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Harbor Road in Stony Brook received "catastrophic damage" after heavy rainfall soaked parts of New York and Connecticut late Sunday night, Brookhaven Town Supervisor Dan Panico said in a post on ...
A 1 mile (1.6 km) trail encircles Stony Brook Pond, ending by a waterfall at the site of a former mill. The trail is wheelchair accessible and includes a [3] 525-foot long boardwalk, installed in 2017, [4] [5] that allows visitors to view birds, wildlife, and the wetland habitat over Teal Marsh and Kingfisher Pond. [4]
The Stony Brook Mill Pond, nourished by flowing streams and the devoted anglers of the Mill Pond Fishing Club, is a story of natural splendor and community spirit. For 67 years, club members have gathered along the Pond's tranquil shores, seeking both tranquility and camaraderie amidst Stony Brook's serene ambiance.
The organization is centered on its 950-acre nature reserve in Hopewell Township, Mercer County, near Pennington, which includes portions of Stony Brook, Wargo pond, over ten miles of trails, the seasonal Kate Gorrie Butterfly House, [2] and the LEED-platinum Watershed Center for Environmental Advocacy, Science, and Education.
Approximately 10 inches of rain fell in 12 hours around Oxford and Southbury, Connecticut; meanwhile Suffolk County, New York, clocked an estimated 7 inches in three hours near Stony Brook.
Stony Brook: Stony Brook Grist Mill: Grist mill 1699 (construction), c. 1751 (mill structure) The Stony Brook Grist Mill is a Registered Historic Place property in Stony Brook, Suffolk County, New York. Its construction in 1699 created the Mill Pond astride the Brookhaven-Smithtown boundary. The mill structure itself dates back to at least ...
It flows southeast, flowing parallel to Route 31 while it receives Peters Brook and Woodsville Brook. It receives a tributary from Sourland Mountain, and crosses Pennington-Hopewell Road. It flows through the Hopewell Valley Country Club and the Stony Brook–Millstone Watershed Association's nature reserve, and then receives the Stony Brook ...
The pond itself, located around 2.42 miles (3.89 km) southeast of Walden Pond, is around 20 acres (8.1 ha) in area. [6] Its outlet, around 1 mile (1.6 km) long, flows southward into Stony Brook, a tributary of the Charles River. [7] Beaver Pond Road, a loop off of Tower Road, is located just to the northwest of the Beaver Pond.