Advertisement. Advertise with us

Photo by WilliamJayMiller.com

Moon Over Glimmerglass

COOPERSTOWN—Photographer Bill Miller sent us this dramatic shot of the moon setting behind Otsego Lake’s west side during an early-morning sunrise. “I love how the ice looks three-dimensional,” Miller wrote in an e-mail. According to a report on the Otsego Lake Association website titled “Otsego Lake Association Winter Update 2022,” records dating back to the 1840s show that the lake has been officially closed by ice every year—until the 21st century. “Now, in just a relatively short period of time, we’ve seen three of the past twenty winter seasons with open waters replacing inches or feet of solidly frozen ice,” the report reads. This year makes four. SUNY Oneonta Biological Field Station Research Support Specialist Holly Waterfield said 2024 is the first year there has been open water on the lake for the majority of the time. “We haven’t seen this before,” Waterfield said.

Posted

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


Related Articles

Divers Take the Ultimate Cold Plunge Under Frozen Otsego Lake

For a bit, divers can forget the chill while they complete their underwater tasks. But when you sense the cold starting to dull your response times, that’s your cue to get out—while you still have plenty of breathing gas, said Paul Lord...…
February 26, 2026

Ice Fishers Brave Cold and Wind on Lake Otsego

“First time ice has been safe for us to get out,” Mike Seymour says while preparing a hole to fish from. “Some days you may have a good day, get a good perch and a walleye or two. Some days, you go home and nothing.”…
February 12, 2026

News Briefs: February 12, 2026

A severe blood shortage, internship opportunities with the SUNY Oneonta Biological Field Station and Preferred Mutual Insurance Company, and Cooperstown Central School sports results are among the topics covered in this week's news briefs.…
February 12, 2026

PUTTING THE COMMUNITY BACK INTO THE NEWSPAPER

For a limited time, new annual subscriptions to the hard copy of “The Freeman’s Journal” or “Hometown Oneonta” (which also includes unlimited access to AllOtsego.com), or digital-only access to AllOtsego.com, can also give back to one of their favorite Otsego County charitable organizations.

$5.00 of your subscription will be donated to the nonprofit of your choice: Friends of the Feral-TNR, Super Heroes Humane Society, or Susquehanna Society of the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals 

Visit our “subscribe” page and select your charity of choice at checkout