part of our shared experience.
If you'd like to celebrate with us, then please tell family and friends about The Smoke Rise & Kinnelon Blog. Invite them to subscribe and to share stories. More is better!
Happy Birthday!
Christine, Ted & Emma
Thursday, December 24, 2009
Happy Holidays From The Whittemores!
Friday, July 31, 2009
Kinnelon Public Paths and Private Property
Public Footpath originally uploaded by Extra Medium.
This photo titled Public Footpath explains that in the UK "...everywhere you go, there are these public footpaths. And for whatever reason, there's always people walking along them. I never see a beginning or end to them. But what's random is that they go on private property..." It had me thinking about areas around Kinnelon where public access comes up against private property.
Take Silas Condict Park with its magnificent and elegant historic Casino building. Definitely a public space. And, yet, not completely since a caretaker lives on the premises.
The first time I realized that a person - rather a family - had a private property in a public space, I remember thinking how marvelous to be in such a bucolic setting, yet also how awkward to be constantly on guard for the unexpected: someone peering into a bedroom or taking a child's toy or ringing the doorbell for more information.
You might say that it comes with the territory. But, still. The co-existence of private within public creates tension.
That certainly holds true in communities like Fayson Lakes or Smoke Rise or along the Kakeout Reservoir trail where common spaces abut private properties, which sometimes aren't clearly defined as private.
I share here stories -- such as Cornie Hubner's -- that bring up visions of spaces that once were private and now aren't, or of ones that were common and now aren't. They may also take us places where we physically shouldn't go unless invited.
We have to be respectful. We can't assume that because something historic looks uninhabited or public, that it is, that we can just wander into buildings and help ourselves to what's around. The only way that the concept of a 'public footpath' through private property [or of common and private] can work is by not venturing from the public path.
In Smoke Rise, one example is the Talbot House on Talbot Drive. It is private property, yet, we are given to understand, visited by uninvited people, some of whom will even go up to the house to satisfy their curiosity.
It's really the same as if people came up to our home and peered through our windows.
We wouldn't like it.
So, although we will continue to write about the many places of historic interest among which we live, we will certainly remember that it does not mean they are all open to the public and, in fact, some are not.
Know before you go!
Christine & Ted
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Take Silas Condict Park with its magnificent and elegant historic Casino building. Definitely a public space. And, yet, not completely since a caretaker lives on the premises.
The first time I realized that a person - rather a family - had a private property in a public space, I remember thinking how marvelous to be in such a bucolic setting, yet also how awkward to be constantly on guard for the unexpected: someone peering into a bedroom or taking a child's toy or ringing the doorbell for more information.
You might say that it comes with the territory. But, still. The co-existence of private within public creates tension.
That certainly holds true in communities like Fayson Lakes or Smoke Rise or along the Kakeout Reservoir trail where common spaces abut private properties, which sometimes aren't clearly defined as private.
I share here stories -- such as Cornie Hubner's -- that bring up visions of spaces that once were private and now aren't, or of ones that were common and now aren't. They may also take us places where we physically shouldn't go unless invited.
We have to be respectful. We can't assume that because something historic looks uninhabited or public, that it is, that we can just wander into buildings and help ourselves to what's around. The only way that the concept of a 'public footpath' through private property [or of common and private] can work is by not venturing from the public path.
In Smoke Rise, one example is the Talbot House on Talbot Drive. It is private property, yet, we are given to understand, visited by uninvited people, some of whom will even go up to the house to satisfy their curiosity.
It's really the same as if people came up to our home and peered through our windows.
We wouldn't like it.
So, although we will continue to write about the many places of historic interest among which we live, we will certainly remember that it does not mean they are all open to the public and, in fact, some are not.
Know before you go!
Christine & Ted
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Friday, July 10, 2009
The Smoke Rise & Kinnelon Blog Turns 1!
One Year Old Birthday Cake originally uploaded by Loveys Confections.
Today marks the one year anniversary of the birth of The Smoke Rise & Kinnelon Blog!
In the past year, we have created 85 blogposts which have attracted 5,959 visitors who have viewed 9,629 pages [7,755 of those being unique page views].
These are the top stories - an eclectic mix, to say the least - with the most sensational being The Kinnelon Critter File: Mountain Lion or Large Bobcat?
Next:
Corrado's Market In Wayne, NJ
A Smoke Rise Ghost Story: The Tale of The Purple Bishop
Split Rock Reservoir Trail Hike
Lake Kinnelon Hike
St. Hubert's Chapel Visit
We have many more gems to share with you...
Thank you to John Connelly, Sunita Narma and the Kinnelon Children's Library for contributing wonderful stories, details and interviews to the blog.
Thanks, too, for the emails, comments and offline discussions.
As we head into year two, I encourage you to tell others about the blog. Suggest that they subscribe. And, if there's some aspect of Smoke Rise and Kinnelon that you'd like to share with others, please consider doing so here.

Technorati Tags: Smoke Rise blog Kinnelon Blog Kinnelon NJ Del.icio.us Tags: Smoke Rise blog Kinnelon Blog Kinnelon NJ
In the past year, we have created 85 blogposts which have attracted 5,959 visitors who have viewed 9,629 pages [7,755 of those being unique page views].
These are the top stories - an eclectic mix, to say the least - with the most sensational being The Kinnelon Critter File: Mountain Lion or Large Bobcat?
Next:
Corrado's Market In Wayne, NJ
A Smoke Rise Ghost Story: The Tale of The Purple Bishop
Split Rock Reservoir Trail Hike
Lake Kinnelon Hike
St. Hubert's Chapel Visit
We have many more gems to share with you...
Thank you to John Connelly, Sunita Narma and the Kinnelon Children's Library for contributing wonderful stories, details and interviews to the blog.
Thanks, too, for the emails, comments and offline discussions.
As we head into year two, I encourage you to tell others about the blog. Suggest that they subscribe. And, if there's some aspect of Smoke Rise and Kinnelon that you'd like to share with others, please consider doing so here.

Technorati Tags: Smoke Rise blog Kinnelon Blog Kinnelon NJ Del.icio.us Tags: Smoke Rise blog Kinnelon Blog Kinnelon NJ
Monday, August 11, 2008
Meet C.B. Whittemore
We moved to Smoke Rise in June of 2004 from Bergen, County New Jersey.As have many of the people we've met here, we moved to escape density and congestion and find a more family-friendly place to bring up our daughter. Although it's been everything we expected, it has been even more that we ever thought possible.
Much of that has to do with belonging to a lake community - something I had never experienced before - combined with inherent contrasts: proximity to New York City's concrete jungle vs. bears, lakes and preserved farmland; being on the edge of modern suburbia yet being surrounded by vestiges of an industrial and historic hotbed.
Although I moved around quite a bit growing up, some of my favorite memories had to do with magical beaches and outdoor places where, as a kid, I could spend hours watching, catching small fish, building underwater sea castles, drying seaweed, collecting rocks, watching the ebb and flow of the tide, or just curling up with a book. I sense that magic around Lake Kinnelon, Smoke Rise, Kinnelon and the other towns in this part of Northern New Jersey. It's a place where imagination can run wild.
I'd like to capture all of that, and share it as I've learned to do blogging at Flooring The Consumer and The Carpetology Blog, and also via photos on Flickr.
I intend to describe marvelous local finds, like What's In Your Neighborhood? The High Point Brewery in Butler, NJ, and learn more about Boonton, Skylands, Silas Condict, Pyramid Park and the Morris Canal.
I hope others living in or around Smoke Rise and Kinnelon will contribute here, and - in the not too distant future - that my daughter will be sufficiently in awe of snapping turtles and black bears to document here what she learns.
I invite you to take part in this adventure.

P.S.: My daughter learned how to ride her bike today!
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