Monthly Archives: May 2016

Oystercatcher Alert!

The other day, “06880” reported on the return of oysters to Sherwood Mill Pond.

Yesterday, an alert “06880” reader sent along this photo, from Compo Beach:

Oystercatcher

I

It’s an oystercatcher. The woman who spotted it has lived here for 19 years. This is the first one she’s ever seen.

She went to eBirdof course! — and found there has never been a reported sighting in Fairfield County.

AllAboutBirds says:

A large, boldly patterned bird, the American Oystercatcher is conspicuous along ocean shores and salt marshes. True to its name, it is specialized in feeding on bivalves (oysters, clams, and mussels) and uses its brightly colored bill to get at them.

The woman who spotted it adds: “It’s really beautiful, with an unusual high- pitched loud tweet.”

Here’s a better photo (from Wikipedia, not Compo!):

Oystercatcher 2

If you see one, tell us.

Better yet, tell Jeff Northrop, over at Hummock Island Oysters on the Mill Pond.

Oh My 06880 — Photo Challenge #74

It took Andy Kaplan exactly 1 minute to figure out where last Sunday’s photo challenge was — and to email the correct answer.

The lovely lemon trees (Meyer lemons, as several alert “06880” readers noted) are located at Bill Gault’s famous red barn, on South Compo. In the winter, the trees are inside. When the weather turns warm, they’re moved outdoors for everyone to enjoy.

Aimee Borys, Martha Witte and Dorothy Fincher all also knew what Joyce Joiner’s photo showed. Click here to see that fine shot again.

I’d be surprised if anyone identifies this week’s photo in 1 minute. Seth Schachter has found a spot that few Westporters know exist — though it’s hidden in plain sight.

(Photo/Seth Schachter)

(Photo/Seth Schachter)

Click “Comments” below to add your guess to this week’s photo challenge.

Crowd-Sourcing Our Memorial Day Parade

The Memorial Day parade is one of Westport’s favorite town events.

Everyone has a favorite spot to watch from. Everyone has a favorite band, float or marcher to photograph.

But why share them only with a few hundred dear pals, casual acquaintances and random how’d-they-get-on-my-list Facebook “friends”?

Tomorrow, let all of Westport see “your” Memorial Day parade. Send a few (not all!) of your photos to “06880” (email: dwoog@optonline.net). Deadline: noon. Please include brief identification, if needed, and of course your own name.

I’ll post some (not all!) in the afternoon.

And be creative! We want special photos, for our special parade.

Westport celebrates Memorial Day in many ways. Here's a simple shot from the parade route.

Westport celebrates Memorial Day in many ways. Here’s a simple shot from the parade route.

Westport Schools Add “Guiding Principles” For Emotional Intelligence

It’s one thing to teach reading, writing, science, math, world language, music and art. Westport schools do that — and they do it very, very well.

It’s another thing entirely to teach emotional and social awareness; kindness with sincerity; principled thoughts and actions, and a love of learning.

You can’t test those qualities. You can’t quantify them, or describe them particularly well. Most school systems don’t even think about such things.

Westport does.

Called “Guiding Principles,” they’re part of a conscious initiative to add social, civic and ethical education to the school day. And they’re being introduced system-wide, from kindergarten through 12th grade, not only in the classroom but at recess, in the cafeteria — anywhere students gather, and teachers can teach.

Last week, director of secondary education (and incoming Staples High School principal) James D’Amico and director of elementary education Julie Droller discussed what it all means.

James D'Amico and Julie Droller, in Westport school district headquarters at Town Hall.

James D’Amico and Julie Droller, in Westport school district headquarters at Town Hall.

“We have a robust social skills curriculum,” D’Amico said. “But we realized we needed to recalibrate what we were doing.”

“We’re addressing more needs than even a few years ago,” Droller added. “Society expects schools to do even more now.”

With the help of Deb Sawch (former Staples English teacher, now co-founder/director of Studies in Educational Innovation at Teachers College, Columbia University) and Allison Villanueva (one of Westport’s Teachers College partners), administrators studied how other top-performing schools — as far away as Singapore and Australia, as near as Horace Mann and as diverse as Berkeley’s Haas School of Business — handled social and civic expectations.

But D’Amico and Droller knew they could not impose any directive from the top down. They had to talk simply, without jargon — and there had to be teacher buy-in.

They worked for 18 months with a group of 45 teachers from throughout the district, to determine the best ways to give students (for example) the opportunity to connect, value and accept others; to act with integrity; to be curious, inquisitive, passionate and joyful about learning new things; to persevere, even during challenges; to view mistakes as part of the learning process, and be flexible in all they do.

It's not enough for youngsters to work together. They also must

It’s not enough for youngsters to work together. They also must connect, value and accept each other; act with integrity, and enjoy what they do.

They also wanted to find ways for adults to model those behaviors.

“We don’t want kids who are compliant,” D’Amico stressed. “We want them engaged in learning.”

In reading, for instance, “we don’t want kids to just flip through pages,” Droller said. “We want them to stop, talk with each other, grapple and compare ideas. We want them to ask questions, without waiting for the teacher.”

All well and good. But how does that happen in a school system — and national environment — that demands quantifiable measures, like getting through a unit and preparing for standardized tests?

“That’s a good question,” D’Amico said. “The changes can be subtle. In 8th grade social studies classes, it could mean changing an assignment from ‘Write about the American you admire most’ to ‘Write about the most principled American you admire.'”

Who would you pick as your most principled American?

Who would you pick as your most principled American?

“We’re naming these principles,” Droller continued. “We’re saying, ‘Here’s what being empathetic means. Here’s what it means to be persistent. Here’s what a growth mindset looks like.'”

This August, Westport hosts its 1st-ever district-wide keynote address. Dr. Marc Brackett — director of Yale’s Center for Emotional Intelligence — will talk about the ability to manage emotions. He believes that emotional intelligence can be taught. In fact, he says, it must be.

Workshops will be offered to parents too, so they can partner with teachers and administrators in the initiative.

“If we don’t have these principles in place, kids don’t learn anything,” D’Amico says. “We can’t go a mile wide and an inch deep. Kids already have access to plenty of information. We have to focus not on what you learn, but how you learn.”

“It’s a shift for our teachers,” Droller admitted. “We’re saying, ‘It’s okay to pare back. It’s okay to develop students as learners,'” not as mere receptacles of facts.

Teachers do this already, D’Amico said. What’s being added is the emphasis on it, as a district-wide focus.

“Teachers own it,” he concluded. “They’re reading books about growth, mindset, grit. This is going to come from them and their colleagues. We’re all  excited.”

Rotary Duck Succumbs To Heat

Sunny — the 23-foot inflatable duck promoting Westport Sunrise Rotary’s Great Duck Race on June 4 — has been the most popular downtown attraction since The Crane.

After hanging out by the library, he moved over to more ducky territory: the Saugatuck River.

Today’s near-90-degree heat must have gotten to him, though. Alert “06880” reader Dorian Barth spotted Sunny keeled over:

(Photo/Dorian Barth)

(Photo/Dorian Barth)

Or maybe he was just resting.

Time In A Bottle

You can get anything you want at Alice’s Restaurant. (Excepting Alice.)

You can get anything you want on eBay too — including glass bottles from long ago.

Alert “06880” reader Seth Schachter saw this for sale the other day:

Bottle 1

It’s hard to see. But the milk bottle says: “Twin Silo Farm, Westport, Conn.”

Seth has no idea where that dairy was. I don’t either.

But Jacques Voris, Jack Whittle or some other historically minded “06880” reader probably does.

Seth did not buy it. (The winning bid was $306.)

However, he’s got several other old Westport bottles in his collection. If anyone knows anything about any of these businesses, click “Comments” below. Inquiring minds — and bottle collectors everywhere — want to know.

E.D. Noy Inc., Greens Farms, Conn.:

Bottle 2

The Westport Drug Co., Geo. J. Green, Westport, Conn.:

Bottle 3

Here’s one many people have heard of. Believe it or not, Embalmers Supply was the largest company of its kind in the country. Founded in 1887 by C.B. Dolge, it moved in 1891 to the riverfront property by Ford Road, near the current headquarters of Bridgewater Associates:

Bottle 4

Who knows what that bottle was once filled with?!

What’s In A (Westport) Name?

It took nearly 200 years for us to break away from Fairfield, Norwalk and Weston, and become our own town. (As well as decide to call ourselves “Westport,” not “Saugatuck” as we had always been known.)

It took 175 years from that founding — on May 28, 1835 — for the Westport Historical Society to produce a 45-minute show, educating 21st-century residents about our 19th-century past.

And it took 6 years from that day — May 28, 2010 — for the WHS to finish editing a film about the re-enactment.

For a town filled with media folks, the production values are a bit sketchy. But it’s an interesting video nonetheless.

And now — on May 28, 2016 — it’s being released to the public. Enjoy!

https://vimeo.com/166274273

Hey! That’s Me!

I thought I was done posting photos of past Memorial Day parades. Yesterday’s images (click here and here) covered 50 years, and provided tons of memories.

But this one — particularly the back story — is too good to pass up.

Three years ago Gordon Joseloff saw a box of 35mm slides for sale on eBay. They were labeled “1962 parade in Westport.”

The WestportNow founder — and former 1st selectman — calls himself “a sucker for Westport nostalgia.” He bid $9.99, and won. The prize: Nice shots of the Memorial Day parade.

Imagine his amazement when one of the slides was of Joseloff himself. There he was — 17 years old, smack in the center of the frame.

My beautiful picture

Still in high school, Joseloff was taking pictures for the Westport Town Crier. He worked that summer — and the next — as a reporter/photographer. (And went on to a storied 2-decade career as a journalist in London, Moscow, Tokyo and other world capitals for UPI and CBS News.)

Perhaps the only thing more remarkable than that story of discovering himself in a photo, is the line of veterans (or perhaps active duty National Guardsmen) behind Joseloff. In 1962, they seemed to go on forever.

Joe Schachter: Memorial Day Grand Marshal

America’s living link to World War II veterans is rapidly diminishing. Nearly 500 servicemen and women from that conflict die every day.

Yet when Joe Schachter rises Monday to deliver Westport’s Memorial Day address, he will stand steady. The 90-year-old’s voice will be strong.

Schachter — the grand marshal of this year’s parade — is living proof of the power of an active, full life.

The South Norwalk native graduated from Norwalk High in 1943. There were plenty of empty seats at the ceremony; many classmates had gone off to war.

Joe Schachter

Joe Schachter

Schachter — who loved the water since childhood, when he fished in a rowboat with his dad and was a Sea Scout — had already enlisted in the Navy. He trained at Trinity College in Hartford (which had been turned into a naval installation), then finished midshipman school at Cornell.

He served — and took enemy fire — on the Wilkes Barre cruiser in Tokyo Bay, and along the Manchurian border.

After the war Schachter returned to Trinity, graduating in December 1947. He spent 30 years in advertising, in Hartford and New York, on accounts like Ford and Eastman Kodak, and moved to Westport to raise a family.

Long Island Sound was always an important part of his life. In the late 1960s Longshore’s E.R. Strait Marina was silted so badly, he and other boaters could get in and out only at mid or high tide.

Schachter helped form the Minuteman Yacht Club. As “the voice of boaters,” they pushed the town to improve the Longshore and Compo marinas. First Selectman John Kemish appointed him to the town’s 1st Boating Advisory Committee too.

The Compo marina — now named for former Board of Finance chair Ned Dimes — includes some of Schachter’s own docks. In the mid-1970s he learned of a new type of construction — using floating concrete, instead of rickety wood — and embarked on a 2nd career.

The Ned Dimes Marina at Compo Beach now includes Joe Schachter's concrete docks.

The Ned Dimes Marina at Compo Beach utilizes Joe Schachter’s concrete docks.

His Norwalk-based Concrete Flotation Systems company introduced floating concrete docks to the Northeast — and as far as Greenland and Bermuda. For 20 years he worked on projects for the Coast Guard and Army Corps of Engineers. He’s most proud of his 400th installation: the one at Compo.

The grand marshal — who has lived in the same house for 50 years, not far from Compo Beach — is well known too for his volunteer efforts with the Saugatuck River Power Squadron. “Safety on the water is important,” he says. “You can’t just buy a boat and go out on the Sound.”

Schachter was also an active member of the Norwalk Seaport Association. He helped start the Oyster Festival, and served as chair of the Maritime  Center’s marketing committee.

Off the water, Schachter spent several decades advocating for rail passengers. He helped found the Commuter Action Committee. As a member of the statewide Rail Advisory Task Force, he served 3 governors.

Schachter is honored to be named grand marshal of the Memorial Day parade. He follows in the footsteps of good friends like fellow WWII vets Barry McCabe, Leonard Everett Fisher and Neil Croarkin.

The World War II memorial on Veteran's Green, across from Westport Town Hall, includes Liberty J. Tremonte's name.

The World War II memorial on Veteran’s Green, across from Westport Town Hall.

A few days ago, he was still writing his speech. “It’s easy to stand up and say a few platitudes,” he noted. “I want to do more than that.”

After Monday’s ceremony, he may join many other Westporters in a Memorial Day tradition: a trip to Compo Beach.

“I’m so pleased to drive by, and see how it serves people,” he says.

Just as Joe Schachter has served his town — and his country — for so many years, in so many ways.

(The Memorial Day parade steps off on Monday [May 30], 9 a.m. at Saugatuck Elementary School. The Veteran’s Green ceremony at which Joe Schachter will speak begins immediately after the parade, approximately 10:30 a.m.)

Because The Nearest Garbage Can Must Have Been At Least 6 Steps Away

Harding Point at Longshore’s E.R. Strait Marina is one of the prettiest spots in Westport.

Except when a very entitled dog owner decides he (or she) can’t be bothered to clean up after his (or her) pet.

ER Strait Marina

Perhaps the dog owner was just marking his (or her) territory, so no other Westporter would be able to enjoy such a lovely spot.