
Westport Library: Saugatuck River reflections (Photo/Michael Chait)

Westport Library: Saugatuck River reflections (Photo/Michael Chait)
Today’s edition of Westport homes — teardowns, and their replacements, courtesy of photographer Dave Matlow’s archives and follow-up — takes us to the Compo and Old Mill Beach neighborhoods.
Those areas have seen more changes than many in town. Among them:

Sterling Drive, July 2011 …

… and April 2026.
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Sherwood Drive, August 2014 …

… and April 2026.
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Buena Vista Drive, December 2018 …

… and April 2026.
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Soundview Drive, March 2016 …

… and April 2026.
(“06880” regularly covers Westport real estate, history … and much more. If you enjoy features like this, please click here to support our work.)
PopUp Bagels — the Westport start-up that popped up during the pandemic, roared into regional and now national prominence, and has clearly outgrown its motto — “Not famous, but known” — is in the headlines again.
Bloomberg reports that Tiger Global has agreed to invest — at a $300 million valuation.
That’s “roughly 5 times what the startup was quoted at as recently as 5 months ago.”
“The buzzy bagel brand races to turn its TikTok-fueled hype into a national presence,” Bloomberg adds.
It describes the brand as developing “a cult-like following around its smaller, fluffier bagels, sold in limited flavors with a minimum order of 3.”
PopUp Bagels plans to open up to 300 locations across the US in the next 4 years.
The 30th store opens Friday in Chicago. Number 31 follows the next week, in Dallas.
Click here for the full Bloomberg story.

PopUp Bagels founder Adam Goldberg, with his Brooklyn Bagelfest award.
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Sustainable Westport’s UnPlastic Westport initiative is bearing fruit.
Donations have already funded 2 public water bottle filling stations: one at the Compo Beach basketball courts, the other at Winslow Park. Both will keep tens of thousands of plastic water bottles out of landfill.

Rendering of the water bottle filling station at Winslow Park …
Five more “priority locations” have been identified:
Three “wish list locations” — requiring more logistical planning — are the Wakeman Fields, Longshore and downtown.
The cost and installation of each station ranges from $5,000 for an in-wall unit, to $15,000 for a standalone, ADA-compliant one.
Sustainable Westport seeks individual donors, and corporate sponsors. Click here to contribute, and for more information.

… and the Compo Beach basketball courts.
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“Love + War” — the remarkable documentary about the professional and personal lives of Pulitzer Prize and MacArthur fellowship winner (and 1991 Staples High School graduate Lynsey Addario — has been nominated for 4 Emmy Awards.
The nominations include the biggest category — Best Documentary — along with others for Outstanding Editing, Outstanding Sound, and Outstanding Promotional Announcement.
Addario congrats her team — including National Geographic — and adds, “It took me years to feel comfortable letting a film crew into my life. Even then, it never felt entirely natural as someone who’s usually behind the camera, not in front of it. So thank you to our cameramen.”
She cites their “gorgeous (and subtle!) cinematic eye (and) powerful footage from Ukraine, often shot while under fire.
“It’s been amazing to share this film with so many different people across the world. I hope ‘Love + War’ continues to stand as a testament to a profession that became my calling, while also being clear-eyed about the complexities and sacrifices that come with it.”
Winners will be announced at Lincoln Center on May 28. “Love + War” can be streamed on Hulu and Disney+.

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As models get fitted, styled, and practice their runway strut, a few tickets still remain for “Fashionably Westport.”
The Westport Downtown Association-sponsored evening (April 25, 7 p.m., Westport Library) is a benefit for Homes with Hope. It features an actual runway, with friends-and-neighbors models from all over town, wearing outfits from over 20 local stores.
(Spoiler alert: One of those models is yours truly. Please don’t laugh — but please come to the show!)
The evening includes plenty of food, and a great silent auction. Click here for tickets, and more information.

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A full crowd packed the VFW last night, for a very special show.
Corky Laing — the former drummer for Mountain (of “Mississippi Queen” fame) — sat in with Gary Shure’s 10$Grand Band.
From the first chords, the place rocked. Do you know what I mean?

From left: Joe Whelan, Ray Schmidt, Corky Laing, Gary Shure, Ronnie Roberts, Michael Bertholf.
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More ospreys — and not the well-known Fresh Market ones.
This pair nests at the north end of Sherwood Mill Pond.
Are they surveying the scene? Planning dinner? Thinking about starting a family?
Whatever the answer: They look very intent doing it.

(Photo/John Kantor)
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Besides the ospreys, there was another sign of the season yesterday — a (finally) warm and sunny spring Sunday.
Boats and other craft headed to Cockenoe Island, off Compo, by the — well, boatload.

(Photo/Carrie Kuhn)
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Westport native and Korean War veteran Donald Switter died on Wednesday. He was 92.
He was studying architecture at the University of Connecticut to study architecture, but while drawing up plans realized his true love was outdoors.
Don pivoted, and started a landscape company. For years, he was one of the town’s top landscapers.
Many residents knew him as the man riding in a Jaguar convertible, with his English setter Mike by his side.
Don is survived by his sister, Phillis Fox of Unicoi, Tennessee; brother James of Winchendon, Massachusetts, and many nieces and nephews.

Don Switter
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It’s been a while since we’ve had deer in our “Westport … Naturally” daily feature.
These 2 look like they need a good meal.

(Photo/Richard Fogel)
Lucky (for them): Growing season is upon us.
Unlucky (for us): They’ll soon be chomping on our plants.
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And finally … on this date in 1742, George Frideric Handel’s oratorio “Messiah” had its world premiere in Dublin.
If you’re free for the next 2 1/2 hours — enjoy!
(Hallelujah! “06880” is your 24/7/365, hyper-local go-to blog — “Where Westport meets the world.” We rely on reader support. Please click here to donate. And thank you!)
Dave Goldshore is an intense coach.
In 4 years, he built the Staples High School boys basketball team into a Connecticut powerhouse.
On a Saturday night last month, the Wreckers were one game away from a momentous achievement: an undefeated (27-0) season, and the program’s first state championship since 1937.
It was a very intense moment.

Dave Goldshore reacts to a great play, in the state title game … (Photo/Ryan Allen)
But as overtime against West Haven began — with several thousand raucous fans packing the Mohegan Sun arena — Goldshore felt serene.
“I was calm,” the coach — who had spent all winter prowling the sideline, barking orders, displaying every emotion from joy to anger, encouragement to frustration, for all to see — recalled last week.
“Win or lose, this group — players, staff, managers — had done all they could. They were leaving everything on the table. I felt a great sense of pride and accomplishment.”
That overtime period ended with the teams still tied.
So did the second OT.
It took 3 overtimes — the longest in state basketball finals history — before the game was decided.
West Haven celebrated wildly. Staples — the team that had captured the town’s heart with their talent, grit and exciting, fun style of play — slumped in despair. They were one game shy of perfection; 3 overtimes away from the ultimate goal their coach had driven them toward ever since the final game of the previous year.

… and a different reaction, near the end. (Photo/Ryan Allen)
For the seniors, it was a goal Goldshore had set the day he was appointed head coach 4 years earlier, when they were rising freshmen.
Three weeks after this year’s heartbreaking loss, he called a team meeting. Just as the seniors were moving on, he would be too. After 9 years with the program — 5 as an assistant, the last 4 as head coach — Goldshore was stepping down.
Goldshore is a basketball guy, through and through. He captained his Horace Greeley High School team in Chappaqua, New York; served 3 years as a student manager (including key recruiting responsibilities) at the University of Michigan, then assisted as Somers High before moving to Westport.
He went into the technology staffing business with his father, but never lost the coaching bug. He joined Staples coach Colin Devine’s staff, then earned his “dream job” in 2022 when Devine began pursuing administrative options.
Goldshore instilled core values, like a culture of accountability. He worked with Westport’s youth basketball program. His very first year, he led the Wreckers to the state Division II, after a dramatic, last-second comeback in the semis.
The next year Staples lost in overtime, in the FCIAC (league) final. That was particularly poignant: Just 15 minutes before getting on the bus, Goldshore learned that his father had died.

Dave Goldshore, shortly after being named head coach.
Last season, the Wreckers opted to move up to Division I. Star player Sam Clachko was injured late in the year, but Staples captured a huge prize: their first FCIAC title since 1963.
This year — a season that galvanized the entire town — they made it 2 in a row.
Accomplishments like that don’t come easily. Staples coaches sign seasonal, 3-month contracts. But building and maintaining a program is a 12-month commitment.
Goldshore jokes that he had his own permanent table at the diner, for Sunday morning meetings with individual players. In addition to planning and preparation, constant communication with players throughout the off-season is essential for program-building, chemistry and success.
“Talking to kids is so important,” he notes. “It’s everything: making sure they’re doing their work, if everything is okay with school and girlfriends, mental health issues, college challenges …”
Other — but by no means all — tasks include going to youth games, building relationships with younger players and families, organizing camps — “doing everything possible to keep the Staples basketball culture alive and well.”
And once the season begins, the intensity ramps up exponentially. Goldshore says that from late November through March, he has 2 jobs: his business, from 8 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., and basketball, from 2 p.m. to 10.

Coach Dave Goldshore (front, center), players and coaches celebrate their 2nd straight FCIAC championship. (Photo/Diane Lowman)
He also has a wife and family. His daughter is in college. One son is playing baseball as a freshman at Trinity College; the other is still at Staples. Personal sacrifices for them are real.
Goldshore began thinking about the future after this year’s Division I semifinal, when the Wreckers were headed to the championship.
After the heartbreaking defeat, he took time to finalize it. Goldshore wanted to be sure it was “the right choice, for the right reason — not an emotional one.” It’s time now, he says, “to make sure that my family — my nuclear family — is safe and well and healthy.”
Still, the emotional toll of his decision is real.
He will miss many things — and not just the practices and games.
“Being there for these kids, with no judgment and complete honesty … it’s so time-consuming. But in the most wonderful way possible.”
Goldshore has no plans to coach in the near future. But, he notes, “I’m not going anywhere.”

Coach Dave Goldshore, in action. (Photo/Ryan Allen)
He looks forward to watching the program “keep trending upward.” He is confident that administrators will hire someone with “very capable hands. There are plenty of great candidates on our staff who can do an amazing job — and even take it to new heights.”
It will be “difficult” for him when practice begins again next November, Goldshore admits.
“I love Staples basketball. The games are the hardest part, and in some ways the least enjoyable.”
He’ll miss “all the times with the coaches, laughing, crying, strategizing and learning.”
Most of all, he’ll miss the players.
“I’ve learned so much from them. This 50-year-old man became a better, more self-aware person because of 15- to 18-year-olds. I’ll miss all that, for sure.”
Goldshore says he is “excited about the future. I look forward to being a fan.”
And, this most intense coach — one who exudes energy on the sideline, runs demanding practices, and helped turn Westport into a basketball-crazy town — says, “I’m at peace with my decision.”
(Every day, “06880” often readers behind the scenes of Westport stories — sports, arts, politics and more. If you enjoy coverage like this, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)
Posted in Sports, Staples HS, Teenagers
A few years ago, Sakura’s spectacular weeping cherry tree was in the state Department of Transportation’s cross-hairs.
They said it had to be removed, for a Post Road project.
Andrew Colabella and a small group of residents swung into action. Together, local and state officials — and Eversource — saved it.
Today, it is as magnificent as ever.
And traffic flows by, perfectly fine.


(Photos/Celia Campbell-Mohn)
Posted in Environment, Local business, Pic of the Day
Tagged Sakura restaurant, Weeping cherry tree
Seven years ago, Westport resident Debra Kandrak had an idea: Paint the town yellow.
Today, her one-woman crusade pays off beautifully.
Every autumn, she uses a wide variety of outlets — social media, emails, “06880” — to encourage Westporters to plant daffodils.
She brings her message to friends, strangers, businesses, and town organizations and committees. Her message is simple: Plant bulbs.
Every spring around this time, we are blessed with the results of her — and their — work.
Once again, the gorgeous yellow flowers are everywhere.
From neighborhoods like Greens Farms to the Westport Library, around mailboxes and street signs, by the Cribari Bridge, in traffic islands and at the entrances to Staples High and Bedford Middle Schools, Debra’s yeowoman efforts pay off for all of us.
As perennials, each year brings more and more explosions of color.
And every spring, Debra says, she finds flowers in areas she had not seen before. Here’s what she found today:

One stretch of Morningside Drive South …

… and another.

Lansdowne Condominiums, Post Road East.

Hillandale Road

Green’s Farms Church.

Compo Beach

Charcoal Hill Road. (All photos/Debra Kandrak)
Of course, daffodils bloomed even before Debra’s crusade.
The flowers lining the front of Willowbrook Cemetery on Main Street have delighted everyone passing by for years.
Here’s a bonus photo, from Claudia Sherwood Servidio:

(Photo/Claudia Sherwood Servidio)
We’re happy to feature more spring-in-Westport photos. Email them to 06880blog@gmail.com.
After the winter we’ve had, it’s time to celebrate a new season!
(“06880” regularly features Westport’s beauty — in words and images. If you enjoy this hyper-local blog, please click here to support our work. Thank you!)
Spring will come.
Eventually.
To goose it along, last week’s Photo Challenge featured a farm implement.
It was rusted, and looked like it had been in the field forever. But, in true New England fashion, it still seemed usable. (Click here to see.)
Susan Iseman, Seth Schachter, Brian Taylor, Sal Liccione and Ivy Gosseen all knew exactly where to find it: Wakeman Town Farm.
Westport’s environmental and educational center gets thousands of visitors a year. There’s a lot to see and do at the Cross Highway fields and farms.
And one day – hopefully very soon — we’ll all be able to enjoy it, in actual spring weather.
Here is this week’s Photo Challenge. If you know where in Westport you’d see it, click “Comments” below.

(Photo/Mark Mathias)
(Every Sunday, “06880” hosts this Photo Challenge. We challenge you too to support your hyper-local blog. Please click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)
Aspetuck Land Trust’s native plant sales is a great spot for hard-to-find native perennials and shrubs.
Plants are ordered online. Pickup is at the Caryl & Edna Haskins Preserve of Compo Road South, from Friday, May 15 through Sunday morning, May 17.
Click here for selections, and ordering information.

A few of Aspetuck Land Trust’s many native plants.
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The third “No Kings” protest is in the history books.
But yesterday — as they have for many months — a small group gathered on the Ruth Steinkraus Cohen Bridge to protest against President Trump.
As usual, they were met with many thumbs-up signs from passing drivers, and horns honking in approval.
As usual too, there were thumbs-down signals, and raised middle fingers.

(Photo/Susan Garment)
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We’ve posted some spectacular bird photos, in our daily “Westport … Naturally” feature.
But this cardinal — perched at Wendy Levy’s Birdbuddy smart feeder — ranks right up there with the most colorful best.

(Photo courtesy of Wendy Levy)
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Longtime Westport resident Bette Hahner died peacefully on March at her home in Chatham, Massachusetts. She was 84.
The New York City native and her husband Jeff spent 28 enjoyable years here. In 2000, they retired and moved to Cape Cod.
Bette loved entertaining and gardening. In Westport she enjoyed throwing clambakes, corporate picnics and dinners for friends and neighbors.
In Chatham, in addition to many hours in her home gardens, she managed luncheons and events for the Chatham Garden Club, Monomoy Yacht Club, Chatham-Harwich Newcomers Club, CONCH and Friends of the Eldredge Library.
She recruited many member to the Garden Club. People loved working with her.
Bette worked seasonally for 15 years in the Chatham permit/sticker office, and knew nearly everyone in town. She then worked at the Freedom Ferry in Harwich Port, as a friendly face in the ticket office. For many years she also sold buttons at First Night Chatham headquarters.
Bette was a past president of the Chatham Garden Club, a board member of the Friends of the Eldredge Public Library, and active on the First Night Chatham Committee. In 2025 she was named grand marshal of Chatham’s July 4th parade.
She is survived by Jeff, her husband of 64 years, and son Tim of Bloomington, Minnesota. She also leaves her dog Emmie.
The family requests that donations be made in her name to the Chatham Garden Club.
A celebration of life will be held Saturday (April 18, 2 p.m.) at the First Congregational Church of Chatham.

Bette Hahner
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And finally … on this date in 1945, President Franklin D. Roosevelt died of a cerebral hemorrhage in Warm Springs, Georgia. He was 63, and in his 4th term.
Woody Guthrie wrote “Dear Mrs. Roosevelt,” in the style of many tribute letters the public wrote to the first lady after his death. There are 15 verses; at the end of each, Guthrie says, “This world was lucky to see him born.”
Guthrie never recorded the song. But Bob Dylan — an acolyte — found it, and rescued it from obscurity. He and The Band performed it at a Carnegie Hall Guthrie tribute concert in 1968. He has never played it since.
(Spring is here! But before you go outside to romp, please take a few seconds to click here, and support your hyper-local blog. That helps keep “06880” alive, through every season of the year. Thank you!)