I waffled about writing this column, but a longtime family friend of Cathy Troisi gave me the nudge I needed.
This weekend marks the unofficial end of summer, but please don’t tell that to the sunflowers in my front yard.
It is hard to believe that this week is “spring break,” or that just a mere month ago my husband, son and I were contemplating an impromptu trip to New York City for some baseball, art and a visit with city friends.
It’s amazing how much life can change in a day, let alone a week.
Events planner Kelly Guilfoyle is new to the running game.
Though he was not a native, Charles Finley came to adore his adopted home of Lyons and its residents.
When the Rev. Deborah Lind arrived in Geneva seven years ago from the Midwest, it was for a short-term assignment as the interim pastor of The Presbyterian Church.
Love can strike twice — at least on the Midlakes High School stage, it appears.
Despite the chilly temperatures of early December, the church doors of The Presbyterian Church in Geneva were flung open.
Young Carmine Cafiero attended the Geva Theatre’s production of “A Christmas Carol” twice with his parents and once as part of a school trip.
Kevin Wright essentially grew up on his grandparents’ Christmas tree farm.
Twenty years ago, Jamie Pulcheon Finch moved to North Carolina, where she finished high school and embarked on a career as a schoolteacher and life as a wife and mother.
When the Rev. James Fennessy moved into the St. Patrick’s Church rectory in Seneca Falls 12 years ago, he stumbled on a few masonry trowels in the rectory basement.
After almost a quarter-century of living in Seneca Falls, it is my home. But I will never be a native, and I know that. However, that doesn’t mean I can’t be proud of and grateful for where I live.
Marsha Fuller said it took a little badgering, but she was finally able to convince her lifelong friend Larry Ann Evans to consent to a GoFundMe page to help with cancer treatment expenses.
Two years ago a group of Romulus Central School graduates started an effort to restore a World War II Honor Roll sign that was placed in front of the Route 96 school in 1946.
Judy Fairbanks of Seneca Falls has watched helplessly as the health of her good friend Scott Warne has declined over the past four months
The Thrive to Survive cancer support group meets the first Saturday of the month at the Geneva Public Library.
Several weeks ago I wrote about Geneva native David Gilbert who decided to celebrate his 65th birthday by swimming across Seneca Lake and back.
The secret is out … and in a very public fashion.
David Gilbert likely woke up pretty tired on his 65th birthday Monday … and not because he was turning 65.
For Waterloo parents, there’s no need for frantic back-to-school supplies shopping as summer winds down.
Longtime readers of this column know I am a berry person. Picking fresh fruit is one of my favorite parts of living in the Finger Lakes.
For a while, the Clifton Springs Library has offered delivery of library materials to homebound residents of Ashton Place, the Spa Apartments and those being cared for in the Clifton Springs Hospital and Clinic’s nursing home.
If you have a historical question related to Wayne County, a new data base is now at your fingertips.
I have written before about my longtime connection to Routes 5&20, but it’s a subject that keeps on giving.
Retired Nazarene Church pastor William Lewis jokes that church people know how to eat.
The Waterloo High School Marching Band has been a longtime contributor to the village’s many Memorial Day events.
Shirley Clemenson of Waterloo titled her photo of hungry baby birds at the bottom page of this page “Spring has sprung in Seneca County.”
The week before spring break Penn Yan Middle School Librarian Pamela Simmons received an email from the Rochester Regional Library Council soliciting nominations for its school library of the year contest.
Andy Riegel has run Riegel Family Farms in Fayette for seven years.
The email’s subject line says it all: “Mothers and Others at it again.”
Seneca Falls lost a passionate community member last week with the way-too-early passing of Annette Lutz.
So this is in some sense a déjà vu column. It appears I am on the centenarian beat of late.
Centenarians are often asked their secrets to a long life.
Jessica Kinsey was a Geneva fifth-grader when she first read “Tuck Everlasting,” assigned by her teacher Eileen Hallings. It was a book that made a deep impression on her.
GENEVA — When Lauren Vasquez passed away last June, her family included the following message in her obituary.
One way I like to celebrate the end of a week (and not every week by any means) is with lunch at Red’s tavern on Fall Street in Seneca Falls.
Thanksgiving and the Christmas season are synonymous with giving, but the doldrums of January … not so much.
In this case, edible means mouth-watering and readable at the same time.
Catherine McCann of Geneva is one busy young woman.
An event planned for next Sunday afternoon will focus on Geneva’s Hispanic community and its contributions to this area.
Reader Eileen Venuti of Lyons subscribes to the nationally distributed, North Carolina-published magazine The Sun.
Christmas is a little more joyous this year for the Morley family.
Christmas came early for Wayne County’s Green Angels this year.