Tag Archives: Owego

Where to Park, in the Southern Tier!

“If I had a dead fish, I’d share the carcass –
If I had a car, I’d parallel parkus.”

Stirring words from the Sherman the shark, sage of Kapupu Lagoon! But seriously, if you (or your guests) are touring the Finger Lakes, where many of our streets were laid out BEFORE the horse and buggy, you’ll sometimes find parking to be a challenge, or at least an annoyance. Here are some ideas, drawn from rich experience.
Parking in downtown Owego can be a challenge, especially since most of the on-street parking has a two-hour limit. There’s a small public lot on Church Street, but it’s often full. Two lots for county employees are available, but open to the public ONLY evenings and weekends. You don’t have to go very far to hit residential neighborhoods, with on-street parking not limited to two hours.
What you may not know is that the large Hyde Lot, off Temple Street behind the village hall, has free three-hour parking. It’s exactly what you need in Owego on a business day. Since the entrance is a block or two away from the business district, we visited Owego for decades before realizing it was there. It certainly simplified our visits!
Corning offers some challenges in the Southside business-government district. Tourists sometimes get caught (and ticked) (and ticketed) because they move from Zone A (for example) when the time limit’s up, and park at another spot. BUT if you find another area marked Zone A, THE SAME LIMIT APPLIES – it’s a TOTAL of two hours a day for ANY Zone A. So you have to move to a differently-lettered zone, or pay for parking… or pay for a ticket. There is a pay garage off Market Street, plus there are pay lots along Denison, next to the library, and elsewhere. The automated kiosk system at these lots is kind of a nuisance. You memorize your space number and go to the kiosk, key in your number, put in the appropriate money, get a slip, go back to your car, and leave it on the dashboard, after which you can finally go about your business.
This is tough on tourists who don’t know the system, the disabled or elderly who have trouble getting around, parents with small children, and anybody who doesn’t like walking or standing in sleet (snow, rain, hail, high wind, lightning). I believe the kiosks now take debit or credit cards, which helps if you’re out of cash. There’s no fee on weekends.
Hammondsport is a small town that gets large crowds. There’s a parking lot at Main and Shethar, and another at Mechanic and Shethar (both on northeast corners). There’s also a strip of head-in spaces at the waterfront, near the Depot, and two or three fringes of spaces at Liberty Square (Mechanic and Lake). Otherwise it’s on-street parking… try getting over to Lake or other away-from-the-center streets, and you may do well. For some events they arrange “remote” parking with free shuttles in and out.
Bath recently took out a few parking meters in the downtown business district, making free parking available for limited periods, helping people who need to step into a store or the post office. Many metered spaces (both parallel and head-in) are available. There’s also a large municipal lot (metered) behind the row of buildings on the east side of Liberty, between East William and East Steuben.
Watkins Glen has a small free lot on Third Street, behind the visitors center. The state park lot charges eight dollars sunrise to sunset. There are also spaces near the marina, and on-street parking… no meters in Watkins.
All of this is subject to change! And none of this is official! But it’s overwhelmingly accurate, and at least gives you a starting point for when you visit. Have fun in our small towns!
(By the way, that “If I had a dead fish” poem is by Jim Toomey, in his “Sherman’s Lagoon” comic strip. Check it out – it’s a great strip!)

Taking a Trip to Tioga

A couple of weeks ago we visited Tioga County Historical Society, where it was opening day for a new exhibition on manufacturing and advertising in Tioga. I was thrilled to see a Monarch motorcycle. The company had been in Addison and in Elmira Heights before moving to Owego, and was pretty much contemporary with Glenn Curtiss.

*We were both very impressed to see how MUCH Tioga County has manufactured over the years. IBM, Lockheed-Martin, and Endicott-Johnson are all modern-day manufacturers. But in addition to their products, and in addition to motorcycles, Tioga folks have made farm machinery… iron bridges… dairy products… household implements… ladders… furniture… chairs… carriages… and swords for the movie “Braveheart.”

*They also had a substantial business providing seeds.

*The extent and variety of manufacturing in what’s actually a small county (both geographically and in terms of population) may reflect Tioga’s location between the cities of Binghamton, Elmira, and Ithaca, not to mention the proximity of Binghamton University and Cornell. Combine these advantages with good road and rail routes, and you have a recipe for success.

*Tioga’s legal history goes back to 1791, when it was split off from the then-huge Ontario County. Broome and Chemung would later be created from Schuyler, as would parts of Chenango and Schuyler.

*Owego is the county seat, but Tioga also has Spencer, Candor, Nichols, Waverly, and Newark Valley – among others. In 1957 prominent Mafiosi gathered for a summit conference at a private home in Apalachin. When they noticed a state trooper keeping watch nearby they panicked, despite the fact that there was nothing illegal about the gathering in and of itself.

*Police soon rounded up (we could even say rescued) dozens of smartly-dressed city boys whose suits and wingtips just didn’t serve in the woods and the cornfields. They said that they had heard that the host was sick, and had all just coincidentally arrived at once to bring him good wishes. This public spectacle forced J. Edgar Hoover to admit the existence of the Mafia, something he had roundly denied up till then.

*Apalachin is also home to the Blue Dolphin, a justly-popular restaurant at Exit 66 on I-86. We eat there whenever we can contrive an excuse.

*John D. Rockefeller lived in Richford as a small boy. Walter Taylor, founder of the Hammondsport winemaking dynasty, was brought up in Owego. The Bodine family of NASCAR fame all graduated from Waverly High School. Another native-born Owegan was Tom Platt, U.S. Senator and powerful Republican boss of New York. His much-younger second wife (whom he disinherited) became a student of Glenn Curtiss, and one of the first woman aviators.

*The Susquehanna River flows right along the edge of Front Street in the county seat of Owego, and overflows badly from time to time. There were catastrophic floods in 1935, 1972, and 2011. Sullivan’s army ravaged its way through Tioga during the Revolutionary War.

*Tioga Downs is in Tioga County. A standardbred course, Tioga Downs also offers flea markets, concerts, and “racino” gambling opportunities, recently being expanded under new state action.

*Interstate 86 crosses through Tioga from east to west (and the other way, of course).

*Tioga has at least 55 listings on the National Register of Historic Places, and at least 35 state historic markers.

*The county is rather bigger than Chemung, but has a population a good deal smaller… about equal to the combined populations of Elmira City, Corning City, and Bath Town. There is one state park (Two Rivers, near Waverly), but numerous town and county parks. It’s in the state-identified 14-county Finger Lakes region for purposes of tourism promotion, but doesn’t actually touch any of the lakes. (Neither do Wayne, Monroe, or Chemung.) Like much of the Southern Tier, Tioga is good deer and turkey country. The Finger Lakes Trail goes through the Town of Richford.

*Tioga County is a good place for a nice, quiet visit. It’s a shame it’s so overlooked, among its bigger neighbors. Think about stopping by. We like it. Maybe you will too.