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Muddy Kill

Muddy Kill

FieldValue
nameMuddy Kill
name_otherModder Kill
imageMuddy Kill.jpg
image_captionMuddy Kill flowing through a horse farm just north of NY 17K
subdivision_type1Country
subdivision_name1United States
subdivision_type2State
subdivision_name2New York
subdivision_type3County
subdivision_name3Orange
subdivision_type4Town
subdivision_name4Montgomery
source1_locationUnnamed pond off Albany Post Road
source1_coordinates
source1_elevation400 ft
mouthWallkill River
mouth_coordinates
mouth_elevation340 ft

Muddy Kill is a 4.2 mi tributary of the Wallkill River that runs entirely through the town of Montgomery in Orange County, New York, United States. It rises from a small pond just over a mile (1.7 km) west of the village of Walden, flowing first southwesterly then roughly due south to empty into the Wallkill just upstream from the village of Montgomery.

Its course takes it mostly through areas cleared for agriculture, although not all are presently cultivated. Near its mouth it passes through a large horse farm, and then once it runs through a culvert under NY 17K it is within 102 acre recently acquired and developed by the town as Benedict Farm Park. It drains the low-lying Comfort Hills to the west.

The name is an English interpretation of Modder Kill, as it was called by early Dutch settlers in the region. In Dutch, Modder means "mud" or "slime", so the meaning of the creek's name stayed the same. The fertile lands of the creek's valley attracted many early settlers, and the houses of some, such as Abraham Dickerson, Jacob Bookstaver, Moses Mould and Wilhelm Schmitt, still stand. It has been equally attractive to contemporary real estate developers, and to lessen environmental impacts on the stream and the Wallkill watershed as a whole the Open Space Institute and the town cooperated in 2005 to obtain a permanent agricultural easement on the 227 acre Zylstra Farm, one of the largest properties along the creek.

A pickup truck leaving high spray columns behind as it crosses a torrent of water crossing a two-lane road. Behind it is a line of vehicles waiting to make the same crossing
Hurricane Irene]]

With little significant woodland in its valley, the creek can rise quickly when heavy rains fall. After the April 2007 Nor'easter, it flooded severely enough near its mouth that Route 17K had to be closed west of Montgomery for two days.

References

References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey. National Hydrography Dataset high-resolution flowline data. [http://viewer.nationalmap.gov/viewer/ The National Map], accessed October 3, 2011
  2. "Town of Montgomery". History of Orange County.
  3. (February 2018). "2005 Annual Report }}{{dead link".
  4. (2007-04-17). "Updated road closings in Orange County". [[Times-Herald Record]].
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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