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Closure of Woodstock swimming hole isn’t stopping visitors

by Nick Henderson
July 6, 2020
in General News
1
Closure of Woodstock swimming hole isn’t stopping visitors

Dozens of cars parked along the stretch of Route 212 in Woodstock adjacent to the Big Deep swimming hole on Satrurday. (photo by Dion Ogust)

Dozens of cars parked along the stretch of Route 212 in Woodstock adjacent to the Big Deep swimming hole on Satrurday. (photo by Dion Ogust)

Despite the recent closure of the town-owned spot off Route 212 east of the hamlet, people have decided it’s business-as-usual at the Big Deep swimming hole in Woodstock. Though its Route 212 entrance has been closed and barricaded, visitors are ignoring the signs and barriers. Several cars lined the shoulder along Route 212 and the Little Deep entrance off Zena Road over the last few weekends.

Town officials left Little Deep open because it consists mainly of hiking trails. The closure of Big Deep was to discourage large groups, but people have instead used Little Deep to gain access to Big Deep upstream.

“Basically it’s not really stopping anything,” said councilman Reggie Earls, who raised the issue at the June 9 meeting of the town board. “You don’t have to be a genius to figure it out.” 

Two police officers on duty questioned whether writing tickets or conducting parking enforcement was the best use of their time. Police chief Clayton Keefe said officers have been ticketing cars that have caused a traffic hazard when parked over the shoulder line and encroaching upon the roadway. Having to walk through the property makes officers unavailable for other calls.

One access to the property is open while the other is closed. “That’s where the confusion is,” councilman Richard Heppner said.

Town supervisor Bill McKenna said he’d speak to highway superintendent Mike Reynolds about better signage at the site.

The partial closure seems to be reducing the amount of garbage at the site, a problem in recent summers.

Last year, the town resorted to shaming people into better behavior through social-media posts, stressing that the swimming hole might be closed if people didn’t clean up the site after themselves. It didn’t work. “Every weekend I would walk in there and I would beg people to help me keep Big Deep open,” said McKenna. People would politely agree to carry out the trash. “Yet every Monday there would be piles of garbage.”

Among McKenna’s concerns had been the potential Covid 19 exposure of maintenance workers cleaning up the area. “On a good day, that’s not a pleasant task,” he said.

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- Geddy Sveikauskas, Publisher

Nick Henderson

Nick Henderson was raised in Woodstock starting at the age of three and attended Onteora schools, then SUNY New Paltz after spending a year at SUNY Potsdam under the misguided belief he would become a music teacher. He became the news director at college radio station WFNP, where he caught the journalism bug and the rest is history. He spent four years as City Hall reporter for Foster’s Daily Democrat in Dover, NH, then moved back to Woodstock in 2003 and worked on the Daily Freeman copy desk until 2013. He has covered Woodstock for Ulster Publishing since early 2014.

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