The Staples Gridiron Club nominates the Wrecker football team as this week’s Unsung Heroes, for their offseason community service. The club writes:
In early December the Staples football team was eliminated from the state championship playoffs by their rivals, Greenwich High School.
On the field, the season was over. But off it, a new season was just beginning.
Head coach Matty Jacowleff — a Staples 2014 graduate — began installing his most important playbook. He calls it “4 for 40”: the 4 years spent playing football at Staples will benefit the student-athlete for the next 40 years.
Sure, Jacowleff said, they had to get stronger and faster as athletes. But they also had to get stronger in the classroom, and become leaders in the community.
Home games attract 3,000 fans on a Friday night. It was time for the football program to give back to the community that supports them.
Over the winter and into the spring, players were offered weekly service opportunities. Sophomore parent Cher Carroll helped organize the outreach.
The results are as impressive as anything that happens on the field.
Players headed to Maplewood at Southport Senior Living, where they conversed, played bingo, and provided tech support to elderly residents. NBC News New York featured the project on a recent broadcast.
Visiting Maplewood Senior Living.
The Wreckers participated in the Hope Blooms team walk, to raise money and awareness for Alzheimer’s.
At the Hope Blooms walk. Head coach Matty Jacowleff is standing, 3rd from right.
At Operation Hope Fairfield, players donated food items, helped bag lunches for distribution, and unloaded donations at a local post office.
Helping at Operation Hope.
The Wreckers also traveled to the Nourish Bridgeport food pantry, where they unloaded and sorted food donations, and helped clients shop.
Players who had conflicts were encouraged to give back according to their own schedules.
Already in 2026, the student-athletes have worked with 8 organizations, and logged over 250 hours of total community service.
Those numbers are impressive. But the Wreckers also came together to help one of their own. Varsity quarterback coach Nick Chacho told the team that he was battling stage 3 colon cancer.
While maintaining their weekly community service schedule and working hard in the classroom, the team undertook several fundraising efforts.
With the help of ASF Westport, they designed and sold “Team Chacho” t-shirts. The following week, over 40 players volunteered at a lemonade stand near Compo Beach.
The squad has already raised over $10,000 to help with medical costs for their coach, with minimal adult involvement and supervision.
Raising funds for their coach.
“Coach Matty” has set out to make his student-athletes model citizens, on and off the field. The Wreckers have responded not for recognition or adulation, but to help support the community that supports them each fall.
They are our unsung heroes.
(“06880” is proud to honor Unsung Heroes — and tell many other tales of town too. Please click here to support your hyper-local blog.)
Lonnie Quinn is the lead weather anchor on WCBS-TV in New York. He appears on the “CBS Evening News,” among other gigs. He was an actor on “All My Children” and “Santa Barbara.”
Lonnie is also a Westport resident, seen most recently on the same Westport Library stage where I interviewed him for our “06880” podcast.
It was a spirited half hour, for sure. Lonnie’s energy is off the charts.
So is his expertise.
I learned a lot — about weather, his life and career, and much more.
To contact Pierce Brown for grill cleaning, text 203-228-2293.
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The Soundview Summer Stroll returns Sunday, July 26!
For the 3rd year in a row — with the support of “06880” and the Compo Beach Improvement Association — the beach exit road will be closed to vehicles.
From 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Westporters can enjoy live music, food, kids’ activities, and a chance to stroll, bicycle, Rollerblade or otherwise enjoy one of the town’s crown jewels.
New this year: non-profits are invited to set up information booths, all along the road.
Earthplace, the Westport Weston YMCA, MoCA\CT and the Westport Swim Club are already in. If your non-profit would like to participate, email 06880blog@gmail.com.
Just a few days after being harassed while leaving The Blondinit — and posting about it on social media — Jonny Daniels returned to the Israeli restaurant on Monday.
This time, he heard no epithets about Israel from across the street. Instead he met the owners — who had closed briefly, after the incident went viral — and wrote:
“Today we had the privilege of meeting an extraordinary couple who proudly embrace and display their Israeli and Jewish heritage. Their warmth, resilience and unwavering pride were truly inspiring.
“The Blondinit serves exceptional Israeli cuisine in a beautiful setting. While the restaurant is not kosher, it offers an authentic and unapologetically Israeli dining experience that deserves to be celebrated and supported.
“Moments like these remind us that hatred and intimidation will never dictate where we go, who we support, or how proudly we live our Jewish lives.
“In the coming days, we will be announcing a very special evening at The Blondinit, where our community will have the opportunity to come together, support this incredible business, and send a clear message: we do not back down, we are not afraid, and we will always stand proudly as Jews.”
Police are conducting SWAT training today at 6 Coleytown Road, near Temple Israel.
There will be increased law enforcement in the area. Don’t be alarmed — it’s for training purposes only.
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Preliminary work is already underway on the Cross Highway bridge replacement, near the entrance to Wakeman Town Farm and the Wakeman fields.
The road will close on or around June 19, through approximately August 20.
Access to Wakeman and Bedford Middle School will be through North Avenue only.
Residents of Cross Highway, Silent Grove North, Half Mile Common, Woody Lane and Whippoorwill Lane will continue to have access, but there will be no through traffic.
Gruel Britannia and Christie’s Service will remain open and accessible.
Questions? Call town engineer Keith Wilberg: 203-341-1128.
The Unitarian Universalist Congregation in Westport’s “upcycle online” auction ends tonight, at 7:45 p.m. A reflection of their commitment to reduce, recycle and reuse, it’s a chance to share with others, and keep landfills down.
Sports fans (Patriots, Bayern Munich), college grads (Northeastern, Cal), shoe aficionados (Ferragamo, Sperry), china and crystal (Limoges, Wedgewood), clothing (Talbots Liz Claiborne), toys (Lego, Nintendo) and more (Thule luggage rack, live ficus tree) — there’s something for everyone.
For many neurodivergent teenagers, school provides social connections and routine.
That can be tough to replicate in the summer.
NeuroMind — a Westport-based hub for neurodivergent individuals and their families, offering coaching, counseling, support groups workshops, and resources — can help.
Their in-person social group for 15-19-year-olds meets Fridays at 2 p.m., from July 10 through August 28. Led by a licensed social worker, it offers an opportunity to make new friends, find a community, feel supported and judgment-free, and “be yourself!”
The next Veterans Benefits Luncheon is tomorrow (Thursday, May 28, 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.), VFW Post 399).
It’s open to all veterans as part of an ongoing effort to check in on all veterans’ welfare, and connect them with the benefits and support they earned.
Representatives will answer questions, and provide information on services and assistance available to veterans.
RSVPs are encouraged (but not required). Email vfw399ct@gmail.com, and include the number of attendees, or call (203) 227-6796.
PS: If you’re not a veteran, but know one: Please pass the word!
Speaking of lunch: Emmy Squared just launched a new promotion.
From Monday through Thursday, they’re selling cheese slices for $1, and pepperoni for $2. That’s “cheaper than gas,” they say — a lot cheaper. (For one gallon, anyway.)
Also on tap at the Church Lane restaurant: Trivia Nights.
They run every other Thursday (June 8 and 22, July 6 and 20, August 3 and 17).
Drinks are happy hour prices all night, on those days.
Though if you drink too much, you might not remember all those factoids. (Hat tip: Sal Liccione)
Longtime Westporter George Manchester turns 95 in June.
His son Jeff — now raising his own family, in his home town — has planned a special gift. He hopes at least 95 “06880” readers will send his father “Happy Birthday” cards.
George spends summers in Maine. Going to the post office is an important part of his day. Let’s inundate him (and the PO) with cards!
Send to: George Manchester, PO Box 202, South Bristol, ME 04568. And feel free to pass this on to others!
George Manchester in 2017, just before the old Saugatuck Island bridge was torn down after damage from Superstorm Sandy. Decades earlier he was involved in the construction of that bridge, as president of the Saugatuck Shores Island Association (now the Saugatuck Island Special Taxing District).
Elizabeth “Betty” Auber died Sunday in her Westport home, with her family by her side.
She was born and raised in Queens, the child of immigrant Irish/German parents.
After graduation from high School she married her sweetheart, Dick) Auber, and raised 5 children.
She went back to school and obtained a degree in nursing from Norwalk Community College in 1981, then graduated from Fairfield University 4 years later with a psychology degree.
Betty was highly respected for her nursing expertise and compassion. She ended her career as a psychiatric nurse providing compassionate care to vulnerable patients.
Betty retired when she was 76 years old, but continued to be a medical consultant to family and friends, always willing to listen and offer advice.
She and Dick loved traveling with friends, and enjoyed hosting social activities. She was also an active Senior Center and Westport YMCA participant. She volunteered at St. Luke Parish, beginning in 1976. Until very recently, she hosted weekly bridge and canasta games in her home.
Betty is survived by her children Patricia (Tom), Richard (Tatyana), Ron (Cheryl), Judy (Ferdinand) and Christine (Michael); grandchildren Abby, Steven, Jordan, Anastacia, Matthew, Kevin and Mary; great-grandchildren Colden, Keegan, Beckham and Eleanor; sister Patricia Casey and brother Joseph Schick. She was predeceased by her husband of 64 years, Richard.
A funeral Mass will be celebrated Saturday (May 30, 11 a.m., St. Luke Church).
In lieu of flowers, donations can be made to he Parkinson’s Voice Project or The Westport Center for Senior Activities.
Elizabeth Auber
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It arrived late. But some of this spring’s colors — like today’s “Westport … Naturally” featured photo, from Joann Circle — make the wait absolutely worth it.
And finally … Sonny Rollins, the saxophonist who was a giant of the post-war jazz age, died at his home in Woodstock, New York. He was 95. Click here for a full obituary.
(And finally … if you’re in a sentimental mood — or any other kind — please consider clicking here, to support this hyper-local blog. These daily Roundups, and so much more, don’t just fall from the sky 😎)
Our town is filled with men and women who have stepped back from corporate America — or whatever career they were in — to start their own businesses here.
But they’re not the only ones.
Teenagers are also taking the entrepreneurial plunge.
We’re not talking about lemonade stands or lawn moving. These young men and women are the real deal.
Here are a few. Read their stories — and be inspired that our future is in very good, creative and hard-working hands.
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We’ve highlighted Christian Rinaldi a couple of times.
Less than one year out of high school, he’s rebranded his thriving, and very professional, mobile car detailing business.
Now called Car Concierge CT, Christian and his staff — a well-trained crew, including Kyle Dulak and Justyn Capellan — offer 4 packages.
There’s interior cleaning, exterior polishing and waxing, and rim work, of course. But they’ve stepped up their premium luxury “concierge” service, highlighting multi-step paint correction, ceramic coating, and much more.
Including the engine. You’ll never see it. But Christian does.
Christian Rinaldi, with cars he’s worked on.
Christian bought a van, and outfitted it with water and a power source, to come to customers all over Fairfield County.
He’s fully licensed, insured, and — as an LLC — has an A- rating from the Better Business Bureau.
Their customers trust Car Concierge CT with Lexuses, Audis, BMWs, Porsches, and an Aston Martin Vantage.
Christian recently spent 2 weeks in Atlanta, getting certified by Koch-Chemie, a high-quality German cleaning products firm. He studied chemistry, along with paint reconditioning skills.
This is not a high school start-up. It’s Christian’s full-time business. He’s a perfectionist, putting hours into every aspect of what he calls “my art.”
Taking care of every detail.
He’s honed his people skills too. He communicates easily and efficiently, explaining to customers exactly what they’ll get, and when, and how he’ll do it.
Christian Rinaldi is going places. Including — he hopes — to your driveway.
Two summers ago, going into junior year, Staples friends Will Stoutenburg and Ollie Vynerib were looking for jobs.
Ollie was 15 — too young to work officially — and neither wanted to have a boss.
They brainstormed ideas, and settled on starting a window washing business.
Will’s parents warned it would be a waste of time. But the boys went to a hardware store and bought squeegees, mops and dish soap, plus long poles.
They came up with a clever name: WOW (for “Will Ollie Window-washing”).
They watched “a ton” of online videos to learn about their craft, and door-to-door sales.
It was not easy.
“Getting doors slammed in our faces was actually super good for us,” Will reports.
It was intimidating at first. But by the end of the summer, after multiple 14-plus hour days, their business had generated $10,000. Ollie and Will made $4,000 each.
They promised every customer that they’d donate a percentage of profits to Staples Tuition Grants. Proudly, they did.
Ollie Vynerib (left) and Will Stoutenburg, ready to work.
Still, they knew there was room to improve.
Last summer they scaled things up. They spent nearly all the money they’d made on upgraded equipment — enhancing both their product and their efficiency. (They’re also fully insured.)
They hired 15 employees — all Staples students — and got very good at selling door to door. They cleaned over 200 homes (and some businesses), with Ollie and Will doing all the sales and scheduling.
“It was exhausting days and stressful,” Will says. “But it was working, so we stayed disciplined and kept grinding.
“The amount I learned about business from running WOW the last 2 summers is incredible,” he adds.
“From how to sell, managing expenses and customers, mastering window cleaning and employees, I gained a ton of knowledge.
“It was far from easy, dealing with things like equipment issues, mean customers, etc. But it was all worth it.”
Wow!
This summer they’ve again spent money upgrading equipment, and reinvesting in WOW. They’ve added sales employees to their cleaning staff.
And they’re still just in high school. After graduating in June, Will heads to Tulane University. He’ll study — no surprise — business and entrepreneurship.
And Ollie will attend the Marshall School of Business, at the University of Southern California.
(To learn more, text 203-820-0078.)
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Grill cleaning is a task that nearly everyone needs done.
But few people want to do it.
Pierce Brown and Ben Zwick are happy to fill the need.
Both graduated from Staples High School last year. They were sports captains (volleyball and ski team, respectively), and participated in the Service League of Boys.
While finishing up their first year at college (Queens University and the University of Vermont, respectively), the business/finance majors looked for holes in the Westport service market that needed filling.
Grill cleaning seemed like a great opportunity.
They offer a full, deep clean and polish — including deep inside, and underneath.
Those are places no one ever sees. But Pierce and Ben make them shine just like the hood.
(To learn more, text Pierce at 203-228-2293 or Ben at 203-818-1833.)
Cars are a lifelong obsession. From a very young age he and his father have raced them. And for years, Ben has helped friends and family members source them, for good prices.
He has turned that latter hobby into a business: BZ Auto Advisory. He find cars that are the best fit, negotiates new and used car prices to save thousands of dollars — and monetizes it for himself too.
“Eliminate the stress, inefficiency and risk associated with car buying by working with an unbiased, personal vehicle advisor,” Ben says.
First, Ben helps define the criteria a customer is looking for in a car. Then, he offers specific models to choose from.
Next, he creates spreadsheets from throughout the region, to find the best deals. Then he contacts the seller, and negotiates.
Ben’s pricing analyses show clients a variety of possibilities.
One recent example: a 2018 Volkswagen Golf R. The deal was closed at $6,000 less than market value.
Ben constantly watches the market. His research is very thorough. Clients are thrilled.
He found a Porsche Panamera 4S Turismo. with a manufacturer’s suggested retail price of $129,000 in 2018, for a client for $56,000. It had only 50,000 miles, and a full Porsche service record.
Ben found a BMW in Boston for $26,900.
Another client says, “BZ helped me find a great 2018 Audi A4, and knew all of the important questions to ask the owner and mechanics. He let me know about expected maintenance and how to identify what cars to walk away from. I was very pleased with his services, and he saved me a bunch of money.”
(“06880” often reports on young Westporters, local businesses- and, like today, their intersection. If you enjoy stories like this, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)
“Guys and Dolls” was the first show David Roth directed, after taking over as Staples Players director in 2000.
He staged it again, 9 years later. And once more, in 2023.
Players’ second director, Al Pia, also did “Guys & Dolls” in the 1980s. The award-winning troupe has done it at least 6 times in total, making it perhaps the most-produced show in their 68-year history.
Today, retired media teacher Jim Honeycutt offers the 2000 and ’09 “nutshell” versions. He edited both in almost exactly the same way.
Shira Hofmekler (also known as Shira Gregory) (Adelaide) is best known for her role in the original Broadway cast of the Tony-Award-winning play “Frost/Nixon.” She also appeared in independent films like “Breaking.” She wrote the player “Helen Unbecoming,” a 2025 semifinalist in the O’Neill National Playwrights Conference.
Peter Duchan (Nicely-Nicely) wrote the book of the musical “Dogfight” (based on the 1991 film). He was a 2011-2012 Dramatists Guild Fellow and a 2014 recipient of the Robert Chesley Playwriting Award. Peter co-wrote the screenplay for “Breaking Upwards” (with Staples graduates Daryl Wein and Zoe Lister-Jones), and co-wrote the short “Unlocked” with Wein, an official selection of the Tribeca Film Festival, Gijon International Film Festival, and many others.
Justin Miller (Benny Southstreet) is a former Staples director of choral activities. He is a choral conductor, composer and arranger, known for his work in the Barbershop Harmony Society and his academic choral teaching. He led the Westminster Chorus and Masters of Harmony to international championships.
Justin Paul (Rusty Charlie) is a composer, lyricist, and half of the acclaimed songwriting duo Pasek and Paul. They wrote the music for “Dear Evan Hansen,” “La La Land” and “The Greatest Showman.” In 2024, Pasek and Paul achieved EGOT (Emmy, Grammy, Oscar, Tony) status after winning an Emmy for their song in “Only Murders in the Building.”
Joanna Gang is a voiceover artist based in New York. She is also a non-profit administrator and fundraiser.
Guys And Dolls 2009
Peter Molesworth (Rusty Chalie) is a writer, actor and filmmaker. Acting credits include “Pear,” “How to Catfish Your Ex” and “Fix.”
Max Stampa-Brown (Nathan Detroit) appeared in “The Third Man,” “FREUD” and “The Garret East,” after the University of North Carolina School of the Arts.
Eva Hendricks (Miss Adelaide) is a lead singer, and Dan Shure (Nicely-Nicely) plays bass, in Charley Bliss, a successful New York band. Their current release is “Back There Now.”
Jake Yarmoff (Sky Masterson) is a Philadelphia-based singer/songwriter. His song “City of Love” can be heard on YouTube.
Max Samuels(Sky Masterson) is a New York-based stage and screen actor known for his roles in “The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel” and “Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt.” He also appeared in “George Kaplan,” “Angry Young Man,” “The Winter’s Tale” and “The Brothers Karamazov.”
Nora Kennedy is a New York-based stage and screen actor and writer, recognized for her film work (“Prom King” and “Taken”), and her one-woman cabaret shows.
Matthew Van Gessel(Harry the Horse) is an actor, director and writer based in New York. He played Isaac Goodenow in the “The Sudbury Devil,” appeared in the film “Bookworm,” was featured as an actor in the project RedDrop, and was cast as Father Rand in “The Vampires of New Orleans.”
For the first time in years, the Y’s Men did not win the Memorial Day float competition.
There’s a good reason: The parade was canceled, due to weather.
Like many organizations, the Y’s Men of Westport and Weston spent weeks preparing their float.
Unlike many, they filmed the process.
So, disappointed parade-goers: Take heart. Just click here or below, to see what you missed.
And — this being the Y’s Men — the video is as intriguing as the float itself.
Credit goes to photographer Ted Horowitz; videographer Rick Godin, who created the finished product very quickly; John Brandt and Dick alt.
The voiceover was done by noted actor and Weston resident James Naughton. He’ll be honored Thursday at the Y’s Men’s annual meeting (Compo Beach pavilion, 9 a.m.).
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Summer is (almost) here.
Time for warm weather! Outdoors! Ticks!
No sweat. The Westport Library has you covered.
On June 10 (7 p.m.; free), Andrew Wilk’s Medical Series continues with “Ticks, Mosquitoes and Sunburn, Oh My! The Hazards of Summer.”
Longtime local internist Dr. Robert Altbaum will discuss how to prevent and treat mosquito bites, bee stings and sunburns. If time allows, heat-related illness will also be reviewed.
Infectious disease specialist Dr. Zane Saul will focus on tick-borne illness like Lyme disease, as well as babesiosis and anaplasmosis.
Lyme disease tick.
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Clarence B. Jones — Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. advisor and speechwriter, who helped plan the March on Washington and drafted part of the famed “I Have a Dream” speech — died Friday in California. He was 95.
Jones inspired Westporters 2 years ago, when he was the keynote speaker for the town’s Martin Luther King Day celebration. Click here or below, for that memorable speech. Click here for a full obituary.
And finally … on this date in 1864, Montana was organized as a US territory.
(“06880” is where Westport meets the world … including Montana. If you appreciate our 24/7/365 hyper-local coverage, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)
Herb Podel — the 101-year-old World War II Seabee veteran and longtime Westporter — did not get to ride in a car, as grand marshal of the 2026 Memorial Day parade.
The event was canceled, by a forecast of rain.
But the longtime businessman and civic volunteer took center stage at Town Hall, where the ceremony was moved.
In a heartfelt speech, delivered in a clear, powerful voice, Podel brought listeners from Abraham Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, to current events.
Noting the spread of autocracy around the world, he asked, “How do we respond to the call to always go to war?”
Michael Chait taped Podel’s 8-minute talk. To listen to the message from the Pacific Theater veteran, click here or below.
After decades of gardening, Michelle Reiner still can’t believe that a tiny speck of a seed can grow into a stunning flower.
Meanwhile, neighbors can’t believe that she spends 12 to 16 hours a day planting, tending and harvesting a 1-acre garden she saved from a developer — and that she offers everything she grows to anyone, at any time.
On the honor system.
Michelle Reiner takes a break from digging dahlias.
Reimer’s route to her garden — called Lucky 13 — was indirect. She grew up in a Philadelphia rowhouse, and worked first in the stock market. Thirty years ago, she moved to Westport.
She was a volunteer firefighter for 12 years. After injuring her back (not on the job), she pivoted to nursing school. Reimer spent 14 years in the Bridgeport Hospital emergency room.
After COVID, she needed a change. She and her husband Hamilton spotted Butternut Farm at 1120 Hulls Highway in Southport, just over the Westport line. It had been a flower farm, and was being eyed for a residential development.
Part of the Lucky 13 property.
Thirteen had always been Michelle’s lucky number — the one she wore playing hockey, and at the firehouse. The Reimers bid $13,000 over the asking price. They got the property, and named it Lucky 13.
Reimer began her “labor of love.” Roses, peonies, pussy willows, lilacs, hydrangea, shrubs … you name it, it’s there.
She’s stayed away from fruits and vegetables (except raspberries, around the cottage).
The other day, she was planting 1,600 dahlias. When they bloom in July, she says, “it will be spectacular. The whole field will be filled with color.”
People can “pop in, look around, appreciate.” And buy.
Reimer places flowers in a barn and shed, next to a barn. There’s a box nearby, with a price list. Buyers pay with cash or Venmo.
Tulips for sale.
Bouquets are $35 to $40. Jars of flowers range from $5 to $15. Sometimes she puts out “imperfect blooms” for $1. “Everyone can find something,” Reimer says.
In an era of security cameras and suspicion, her low-tech honor system is a refreshing throwback.
And it works.
“People can come get flowers at 2 a.m.,” she says. “There are no issues. People are pretty honest.
“It’s kind of nostalgic to trust people. Some of them leave notes. They say, ‘It’s nice in this day and age to have this.’
“If someone needs to steal,” she adds, “I figure they need it more than I do.”
Michelle Reiner has a green (and red, pinkk and yellow) thumb.
How did this former Wall Streeter/firefighter from Philadelphia learn to garden?
The Westport Library. She spends “days and days” there, poring over books. (YouTube videos help too).
Plus, she says, “common sense. A lot of this is trial and error. I learn as I go.”
And boy, does she go. Last year, between the end of March and the beginning of November, Reiner planted 10,000 seeds.
“It’s a ton of work,” she admits. “But it’s worth it. It’s crazy beautiful. And it’s fun.”
Beautiful and worth it, for sure.
Reiner feels part of the neighborhood. The neighbors appreciate all that she does for them.
13 is their lucky number too.
(You can follow Michelle Reiner on Instagram: @lucky13farmCT. Hat tip: Shari Kaufman)
(“06880” regularly covers the environment, interesting residents, local businesses — and, like to day, their intersection. If you enjoy stories like this, please click here to support our work. Thanks!)
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