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Eaton Reservoir also called Eaton Brook Reservoir is a man-made lake located by Erieville, New York. Fish species present in the lake include pumpkinseed sunfish , walleye , smallmouth bass , yellow perch , bluegill , pickerel , rock bass , rainbow trout , and largemouth bass .
Lake Eaton is located west of Long Lake, New York. Fish species present in the lake are brook trout, lake trout, lake whitefish, smallmouth bass, landlocked salmon, brown trout, and rainbow trout. There is a state owned beach launch located in the campground on Route 30, 2 miles west of Long Lake. [3]
The Otselic River (aht-SEEL-ik), formerly known as Otselic Creek, is a 55.4-mile-long (89.2 km) [2] tributary of the Tioughnioga River in central New York in the United States. It drains a hilly area, mostly forested and agricultural, east of the Finger Lakes at the northern edge of the Susquehanna River watershed.
Eagle Lake (Hamilton County, New York) Eagles Nest Lake; Lake Eaton; Eckford chain; Eighth Lake; F. Fall Lake (New York) Fawn Lake (Lake Pleasant, Hamilton County ...
New York State Route 26 crosses the southern portion of the town, passing through the hamlets of Eaton and West Eaton. Route 26 leads east into Madison and southwest 10 miles (16 km) to Georgetown. Part of the village of Hamilton is in the southeast part of Eaton. Eaton is centered at 42.850 degrees north latitude, 75.612 degrees west longitude.
Artists Dan Dellapasqua and Kyle Nelson along with COO at Crane Hotel Group Haven Hatch pose outside of the Nevada Motel across from Long Sands Beach March 8, 2024. The motel is expected to open ...
It is located west-southwest of the hamlet of Long Lake in Hamilton County. The View from Owls Head Mountain fire tower. It can be climbed from a trailhead on Endion Road off New York Route 30, just north of the hamlet of Long Lake. The trail provides a 3.2-mile (5.1 km) ascent with a gain of 1,200-foot (370 m); a side trail leads to Lake Eaton.
Eaton Site is a historic archeological site located at West Seneca in Erie County, New York.It contains a record of small, intermittently occupied campsites from the Early Archaic (c. 8000 BC) though the Late Woodland (c. 1200 AD) periods and an Iroquoian village dating to around 1550 AD.