Tag Archives: Sherwood Mill Pond Preserve

Sherry Jagerson: Booked For Kenya

Sherry Jagerson was one of several determined Westporters who shepherded the Sherwood Mill Pond Preserve into existence. She continues to work tirelessly to keep it healthy, and open to all Westporters.

Now she’s gearing up for a very different volunteer effort, thousands of miles away.

Sherry and and her granddaughter Adelaide Fowle — a Staples sophomore — are heading to Kenya. They’ll help build water filtration systems in a village called Chepsaita.

With their group — United With Kenya — they’ll also help build a library. For months Sherry has scoured Fairfield County, trying to get as many books as possible to send there.

FedEx is shipping them for free, at the end of May. So Sherry and Adelaide are in their final push for donated books. The deadline is May 21.

If you’ve got any — and what better way to spur some spring cleaning! — email  sjagerson@mac.com. She’ll arrange a pick-up or drop-off for this very worthwhile project.

Sherry Jagerson, with a car full of books.

Sherry Jagerson, with a car full of books.

Yankee Stadium Comes To Compo Beach Road

For several years, a vacant lot on Compo Beach Road — the main entrance to the beach, just before Owenoke — has stood as mute testimony to the Great Recession. This is not the time to build on the site of what was once a teardown.

But the owner keeps paying property taxes.

Yesterday, he started to produce a tiny revenue stream:

That’s $30 less than the weekend fee.

And $55 less than the fine for parking illegally on the street.

Or in the equally illegal, much-further-away, but often full, Sherwood Mill Pond Preserve lot.

Mother Nature’s Mill Pond Preserve

When a group of committed Westporters turned the old Allen’s Clam House site into a preserve — featuring wetland plants, a vegetative buffer above the tidal zone and walking paths — they figured it would take 3 years of care before nature took over.

That was 3 years ago.

A couple of Mother Nature curveballs — Hurricane Irene and an October snow — brought volunteers out in force. But as spring blooms, the Sherwood Mill Pond Preserve has emerged as a much-loved, frequently visited and very natural part of town.

The Sherwood Mill Pond: one of the most tranquil spots in Westport. (Photo/Katherine Hooper)

It’s visited at all hours by a wide swath of folks. Painters, bird watchers, book readers, flower lovers, parents with kids, lunch breakers — all find peace and beauty there.

A few benches and a couple of signs are the only indications that humans have shaped the preserve. One of the signs describes the history and significance of the Mill Pond.

The handsome Mill Pond sign.

The other — a gift from Newman’s Own Foundation, created by Audubon illustrator Edward Henrey — identifies some of the 70 species of birds, and many forms of aquatic life. A cutaway shows mollusks burying beneath the sand, crabs scuttlingon top of sand, and mallards diving into the water.

Sherry Jagerson helped mastermind the preserve, from conception to reality. Entering its 3rd full season, she is pleased that each year, volunteers have had to do less “hands-on” work. (The hurricane destroyed lots of leaves, and  water washed over vegetation to the street, but nature is hard at work restoring what was lost.)

Sherry, and fellow committee members like Liz Milwe and Wendy Crowther, are proud of the preserve. They’re pleased it’s getting so much gentle use.

Now — like the rest of Westport — they’re eager to relax and enjoy it.

(Despite the Mill Pond Preserve’s success, the committee can always use help. To volunteer, call Sherry Jagerson at 203-856-4580.)

The ever-changing Sherwood Mill Pond. (Photo/Katherine Hooper)