Please support “06880” — thanks!
SUBSCRIBE TO '06880' BY EMAIL -- IT'S FREE!
Subscribe to ‘06880’ in a reader
SEARCH THE “06880” ARCHIVES
“06880” WEATHER
Recent Comments
- Frank Rosen on Roundup: Historic Homes, Homes With Hope, DMV, More
- Dan Woog on Roundup: Historic Homes, Homes With Hope, DMV, More
- Frank Rosen on Roundup: Historic Homes, Homes With Hope, DMV, More
- Gerald F. Romano, Jr. on Budget Deliberations Begin
- Robert Giunta Harbormasters Westport on [OPINION] Don’t Bury Burying Hill!
-
Recent Posts
- “Little Women”: Big Players’ Radio Show
- [OPINION] Don’t Bury Burying Hill!
- Pics Of The Day #1410
- Great Sandwich Contest Begins. Westporters Bite.
- Budget Deliberations Begin
- Roundup: Historic Homes, Homes With Hope, DMV, More
- Resurgence Continues: New Restaurants, Shops Fill Downtown
- After Death, A Push For College Safety Reform
- Pic Of The Day #1409
- Barnes & Noble Back In Business
Bored? Wander through ‘06880’
Pages
Categories
- Arts
- Beach
- Categories
- Children
- Downtown
- Economy
- Education
- Entertainment
- Environment
- Friday Flashback
- History
- Library
- Local business
- Local politics
- Longshore
- Looking back
- Media
- Organizations
- People
- Photo Challenge
- Pic of the Day
- Places
- Police
- Politics
- Real estate
- religion
- Restaurants
- Saugatuck
- Sports
- Staples HS
- Street Spotlight
- technology
- Teenagers
- Totally random
- Transportation
- Unsung Heroes
- Weather
- Westport Country Playhouse
- Westport life
- YMCA
Linkages
DISCLAIMER
This blog is personal opinion, and is not representative of the views of the Westport School District or Board of Education.
Pic Of The Day #411
This entry was posted in Downtown, Pic of the Day, Weather and tagged Levitt Pavilion. Bookmark the permalink.
Spectacular!
What kind of tree is that?
Horse chestnut?
Definitely not horse chestnut. Most likely locust, probably white locust.
That photo is MORTIMERifying
Awesome photo, thank you✨❗️
Something Wicked This Way Comes!
Nice Pix!!!
Great photo taken during the “golden 20” (first or last 20 minutes of the day when the sun is low in the sky). Add to that some dramatic storm clouds in the distance and the photographer’s sense of composition to make it even better. The most important thing is to have a sharp eye; to “see” the light. Well done Patricia!