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Cary Institute hosts sunset hike to Cannoo Hill

The Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies hosted a sunset hike to Cannoo Hill in Millbrook on Saturday, March 16. That’s Cannoo, spelled differently than the well-known Canoe Hill Road in Millbrook. Cary Institute Education Program Specialist Jennifer Rubbo led the moderately strenuous 2.6-mile hike to the top of the hill. Attendees enjoyed a breathtaking view. Unfortunately, Saturday’s overcast sky in the late afternoon made the chance of catching a sunset view slim.Leader Rubbo stopped along the way to share Cary Institute history. She said Mary Flagler was heiress to her grandfather Henry Morrison Flagler’s Standard Oil fortune. Flagler married Melbert “Mike” Cary Jr. in 1923. The couple resided in the village of Millbrook where they bought 17 properties and called their land the Cannoo Hills. At the top of the summit of Cannoo Hills the couple built a tea house as a getaway from their home in New York City. Rubbo said the couple was not interested in farming the land, so they allowed people to rent parts of it as long as the renters handled all of the upkeep. In the summers the Carys came up from the city and lived in the tea house. Rubbo said during their time in the tea house they made plans for the land and for a bigger house. However, Melbert died of bone cancer before they had a chance to fulfill their plans. Mary became known for her love of the land, buying trees from around the world and planting them throughout the property. She also told town of Washington officials she would take care of all the trees on Canoe Hill Road and Fowler Road. Mary Flagler died in 1967 and in her will established a trust to transfer the property to be used by a charitable organization that actively engaged in conservation, maintenance and preservation of the land for natural resources.On Saturday hikers got to see the tea house. The southern Cannoo Hill is called Tea House Hill. This area of the Cary Institute grounds is not open to the public and the institute rarely hosts walks there.“This is the second time in the last six years that we have brought people up here,” said Pamela Freeman, communications program assistant at the Cary Institute. “This is a treat to see the tea house and to hear about its history.”One visitor, Joe Reilly, said, “This is the second time I have been here and the scenery is incredibly beautiful. On a clear day you can see past New Paltz. Anytime they have a walk here I come to it.” Rubbo said a perk of being a camper at the Cary Institute Ecology Camp is that she takes her campers up to Cannoo Hill often. For all young explorers and nature lovers the Ecology Camp is open to children in grades two through seven. For more information go to www.caryinstitute.org/ecology-camp.

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