Pics Of The Day #2811

Sherwood Mill Pond, in today’s fog … (Photo/Gregg Jacobs)

… and the Mill Pond’s Hummock Island, yesterday (Photo/RB Benson)

Photo Challenge #522

Last Sunday, I gave “06880” readers an early holiday gift.

Our Photo Challenge was both gorgeous, and easy to recognize: the Greens Farms post office lobby.

It was decorated beautifully, lovingly, and cleverly. (Click here to see.)

That homey touch is just one of the reasons Westporters — those who live in the neighborhood, and those who don’t but fortunately are in the know — love it.

And patronize it.

It’s one of Westport’s best-kept secrets (though, as Dave Eason commented, after the Photo Challenge publicity, it may no longer be too secret).

Besides Dave, 2 dozen readers took time out from their shopping to check in with the right answer. (A few others misidentified it as the Westport Museum for History & Culture.)

Congratulations to Jen Dennison, Ed Simek, Matt Murray, Jacque O’Brien, Seth Schachter, Kevin O’Connor, Lee Bollert, Bob Schroeder, Kate Caputo Squyres, Michael Szeto, Seth Braunstein, Clark Thiemann, Elisabeth Boas, Rob Hauck, Marianne Harrison, Sal Liccione, Jonathan McClure, Matt McGrath, Rob Henkin, Cheryl Petrone, Lynn Untermeyer Williams, Colleen Williams and Paul Cahill.

You all got that “post” right!

How many readers will get this one?

If you know where in Westport you’d see this, click “Comments” below.

(Photo/Lou Weinberg)

(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!)

 

Roundup: Don Siegelaub, Bob May …

Longtime Westporter Donald Siegelaub died peacefully on Thursday. His children Susan Katz and Steven Siegelaub were with him. He was 99 years old.

After graduating from Midwood High School in his native Brooklyn in 1943, Don enlisted in the Army on his 18th birthday. He was part of the 4th Infantry Division during the D-Day assault on Utah Beach. Don saw heavy combat duty in the hedgerows of Normandy. In late July 1944, he was seriously wounded in action. He was evacuated to England and then the US for treatment and recovery. He was awarded the Purple Heart for his heroism.

After his discharge, Don attended Texas Christian University on a basketball scholarship. But he missed his family and friends, and at 21 he enrolled at Brooklyn College.

Don was the star center on Brooklyn’s famed basketball team, and met 16-year-old Marcia Jaffe. Though offered an NBA contract, Don moved on from basketball after graduation.

However, he stuck with and married his soulmate Marcia in 1950. They were inseparable for 62 years, until Marcia’s death in 2012.

During the 1950s, Don and 2 partners began a construction business in New York City. Recognizing an opportunity with the post-war housing boom in the Connecticut suburbs, Don relocated to Westport. He and Marcia put down roots and raised their young family.

Throughout the 1960s Don and his partners built hundreds of homes in Westport and surrounding communities in southern Connecticut. Don went out on his own in the early ’70s. He expanded his business to commercial construction, then built high-end single family homes in Westport and Weston.

Don and Marcia were early members of Rolling Hills Country Club, and founding members of Temple Israel in Westport. As avid supporters of the Anti- Defamation League, they opened their home each summer for fundraising events.

His family says, “Don will be remembered for his devotion to country, family, friends and community, as well as a life of honor, integrity and generosity.

He is survived by his children Susan Katz (Michael Ian) and Steven Siegelaub, grandchildren Adam Katz (Natasha), Sophie Katz (Brandon Williams), Jonathan Siegelaub (Kathy) and Tracy Siegelaub, and great-grandchildren Sila, River, Jacob and Estella.

Don’s funeral will be held at 1 p.m. today (Sunday), at Temple Israel.

Don Siegelaub

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Robert May — a 35-year special education teacher in Westport — died peacefully at his Southport home on December, surrounded by family. He was 77.

After his long and well-respected career in education, Bob turned toward gardening and other outdoor activities.

He was known for long daily walks along the beaches of Westport and Southport, during which he collected treasures. Bob turned everything from driftwood to discarded toys into intricate, whimsical and beautiful pieces of art.

Bob was also an avid photographer. With a keen eye for color and contrast, he captured the natural world. He shared his pieces and photographs widely with friends and family.

Bob spent many years volunteering with the Operation Hope food pantry, building friendships and providing support and laughter.

His family says, “his gentle spirit and presence meant Bob was also a chosen favorite of many dogs over the course of his life, as though they could sense that they had found a kindred spirit. Bob delighted in simple pleasures: hot and (very) sweet coffee, a well-crafted wooden slotted spoon, the skittering of shorebirds along the beach, a long and meandering conversation with a loved one, and an ice-cold vodka martini, extra dry.”

Bob was predeceased by his younger brothers Bruce, Werner and Daniel. He is survived by his older brother Richard; children Morgan May and Whitney Buckley, and their spouses; 4 grandchildren; his ex-wife and dear friend Kaye May, and a wide circle of family and friends.

Visitation is set for January 11 (10 a.m. to noon), followed at noon by a service to celebrate Bob’s life at Spear Miller Funeral Home in Fairfield. In lieu of flowers, donations can be made in Bob’s honor to Operation Hope.

Bob May

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Today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo shows a serene holiday scene on the Saugatuck River, behind Richmondville Avenue.

Everything was just ducky.

(Photo/Michael Pearl)

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And finally … happy 78th birthday to Marianne Faithfull.

Her first hit single was written by Mick Jagger, Keith Richards (a current Weston resident) and Andrew Loog Oldham (a former Wilton resident who spent a lot of time in Westport):

Jagger and Richards were said to have written this song about her:

(You can’t always get what you want. But you can click here, to support “06880” with a tax-deductible contribution. Thank you!)

Lighting Up The Town

Christmas is over.

Our annual display of lights and decorations is not.

Long Lots Road

Traditionally, residents leave their displays up past New Year’s. Many remain through the 12th day of Christmas (January 5th), and then the Epiphany (Three Kings Day, January 6).

Buena Vista Drive

Most come down soon thereafter. I’ve seen wreaths remain beyond Memorial Day, for better or worse.

Meeker Road

So the good news is: There is still lots of time to enjoy the hard work that homeowners (or their hired hands) have put in to delight, inspire, sometimes amuse and occasionally even awe us.

Richmondville Avenue

The better news is: Westport is filled with holiday decorations. On and around houses from the 1700s, and those built year; from Compo Beach to Sturges Highway, and Bulkley Avenue to Kings Highway, our nights are brighter, thanks to our neighbors.

Dogwood Lane

Andrew Colabella took his camera (and his energy) all around town this week. Here are just a few of the scenes he photographed.

Happy Three Kings Day!

Reichert Circle

Salem Road

Bulkley Avenue North

Sunrise Road

Crystal Circle

Barber shop, foot of Treadwell Avenue

Kings Highway North

Juniper Road

East Meadow Road

Snoopy, on a Woody Lane barn

Oak Street

Dogwood Lane

Maple Avenue South

Old Mill Road

Myrtle Avenue

Westfair Drive

Hillspoint Road

Cottage Lane

Compo Beach entrance (All photos/Andrew Colabella)

Pics Of The Day #2810

One view of Winslow Park, in today’s fog …

… and another (Photos/Wendy May)

Roundup: January At The Playhouse, Wreath At Gillespie Center …

Westport Country Playhouse kicks off 2025 with a Script in Hand reading of “How the World Began.”

The drama explores the clash between science and faith in a small Kansas town torn apart by a tornado.

When a science teacher makes a casual remark about the origins of life, she triggers a fierce confrontation with a bright but troubled student. A cultural battle threatens her safety, and the fragile unity of the community.

Tickets for the January 13 (7 p.m.) event are $30; $25 for series subscribers. Click here to purchase.

The Playhouse then celebrates Martin Luther King Day on Monday, January 20 (7 p.m.), with “King in the Wilderness.”

Produced by novelist/screenwriter/playwright/professor/essayist Trey Ellis — a Westport resident — the Emmy-winning documentary film follows Rev. Dr. King during the last year’s of his life.

Tickets are free. Click here to reserve a seat, and for more information.

On January 23-26, “Broadway’s Bad Boys” take the Playhouse stage. The high energy evenings with rebellious heroes include a Pride Night (January 23, 6 p.m.) and Together at the Family Table (January 24, 5:30 p.m.). Tickets start at $35; click here to purchase.

In addition, the Playhouse offers free tours at 10:30 a.m. on Friday and Saturday, January 17-18 and February 7-8.

Archivist Bruce Miller will take attendees behind the scenes — to the costume room, dressing rooms, green room and more.

Tours last 90 minutes, and are limited to 25 guests. Click here to book a spot.

Westport Country Playhouse archivist Bruce Miller, with some of the 500 head shots near the dressing rooms underneath the stage. (Photo/Dan Woog)

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‘Tis the season for Wreathing for Community.

The group is low-key. But their work is highly visible.

Volunteers create beautiful wreaths, centerpieces and similar items. Some are donated to local non-profits for their fundraising. Others are given as gifts, to organizations and individuals.

Wreathing for Community recently presented a wreath to the Gillespie Center, our town’s homeless shelter and food pantry which is reopening after renovations.

The wreath was made by a Neighbors & Newcomers of Westport member, using products donated by local residents.

The Gillespie Center — part of Homes with Hope — was nominated by community members to receive the handsome decoration.

Alma Sarelli, Neighbors & Newcomers of Westport president (left), and Homes with Hope CEO Helen McAlinden, with the new Gillespie Center wreath.

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Westport’s Longshore Ladies 9 Hole Golf Association opens registration soon for their 2025 season. Westport residents have priority to become new members.

Check the Longshore website for registration information on January 2.

Mary Beth Neraas, Longshore Ladies 9 Hole Golf Association member chair.

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Dogs are allowed on Compo Beach from October 1 through March 31. The rest of the time, they’re limited to Soundview Drive, on leash.

There are no rules about cockatiels.

But until Christmas Day, Matt Murray had never seen one there.

As today’s “Westport … Naturally” photo shows, there’s always a first time.

(Photo/Matt Murray)

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And finally … today is the birthday of Roebuck “Pops” Staples (1915-2000) …

… Edgar Winter (born 1946) …

… Alex Chilton (1950-2010) …

… and John Legend (born 1978).

(It’s not our birthday. But you can give “06880” a gift anyway. Please click here to make a tax-deductible contribution. We thank you!)

Online Art Gallery #246

As it does nearly every week, today’s online art gallery welcomes a couple of first-timers.

They’re not “new” artists. They’ve been creating works for quite a while. But this marks their first appearance in our regular Saturday feature.

If you need a New Year’s resolution, here’s one: Submit your art to our gallery.

Don’t be shy! This feature is open to all. Age, level of experience, subject matter — there are no restrictions. Everyone is invited to contribute.

No matter what style or subject you choose — and whether you’re a first-timer or old-timer — we welcome your submissions. Watercolors, oils, charcoal, pen-and-ink, acrylics, digital, lithographs, collages, macramé, jewelry, sculpture, decoupage, needlepoint — we want whatever you’ve got.

Just email a jpeg to 06880blog@gmail.com. And please include the medium you’re working in — art lovers want to know.

Untitled (Maj Kalfus)

“The Welcoming Tree for the New Year 2025” — watercolor (Steve Stein)

Untitled (Marianne Honeycutt)

“Our Town” — acrylic impasto (Dorothy Robertshaw)

“The Night, The Dreamers, The Dancers” (Tom Doran)

“There Are No Mistakes” (Holly Tashian)

“Best Friends” (Cohl Katz)

“Molly” — Celeste LaCroix’s dog’s birthday is today! (Jo Ann Miller)

“Burying Hill Sunset” (Duane Cohen)

“Pantouf, a Samuel Crocker-designed Ketch From the ’30s” (Peter Barlow)

Untitled (Missy Greenberg)

“Listening Intently” (Lawrence Weisman)

Untitled (Martin Ripchick)

“Nativity Bell” — oil on canvas (Mary Madelyn Attanasio)

Untitled — Sharpie and colored pencil (Jon Nicholson)

(Entrance is free to our online art gallery. But please consider a donation! Just click here — and thank you!)

O Christmas Tree! Scouts Ready To Haul Yours Away.

Christmas is in the rear view mirror.

Your tree is still up. It still smells fresh. But pretty soon, it will meet its expiration date.

Getting rid of a Christmas tree is nowhere near as fun as getting one.

No problem!

As they do every year, Scout Troops 39 and 139 can help.

Their annual Christmas tree pickup is Saturday, January 4. Just fill out this form. (Do it ASAP – there are a limited number of spots!)

Put your tree by your mailbox by 6:30 a.m. that morning. The suggested donation is $20 per tree (of course, you can give more!). Put it in an envelope (cash or check made payable to “Troop 39”); tape it to you front door.

All trees will be mulched into wood chips, and donated to the town for landscaping projects. Funds raised help pay for Scout activities all year long, and for chipping expenses.

NOTE: Scouts cannot take wreaths or garlands. The wires ruin tree chippers.

The Scouts add: “We are not perfect. If we don’t pick up your tree by 5 p.m. Saturday, January 4, please send an email with your name, address and phone number to troop39westport@gmail.com by 8 p.m. We will pick up your tree Sunday morning January 5, before we return the rental trucks.

Scouts in action.

NOTE: If  you miss the Scout pick-up — or for some reason don’t want their help — you have a couple of other options.

You (or your trash hauler) can bring your tree to the yard waste facility (180 Bayberry Lane). Be sure to remove all tinsel and decorations (duh) first.

You may not take your tree to the Sherwood Island Connector transfer station. Christmas trees — even dead ones — are not trash. They cannot be recycled. (You can, of course, take your fake tree there.)

Another option is “Trees for Trout.” Donating a clean tree helps create new habitats in the Norwalk River. There is a $10 donation fee. Click here for details.

(Photo/Amy Schneider)

Pic Of The Day #2809

Westport Library (Photo/Michael Chait)

Friday Flashback #430

Twenty-five years ago, the world prepared for New Year’s.

It was an auspicious moment: the start of not just a new calendar year, decade, or even century.

It was the beginning of a new millennium.

Hope fille the air. Would humanity suddenly turn a page, and — looking forward, with fresh eyes — come to a new understanding of our place on this planet, and in the cosmos?

But excitement was tinged with uncertainty. “Y2K” — the fear that when the clock struck midnight on January 1, computers programmed in the 1900s would interpret the year as “00” and malfunction, produce incorrect data, even shut down at nuclear facilities and financial institutions — also loomed heavily.

Employees worldwide worked feverishly to make sure their companies were “Y2K-compliant.” Some Christmas vacations were canceled.

Dependent Care Connections — a provider of workplace services aimed at increasing productivity and reducing absenteeism — was on the case.

Right here in Westport.

From their offices in the Nyala Farm complex (now the headquarters of Bridgewater Associates), they rolled out a program called Y2KARE. It offered counseling, education and referral support to help employees manage personal responsibilities, while helping prepare their workplaces for Y2K.

DCC worked to aid frenetic Y2K employees, from the Nyala Farm office complex in Westport.

Y2KARE included a team of counselors, a network of providers and local resources, discounts and specialized programs.

The goal was to provide extended hours of service; weekend, childcare and eldercare; vacation camps, and services like gift-wrapping, personal shopping, and meal deliveries, for employees toiling on Y2K issues.

DCC CEO Peter Burki said, “People are really on top of and aware of this issue. We’ve had clients sign up right and left. Companies are looking for mechanisms to support the employee at this time of critical need.”

What would happen after the New Year?

“I think we’ll have a very strong indication on January 1 in terms of the magnitude of the problem,” Burki said.

“It could be ‘the mouse that roared,’ or it could be something very impactful.”

Y2K was, of course, a nothingburger.

Computers did not crash. Nuclear facilities did not implode. The world continued to spin on its axis, oblivious of the date or anything we humans were doing.

Today, Y2K is a dim memory. The first quarter of this century is almost over.

On Wednesday, we begin the next quarter of the 2000s.

Now, uncertainty of a different kind fills the air.

What will January 1 — and the rest of 2025 — bring?

Happy New Year!

(Friday Flashback is one of “06880”‘s many regular features. If you enjoy this — or anything else on our website — please consider a tax-deductible contribution. Just click here. Thank you!)