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Recent Posts
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- Pics Of The Day #3278
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- Pic Of The Day #3277
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Sarah Gross Spreads The Organic Garden Gospel
Westporters know Sarah Gross as the owner of Cabbages & Kings Catering. For over 30 years, the 1970 Staples High School graduate has won hearts (and stomachs) throughout the tri-state area with delicious (and healthy) food.
Two years ago she introduced C&K Community Kitchen. The collaborative community incubator offers affordable, certified, organic, non-GMO commercial kitchen space, rented in 8-hour shifts.
Sarah has always known the importance of “organic.” But as she studied where her food (and ours) comes from, she realized that’s not enough. “We need to feed our soil, in order to create bionutrient rich food using sustainable regenerative practices,” she says.
She looked around for someone to help transform her own land into a bionutrient organic food forest. “I believe we were sold a bill of goods with the promotion of pristine green lawns,” she says. “The possibility of ending world hunger is sitting right in front of us.”
Through the Westchester chapter of the Bionutrient Food Asssociation, Sarah enlarged her garden, built up her soil, and is adding fruit trees and berry bushes. She’ll feed her family, and donate the rest of her bounty to friends, neighbors, food pantries and other organizations serving people who lack access to fresh fruits and vegetables.
She is open to sharing her garden with a restaurant or caterer needing land for nutrient-rich organic farming.
The soil in the no-till garden is fed with premium compost from a local purveyor. Worms were added to do their thing, and a drip system installed. It is covered in organic hay mulch, to build the soil for next season. It will be farmed bionutriently.
A pollinator garden on the side will be full of flowers, for bees.
A deer fence and log walls surround the property, to protect the gardens, trees and bushes.
Meanwhile, she is speaking out against the use of harmful practices.
Sarah says that Roundup — banned in California, Canada and Europe — is “evil.” Yet, she notes, plants sold at Home Depot, Walmart and local landscape businesses are riddled with the weed killer.
As Sarah sees the decline of monarch butterflies — victims of Roundup, she says, and notices fewer hummingbirds, she makes a connection.
“With every choice we make, we are voting for thriving or our own demise.” That’s especially true, Sarah says, with food choices. It applies to restaurants as well as home gardeners.
Sarah has partnered with Vic Ziminsky of Let It Grow Landscapes and local master gardener Laura Stabell to offer organic gardening services. They plant and maintain food gardens for clients, encouraging others to make the most of their lawns by growing food that feeds themselves, wildlife and a less fortunate population.
In addition, Sarah told the first selectman’s office about organic landscaping classes August 13-16 in New Haven, and November 12-15 in East Hartford. (Click here for information.) The classes are heavily discounted for Connecticut landscapers. She hopes local companies will take advantage of the opportunity — and homeowners too.
“Our choices about how we tend to our property — what we spray on our trees and put on our lawns — affect not only our own land, but the atmosphere and water aquifers of all those around us,” Sarah says.
“Now we have the opportunity to make viable different choices — individually, and as a community.”
Photo Challenge #188
There were many ways to describe last week’s photo challenge.
Lauren Schiller’s shot showed a few windows, and beige and tan structures.
Some “06880” readers described them as storefronts on the Post Road, across from Bank of America. Some mentioned current tenants, like Arogya. Others placed them “down the street from old Westport Bank & Trust” (now Patagonia), “between Urban Outfitters and Nefaire Spa,” and where B&G Army Navy and Chroma card store used to be.
All are somewhat correct. Congrats to Fred Cantor, Seth Goltzer, Suzanne Raboy and Bobbie Herman.
But the folks who really nailed it — that’s you Matt Murray, Elaine Marino, Jonathan McClure, Joelle Harris Malec and Michael Calise — knew that the image actually shows the backs of those stores (117-131 Post Road East, as Elaine accurately points out).
The view is from Church Lane — in front of Bedford Square.
The buildings are architecturally undistinguished. Sometimes they fade into the landscape.
But you can’t hide anything from alert “06880” readers. (Click here for the photo, and all guesses.)
Meanwhile, with Democratic and Republican primaries coming this month, now is a good time for an election-related photo challenge:

(Photos/Grover Fitch)
Sure, it’s been 28 years since Lowell Weicker ran for governor (and won) as a candidate of the independent A Connecticut Party.
He’s remembered best for implementing a state income tax — a much-criticized measure that nonetheless earned him the John F. Kennedy Library Foundation’s Profiles in Courage award for taking an unpopular stand, then holding firm.
The state tax is still with us. So is this sign. Where in Westport is it?
If you know, click “Comments” below. And if you have any memories of Governor Weicker, send those along too!
Posted in Downtown, Economy, Photo Challenge, Politics
Tagged A Connecticut Party, Church Lane, Lowell Weicker, Post Road East
Hey, Einstein!
John and Melissa Ceriale are giving, generous Westporters. They’re involved in a host of philanthropic organizations and endeavors, and epitomize the best of Westport.
Melissa is particularly passionate about Montefiore Health Systems. The other day, she opened up her Greens Farms home — and breathtaking 8 acres of gardens — for an informational session. Two doctors from the Einstein campus gave fascinating talks about their specialties: addiction and depression.
I learned a lot, and was inspired to learn more — about those subjects, and Montefiore Albert Einstein College of Medicine.
Just before she asked for questions, Melissa introduced a special member of the audience: Bill Morse. “He actually knew Einstein!” she said.
If that’s not a perfect “06880: where Westport meets the world” story, nothing is.
A couple of days later, I called Bill. The educational consultant — a Westporter since 1988 — has stories to tell.
They start with his father, Marston Morse. A noted mathematician, he spent most of his career on a single subject: Morse Theory (a branch of differential topology, and a very important subject in modern mathematical physics, such as string theory).
In 1935, Marston Morse was invited to join the prestigious Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. His colleagues included Einstein, and Robert Oppenheimer.
Bill Morse was born in 1942. From the age of 4 until 13 — when Einstein died — the boy watched the world’s most famous scientist walk past his house, nearly every day.
“I would be playing or rollerskating,” Morse recalls. “He would shuffle past, in sandals and that long hair.”
Then Einstein would turn the corner, and walk past Oppenheimer’s house. (He may have been the most brilliant man on the planet. However, Einstein never learned to drive.)
Morse’s mother Louise was 20 years younger than his father. When she was just 30 years old, she was assigned to sit next to the physicist at an Institute dinner.
Einstein learned of the arrangement, and was worried. What, he asked others, could he possibly talk to her about?
Morse’s mother heard of Einstein’s concerns. She said, “And he thinks he’s got a problem?!”
Einstein heard her quip — and loved it. For the rest of his life, he always requested that she be seated next to him.
That story got plenty of mileage. Louise died a year and a half ago — at 105.
Bill also told me about the time Einstein said to Marston, “I don’t understand modern mathematics. Do you?”
Bill’s father did not reply. “It would have been crazy,” he told his son.
You don’t have to be an Einstein to write an “06880” post like this.
But it sure helps to know someone who knew him.
Come On Down! The Water’s Fine!
Sure, today started out iffy.
But by early afternoon, the sun came out. Clouds skittered away. With the temperature in the mid-80s, it was perfect beach weather.
You wouldn’t know it at Compo though. From one jetty to the other, the sand was empty.
On South Beach, picnic tables and grills that last year were as hard to snag as Harvard admissions, begged for action.
Even Hillspoint Road — usually chock-a-block with non-sticker folks who park (way past the limit), then walk to Compo or (even closer) Old Mill Beach — looked as lonesome as North Dakota.
Is anybody here? Anyone?
Or is Westport traveling through another dimension, not only of sight and sound but of mind …
Posted in Categories
Rachel Doran’s Journey
This month, Rachel Doran should be completing a summer internship in New York. She should be looking forward to her senior year at Cornell University, as a fashion design major with a minor in business.
Instead, the 2015 Staples High School graduate — a National Merit Commended Scholar, talented Players costume designer, and founder of “Rachel’s Rags,” a company that makes intricate cotton and fleece pajama tops and bottoms — is in critical condition at Columbia Presbyterian Hospital’s Center for Acute Respiratory Failure and ECMO Program.
Last month Rachel was diagnosed with Stevens Johnson Syndrome and Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis, a rare reaction to common medications that resulted in severe burns to 95% of her body.
She was treated at Bridgeport Hospital’s Connecticut Burn Center for 2 weeks, before being transferred to New York for the treatment of Adult Respiratory Distress Syndrome — another rare and life-threatening syndrome. She is in the ICU, on a special lung protocol called ECMO and dialysis.
Her skin is slowly beginning to heal. But Rachel has a collapsed lung and renal failure. She is being kept as comfortable as possible, and is supported by a superb hospital staff.
Rachel’s family has been by her side for 3 weeks — and faces a long road. She could be at Columbia Presbyterian for months.
Her parents are staying in a New York hotel, while their extended family tries to maintain a sense of normalcy for Rachel’s sister Ellie in Westport.
Between hospital bills, the hotel and loss of wages, the financial ramifications will be vast. Friends created a GoFundMe page to lighten the load.
Everyone who knows Rachel calls her “amazing.” Now is the time for Westport to offer her and her family some amazing help.
Click here to contribute to the Dorans’ GoFundMe page.
Posted in Local business, People, Staples HS
Tagged Columbia Presbyterian Hospital, ECMO, Go Fund Me, Rachel Doran, Rachel's Rags, Stevens Johnson Syndrome
Damn! I’m Sure I Put That Time Capsule Somewhere Around Here …
Those pesky time capsules.
We keep burying them. And keep forgetting where they are.
It happened a few years ago with Greens Farms Elementary School.
Now it’s Saugatuck Congregational Church’s turn.
In 1866 a time capsule was buried under the cornerstone of their then-new Sunday school building. The church was located across the Post Road, and up the hill from where it is now — approximately where the gas station and adjacent bank are, near South Compo Road.
In 1950 the church was moved — v-e-r-y slowly — across the street, to its current location by Myrtle Avenue. At the same time the school building was relocated to Imperial Avenue, where it created what is now Bedford Hall at the Westport Woman’s Club.

In the 1950s, Life Magazine ran photos of Bedford Hall being moved from the Post Road to Imperial Avenue.
The cornerstone was not unearthed during the move. No one seems to know what happened to it.
Now — 68 years later — the Westport Historical Society is on the case.
If you have any idea of the whereabouts of the Saugatuck Church cornerstone — or hey, any other in town — email info@westporthistory.org.
And for God’s sake, the next time you bury a time capsule, leave detailed instructions!
Westport Schools Limit Plastic Straws; Student Takes Aim At Water Bottles
The campaign to lessen plastic straw use in Westport no longer sucks.
The Whelk, Jesup Hall, Kawa Ni, Amis, Viva Zapata, Dunville’s and the Black Duck have all joined in. Dunkin’ Donuts is in the process of phasing them out.
Now comes news that a place that serves many more customers a day than all of these combined — well, maybe not Dunkin’ — has joined the crusade.
RTM member Andrew Colabella tells “06880” that he heard from Deborah VanCoughnett, director of dining services for Chartwells, the company that runs food services for the Westport schools.
Andrew says they’ll severely limit plastic straw use when school starts later this month.
None will be on display. However, students who need one — for example, those with physical disabilities — can simply ask a cashier.
Andrew thanks fellow RTM member Kristin Schneeman, school superintendent Dr. Colleen Palmer, Bedford Middle School principal Dr. Adam Rosen and student Michael Rossi Pontoriero, and VanCoughnett for their work on this project.
It’s an important step forward. But bigger issues lie ahead.
Like plastic bottles.
Yesterday, I got an email from Samantha Henske.
Last year — as a 5th grader at Kings Highway Elementary School — she started a drive to eliminate single-use water bottles. She and her Workshop grouop sold reusable BPA-free water bottles to 400 KHS students. With the money raised, they bought a water filling station for the school.
As she worked on the project, Sammi learned not only about environmental effects of plastic bottles (one year of manufacturing uses enough oil to fuel a million cars; a bottle in a landfill takes up to 450 years to decompose; plastics that get into fish and other sea creatures can end up as microplastics in our bodies), but that chemicals in BPA can lead to neurological difficulties and increased growth of cancer cells.
Now — as she enters Coleytown Middle School — she’s moving forward, townwide. Next month, she meets with 1st Selectman Jim Marpe and Westport’s Green Task Force.
This is a sibling effort. She’s doing the research; her sophomore brother Spencer is working on design and technology.
The result is a Change.org petition. The goal is to eliminate single-use plastic water bottles in all of Westport. To sign — or learn more — click here.
Posted in Children, Education, Environment, Local politics, People
Tagged Andrew Colabella, Chartwells, Deborah VanCoughnett, plastic straws, Plastic water bottles


















