Yearly Archives: 2011

Thanks A Lot!

The “Comments” page of “06880″ has been filled with wild stuff the past year.  Crazy drivers, crazy weather, crazy crap going down at The Farm  — if I’ve written about it, you’ve commented on it.

Today, let’s play nice.

We’ll devote this post’s “Comments” to a simple topic:  whatever we have to be thankful for.

I’ll start it off.  I’m thankful that I live in such a beautiful, creative, compassionate, involved and supportive town.

I’m thankful for the thousands of readers who make “06880″ such an interesting labor of love.

And I’m thankful that despite all the craziness that sometimes threatens to drown us, we somehow manage to keep our heads above water, shake ourselves dry, and find our way back to firm, familiar land.

Oh, yeah.  I’m also thankful for electricity.  It’s on, most of the time.

Now it’s your turn.  What are you thankful for?  Just click the “Comments” link.

Thank you!

Westport illustrator Stevan Dohanos’ “Saturday Evening Post” cover, Thanksgiving 1941 — 70 years ago today.

Fishes And Loaves And Turkeys

“Miracle” is a strong word.  But it comes close to describing what it’s taken to ensure that the annual Thanksgiving feast — enjoyed by 300 people, held at the Saugatuck Congregational Church since just a year or two after Adam met Eve in the Garden of Eden — will happen anyway, though Sunday’s fire rendered the church unusable.

Several institutions immediately offered space.  Christ & Holy Trinity Church — just down the road, with a 3,000-foot “Great Hall” dedicated only in June — was quickly chosen.

Christ & Holy Trinity Church -- including the new Great Hall, where Thursday's Thanksgiving feast will take place.

Yesterday, dozens of Westport Young Woman’s League women and Boy Scout boys scoured soot-encrusted pots and pans.  They finished at 7 p.m.

Stew Leonard’s and Britt-Air replaced the 30 turkeys destroyed in the fire — and Oscar’s Deli donated space in its walk-in freezer to store them.

Stop & Shop gave produce.  The Westport Garden Club prepared fruit.  Panera Bread offered food and (duh) bread.  Coleytown Elementary School prepared pumpkin bread and centerpieces.  R.J. Mase loaned knives.

Cash always helps.  Among the first donors:  Coleytown Middle School.

Even Gateway Printers pitched in — printing signs to show the way from Saugatuck Church to Christ & Holy Trinity.

You could call it a miracle.

Or you could say it’s what a true community does:  comes together in time of need.

But why argue?  Let’s talk turkey:  Happy Thanksgiving!

Anthony Jordon, manager of the Norwalk Panera store, and associate Dana Boch provide plenty of food for the feast.

Glen Palinkas, Mark Mathias and Paula Mikesh prepare to turn donated goods into a Thanksgiving meal.

WYFF To BYFF?

It’s still called the Westport Youth Film Festival.  But the 9th edition this spring will take place at the Bijou Theatre in downtown Bridgeport.

The event started out in Westport, at Toquet Hall and Town Hall.  Last year it was held at Fairfield’s Community Theatre.

Sounds like a good move.

The Bijou — in downtown Bridgeport — is a beautiful, historic theater in an up-and-coming neighborhood.  Shifting the festival to a bigger, hipper location can only help the city, the festival, and everyone associated with it.

The festival showcases the work of local youngsters — and those from as far as Sweden, Israel and India.  It also includes thought-provoking panels, speakers and workshops.

Each year’s long planning process brings together teenagers from throughout Fairfield County.  The involvement of Bridge Academy — a Bridgeport charter school — is particularly important, and beneficial.

But keeping the name “Westport Youth Film Festival” is nice.  Our town no longer has a theater.  At least we can put on a show.

(For more information search “Westport Youth Film Festival” on Facebook, call 203-222-7070, or email evan@westportartscenter.org)

Talking — And Donating — Turkey

Sunday’s fire destroyed more than a significant portion of Saugatuck Congregational Church.

Also lost:  over 30 donated turkeys, part of the annual Thanksgiving Feast (now set for 1 p.m. Thursday at Christ & Holy Trinity Church).

It took less than 24 hours for the turkeys to be replaced.  Scott Thommen of Britt-Air, along with Stew Leonard’s, quickly made sure the church had one less thing to worry about.

For Stew’s, it was the 2nd turkey donation to Saugatuck Congregation.  “The world’s largest dairy story” had already donated a bunch o’ birds — the ones caught in the fire.

Oscar's Andy Porier; Scott Thommen, owner of Westport's Britt-Air; Randy Christophersen, chair of the Saugatuck Feast Committee, with newly donated turkeys.

“Miss Annie” Reuter Retires

Annie Reuter loves lots about life.  But her 2 absolute favorite things are children and books.

When she walked into the Ridgefield Library 2 decades ago — to start her new job as children’s librarian — she told herself:  “This is where I’m supposed to be.”

But life got even better.

In 1997 she moved to the Westport Public Library.  Between the library’s support for kids, Westport parents’ championing of children and her own over-the-top enthusiasm, it was a match made in library heaven.

Annie Reuter

Annie did not major in library science, or children’s literature.  Her degree was in human services.  Before Ridgefield she worked as a court advocate and rape crisis counselor, was an occupational therapist, and — this comes close — ran a nursery school.

But none of that compares to the joy of being around children all day, introducing them to reading.

“Children’s librarians open up worlds, through stories, imagination, play, language and rhymes,” Annie says.

Working with kids gives her a chance to “go back and join children as they suspend reality,” she adds.  “To a child, Winnie the Pooh is as real as a policeman.  There’s something magical about that.”

Most youngsters come into the children’s library without any idea what they’re looking for.  Annie talks with them, finds out their interests, and steers them to just the right books.

“When you see them open a book, and open up a new world, that’s magical too,” she says.

One of Annie Reuter's favorite sights in the world.

Kids grow up fast — we all know that.  Their tastes move quickly from Dr. Seuss to Harry Potter to Kurt Vonnegut to John Irving.  (I wish.)  But many come back upstairs to visit Annie.  She remembers them all.

They may be big 7th graders — or, now, bigger college students — yet Annie still sees them “as a child in Story Time.”

Next month, Annie retires.  She looks forward to playing with her 3 “delicious” grandchildren, traveling — and perhaps doing something at the library in Southbury, where she lives.  (“It’s been quite a commute,” she says diplomatically.)

Annie will miss “the babies, the children, the staff and the town.”  She calls Westport’s energy “irreplaceable.”

“This is a town that absolutely champions children,” she says.  “There is a love of reading everywhere.”

Kids, she notes, “can’t go to the library unless grownups bring them.  And here, they always do.”

(A reception honoring Annie Reuter is set for Saturday, December 10, 10:30-11:30 a.m. in the Higgins Room.  All Westport parents — and, more importantly, youngsters — are invited.)

Saugatuck’s Flashlight Service

Acrid smoke hung in the air.  Yellow police tape fluttered in the breeze.  Whirring generators made the prayers and hymns hard to hear.

But — stirred by words like “we shall never be shaken,” and comforted by the closeness of friends and fellow congregants — the Saugatuck Congregational Church held a flashlight service tonight on its front lawn.

A few yards away, the church — fire-damaged, but still intact — stood proud and tall.

Thursday is, officially, Thanksgiving.

But for dozens of Westporters on the church lawn, tonight was the true celebration.

Doug Johnston, chair of the diaconate, welcomes Westporters to the service.

Saugatuck Church Service Tonight — On The Lawn

Saugatuck Congregational Church is already on the mend.

At 7:30 tonight — less than 24 hours after a fire severely destroyed part of the handsome building — a brief worship service will be held on the front lawn.

Guests are asked to bring candles, and park at the Westport Country Playhouse.

More good news:  The church’s neighbor — Christ and Holy Trinity Church, near the YMCA — has agreed to host the Saugatuck Church’s annual Thanksgiving Feast at 1 p.m. on Thursday.  As usual, all are welcome.

This afternoon, Saugatuck Church emailed a “Dear Friends” letter.  It read:

As many of you already know, last night there was a devastating fire in our church building.

We are clearly hurt by this, but we are also profoundly thankful that the fire did not, as we feared it might, take the entire building. We have not lost our spiritual home.

At this time we know that there was severe fire damage to the choir loft, the Daniels Room, the Fellowship Room and the nursery school. We know that the sanctuary and the new education wing have at least sustained water and smoke damage. At this time, we don’t have more details on the extent.

We’ve had so many expressions of support.  Sarah Verasco, Jeff Ryder, John Branson and the Town of Westport, along with many others, have stood with us through this ordeal.

So many others have come to visit or called to express their concern and support, and we know that our friends are praying for us across the state and even the entire United Church of Christ. May their prayers comfort us as we step forward.

We have spoken with our insurance provider at the Insurance Board, and they have already sent a team today. We know that we will be in a lengthy partnership with them as we look toward rebuilding.

As more information becomes available, we will send it through.

We will get through this together.

Please check out our website (www.saugatuckchurch.org) which will be updated as information becomes available.

After The Fire

Yesterday afternoon — a glorious fall Sunday — a woman stood in Colonial Green. She was taking photos of Saugatuck Congregational Church, across the street.

And why not?

It’s a magnificent building — as beautiful and iconic as any New England church should be.  It’s the perfect image of Westport — even if it’s been there, on the corner of the Post Road and Myrtle Avenue, since “only” 1950.

(Fun fact:  That year, the church was moved — very slowly, on a bed of logs — from its spot across US1 a few hundred yards away, where the Sunoco station now stands.  Life Magazine covered the event.)

More importantly, for nearly 180 years the Saugatuck Church has played a vital role in the life of our entire town.  More than 50 different 12-step groups meet daily there.  The church hosts a thriving nursery school, and many other community groups.

A fire last night destroyed part of the magnificent structure — thankfully (if one can say that) the back, not the sanctuary or steeple.

But the fire came at a particularly bad time.  On Thursday, 300 diners would have relished the traditional Thanksgiving feast.  Next month, the same number would have gathered for a Christmas meal.

Offers have already poured in to cover those 2 events, and provide a place for the AA and other meetings, as well as the nursery school.

The entire town will help the Saugatuck Congregational Church, and its members — just as, for nearly 2 centuries, they have helped all of us.

In the meantime, our prayers are with all congregants, and clergy, of this wonderful church.

Dino-Mite!

Not to brag — well, okay, I will — but I’m pretty good at trivia.  I even won a few thousand dollars once on the History Channel’s low-rent version of  “Jeopardy.”  (It would have been $25,000, but I got tripped up on a question about the Pathfinder mission to Mars.  Who knew Nissan sent an SUV into space?)

Yet I would have been humiliated had I been at Yale’s Peabody Museum of Natural History Museum recently.  The event was the 14th annual Paleo-Knowledge Bowl, and I am definitely not as smart as 20 teams of 4th through 6th graders.

Especially the Wilton Library team, which included Westporter Charlie Colasurdo.  And which won the entire shebang.

The day-long event includes questions about paleontology that Ph.Ds would stumble over.  It begins with a written exam — say, “Name the 2 Connecticut dinosaurs known from skeletons that were discovered in a Manchester sandstone quarry in the late 1800s”* — but that’s not even the most fun.

Charlie Colasurdo, with his way-cool trophy. (Photo/Josue Irizarry)

Throughout the day the 20 teams are whittled down to 16, then just 3.  Each question is read twice.  Team members confer, and announce their answers in front of a live audience.

For the final round this year, a Yale proctor wheeled out a Deinonychus skull.  The judge asked why its antorbital fenestra — that’s the skull opening between the eye and nostril, dummies — was particularly large.  He read off a battery of possible answers.

Charlie and his teammates conferred.  They were excited — because, unlike you and me, they knew that orbital spaces helped the dinosaur see at night.

Still, the team — competing in its 1st-ever Paleo Bowl — was surprised to win the whole shebang.

“We couldn’t believe that all our hard work got us to the final round,” Charlie said, channeling his inner Super Bowl athlete.  “Some of the questions were tricky, but our team was really well prepared by Mr. Fennell.”

For the past 5 months Darrell Fennell, a volunteer coach,  and his daughter Katherine — along with the Wilton Library staff — coached the team for several hours a week.  They explored dinosaurs, fossils, paleobiology, geology and more, through presentations, discussions and demonstrations.  There were even field trips to the Peabody.

In addition to a behind-the-scenes peek into Peabody’s vertebrate paleontology collections, the winners walked away with a trophy, family memberships to the Yale Peabody Museum — and a special prize of rare fossils.

After my own experience with the History Channel quiz show, I’ve set my sights on “Who Wants to be a Millionaire?”

Charlie Colasurdo, will you be my phone-a-friend?

(*Answer:  Anchisaurus and Ammosaurus.  Duh!)

One Store Closes, Another Opens

If you wanted to see the changing face of Saugatuck, yesterday was the day.

On her final day in business, Doc’s Café owner Yvonne Dougherty threw a party for her many customers friends.

There was good food, her classic Sledgehammer coffee (and wine), plus plenty of what-am-I-going-to-do-now lamentations from folks who have come in every day — “literally,” one said — since she opened her converted-garage doors on September 11, 2000.

Fans of all ages flocked to Doc's on its final day.

“As cheesy or clichéd as this may sound,” Yvonne wrote in a farewell letter,

you’ve become like family to me.  While discovering what kind of milk you prefer in your latte and the variety and quantity of sweetener, I’ve also learned about you.  I’ve learned about your families and your careers.

You’ve shared with me your successes and your hardships.  In return, you’ve learned an awful lot about me — perhaps, at times, to the chagrin of my 3 children (all former Doc’s employees at one time or another) and my husband (the man who truly made this dream possible).

Yvonne promises to open a new incarnation of Doc’s — somewhere — “very soon.”

Meanwhile, across the street — literally — Saugatuck Craft Butchery threw a welcome-to-the-neighborhood party for itself.  They’re the newest shop to open in the first phase of the Saugatuck retail/residential/office redevelopment — the same project that, in its next phase, will demolish the building housing the now-former Doc’s, among others.

The crew and customers are all smiles at Saugatuck Craft Butchery.

I’m not much of a red meat eater, but the spiced hamburgers that were free for the sampling were — literally — the best burgers I’ve ever tasted.  That includes Shake Shack — and Big Top.

The plaza by the river was rockin’.  There was music, food, and an old-fashioned, meet-your-neighbors vibe.  It’s exactly what the developers of Saugatuck envisioned several years ago — but it was exactly the type of friendly, funky place Doc’s already was.

Thanks for the memories, Yvonne.  We hope you’ll resurface somewhere, soon.

Thanks for coming, Saugatuck Craft Butchery.  We hope you’ll be here a long time, as the area grows and thrives around you.