|
|
Summer, 2007
On June 21, 2007, Paul Smith's
College professor Mike DeAngelo and Lisa DeAngelo, came to
deliver the Sylvia Lake Association's water testing kit and to
perform tests that our resident volunteers were unable to do
last Fall. Now that we have a testing kit on site, we can be much
more flexible with the testing schedule.
The Sylvia Lake board continues to
focus on the importance of water quality. We are in year two of
the Adirondack Lake Assessment Program. The ALAP measures leading
parameters that provide information about the health and aging
process of a lake or pond. These parameters include transparency,
pH, alkalinity, conductivity, concentrations of chlorophyll-a,
calcium, phosphorus, nitrate, and dissolved oxygen, among others. Read
more about the Adirondack Lake Assessment Program in their brochure. |

Lea Dickson, President of the Sylvia Lake Association,
Mike DeAngelo, Lisa DeAngelo
check the equipment before heading to Parker Bay to pick up David
McGrath |
The goals of the ALAP are two-fold.
First, to gather useful, scientifically valid information on a
particular lake or pond to inform those associated with this water
body about its overall condition and trends. Groups or individuals
can use this information for long-term planning for a healthy lake
or pond. Second, to establish a profile of water quality conditions
and trends across the Adirondack Park. As mentioned above, despite
the importance of water in the Adirondacks to the local economy,
character of our communities, quality of life, and the environment,
we know very little about most of the lakes and ponds in the Adirondacks."
(from Residents Committee to Protect
the Adirondacks)
Our water testing team includes Carlton Force,
Faye and David Lockwood, Lea Dickson, Shari Barnhart, Jeanette
Perry, and David McGrath.
Jody Hatch is also a water testing volunteer and is waiting to
be trained. If there are any others out there who would like to
become involved in the water testing, contact any of the current
volunteers. The training will be scheduled for this summer. The
water testing kit, shown below, contains the equipment for performing
most of the required tests.
Read Sylvia Lake's Water
Quality Summary report prepared by Mike DeAngelo.
|

This is the water testing
equipment.
|

David performs the clarity test with a Secchi disk.
|
| At the spring board meeting, the Sylvia
Lake Board voted to purchase a water testing kit that can stay here
at the lake. Prior to this, we had to wait our turn to borrow a kit
from the St. Lawrence Soil and Water Conservation District in Canton,
NY. |
A lake association, individual, family,
or group can easily monitor a given lake or pond, a process that
takes about 90 minutes once a month. All volunteers are trained.
Each group or individual who monitors a lake or pond is provided
with a monitoring kit and bottles and filters for each three month
monitoring season - June, July and August.
Frozen samples are delivered for analysis to the AAI laboratory
at Paul Smiths College. At the end of each season, an annual report
is produced for each water body enrolled. (from article, Adirondack
Residents Learn to Monitor Lake Water Quality) |
|
|