TUPPER LAKE â One skierâs trash is Anne Rastâs treasure.
The artist from Lake Placid turns decommissioned skis, poles and snowboards into chairs, jewelry and household items. Her products are now on display for purchase at the Tupper Arts Center.
She started building ski chairs in 2005 after seeing a crumbling ski chair while at Whiteface.
âI said, âI can do better than that,ââ Rast said.
She used to collect skis from the North Elba Transfer Station, where people would dump their old pairs and employees would save them. Now, she has a donation rack at Green Goddess in Lake Placid. She estimates there are 500 pairs of skis at her home workshop, a garage that was supposed to hold a car.
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Outside diners enjoy food and drink at the Lake Placid Pub and Brewery on March 22. (News photo Andy Flynn) New York is loosening several COVID-19 regulations on bars setting end dates for a midnight curfew and a requirement that food must be purchased with alcohol. Some local bar owners reacted with a mix of excitement and ambivalence. The food requirement with an alcoholic drink were lifted Wednesday, April 28. This is commonly referred to as “bar seating.” The midnight curfew, which also applied to restaurants, will be lifted May 17 for outdoor areas and May 31 for indoor areas. “I think that everybody in the hospitality business is beyond excited that the food requirement is finally going to be dropped,” said Chris Ericson, co-owner of the Lake Placid Pub and Brewery and Big Slide Brewery, both in Lake Placid. “It’s nice that rational minds seem to be winning the day with this one.”