... we've never had three fatals like that," New Hampshire Fish and Game Col. Kevin Jordan said Monday. The Mamaroneck, N.Y. teen was snowmobiling with his father, Arnaud Remy, 48, on the lake while participating in the Great Meredith Rotary Ice Fishing ...
... from the harrowing ordeal. In an unrelated fatal accident a few hours later on the lake, a 48 year-old man from Mamaroneck, N.Y., and his 15-year-old son left Sleeper Island on snowmobiles, headed toward Ship and Moose islands when they encountered ...
Police officials recovered the body of a 15-year-old boy who slipped into Lake Winnipesaukee in New Hampshire early Sunday morning after snowmobiling with his father, according to the Daily Mail. On Saturday, February 11, a teenager, Arthur Remy, and his 48-year-old father Arnaud Remy, of Mamaroneck, New York, were partaking in the Great Meredith Rotary Ice Fishing Derby, where thousands of people attended, snowmobiling on Lake Winnipesaukee when tragedy struck.
... of Environmental Conservation, said she's wrapping up a month-long deer count using drones. "I am counting Mamaroneck right now. It is an ongoing process. There are many challenges to doing a drone project over this area, but I have learned a great ...
... Crosier's body was recovered later that night in 21 feet of water. In a separate event, a 48-year-old man from Mamaroneck, N.Y., and his 15-year-old son fell through the ice between Sleepers Island and Ship and Moose Islands just before 3 p.m. ...
... and director of NY4Whales/NY4Wildlife, also is conducting a deer count using drones in the Village of Mamaroneck. Kiley Blackman of Tuckahoe, founder of Animal Defenders of Westchester, said that a Geesebusters" mechanical predator system is being ...
... to match the grant with $33,000 on a project to restore 12 acres of coastal forest at Otter Creek Preserve in Mamaroneck. Westchester Land Trust officials said the project will improve the wildlife habitat for 100 species of migratory and ...
Town of Mamaroneck, N.Y. - Today, top federal and state environmental officials from New York and Connecticut announced 25 grants totaling $1.3 million to local government and community groups to improve the health and ecosystem of Long Island Sound. The projects, which are funded through the Long Island Sound Futures Fund , will restore 27 acres of habitat, including coastal forest, dunes, and salt marshes for fish and wildlife.