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Honeoye Lake is the second smallest of the Finger Lakes and is located to the west of the major lakes. To its west are other minor Finger Lakes: Canadice Lake, Hemlock Lake, and Conesus Lake. As with the other Finger Lakes, Honeoye Lake was created by the advance and subsequent melting of continental glaciation. The lake's surface is 804 feet ...
Honeoye Lake Boat Launch State Park is a nine-acre (3.6 ha) state park [1] located along the southeastern shore of Honeoye Lake, one of New York's Finger Lakes.The park is located in Ontario County off East Lake Road, and offers a boat launch in addition to facilitating lake access for fishing and ice fishing.
The Hamlet of Honeoye lies just north of Honeoye Lake on Honeoye Creek and lies at the bottom of Honeoye Valley. Honeoye is located at 42°47′24″N 077°31′01″W / 42.79000°N 77.51694°W / 42.79000; -77.51694 (42.7900646, -77.5169374) and its elevation is 814 feet (248
Honeoye / ˈ h ʌ n i. ɔɪ / may refer to: Honeoye, New York, a hamlet in Ontario County, New York, at the north end of Honeoye Lake; Honeoye Creek, a tributary of the Genesee River in western New York; Honeoye Falls, New York, a village in Monroe County on Honeoye Creek; Honeoye Lake, the source of Honeoye Creek
Canadice Outlet – A stream flowing out the north end of Canadice Lake. Harriet Hollister Spencer State Recreation Area – A state park in the southeast part of the town. Hemlock Lake – A minor Finger Lake, forms the west boundary of the town. Honeoye Lake – A minor Finger Lake, forms the east boundary of the town.
Harriet Hollister Spencer State Recreation Area was created after 679 acres (2.75 km 2) of land was given to the state from the estate of Harriet Hollister Spencer, a Rochester horticulturalist, rose expert and civic leader, after her death in 1962.
Honeoye Creek (/ ˈ h ʌ n i ɔɪ / HUN-ee-oy) [3] is a tributary of the Genesee River in western New York in the United States. The name Honeoye is from the Seneca word ha-ne-a-yah, which translates to "lying finger", or "where the finger lies". The name refers to the local story of a Native American who had his finger bitten by a rattlesnake ...
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