Tag Archives: University of Connecticut

Roundup: Parks & Rec Summer Kickoff, Co-op Nursery Touch-a-Truck, Chabad Golf Outing …

In just 3 years, the Westport Parks & Recreation Department “Kickoff to Summer” has become a — well, great kickoff to summer.

This year’s event is May 23 (11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Compo Beach).

In addition to the now-traditional kids’ activities, music, food trucks and raffle, they’ve added helicopter rides, and the unveiling of young artist Luke Bernier’s mural by the concession stan.

Parks & Rec personnel will provide info on programs and other offerings for the upcoming year.

Part of the fun, at last year’s Kickoff to Summer.

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It’s not easy coming up with a creative, on-brand fundraiser.

For 19 years though, little kids (and their parents) have loved the Westport Weston Co-op Nursery School‘s Touch-a-Truck event.

This year’s edition is May 2 (9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., Imperial Avenue parking lot).

As always, it features fire trucks, police cars, ambulances, cranes, dump trucks, buses, big rigs and more.

Kids of all ages can get up close, climb in and on, and pose for photos with their favorite vehicles.

Also on tap: face painting, food trucks, live music, and other family-friendly activities.

NOTE: It can get loud. Children with sensitivity to noise are invited to quiet time (9 to 9:30 a.m.), with no sirens or horns.

Admission is $35 per family; click here for tickets.

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Question: Where is the newest trivia night in town?

Answer: Emmy Squared.

This Monday (7 p.m.) — and every 2nd Monday after — the pizza-and-more spot in Bedford Square will host a pop culture quiz.

It’s run by Best Trivia Ever. The same group organizes events at the Blind Rhino, and other restaurants.

For more information, click here.

Next question: Will we see you there?

Trivia Night site. Though the action will probably be at the bar.

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Golf and giving back are par for the course on May 4 (Great River Golf Club, Milford).

Chabad of Westport’s annual golf outing includes on-course snacks, lunch, a cocktail/dinner reception, raffles and giveaways, a $25,000 hole-in-one prize — plus an opportunity to meet visiting IDF soldiers.

Proceeds from the event support Israel, local youth services, and Camp Gan Israel.

Non-golfers are welcome. Sponsorships, foursomes and dinner tickets are now available. To register or learn more, click here.

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Tony Rizza has done it again!

The Westport resident — a University of Connecticut business school graduate, and former Husky soccer player — has donated $1.5 million to the school.

The gift will support the “pursuit of sustained excellence across all of UConn’s athletic programs.”

Rizza — an investment manager — previously contributed $10 million. Those gifts helped revitalize Morrone Stadium, and helped build a state-of-the-art sports performance center.

 

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Yesterday’s brief rain shower produced one of the better rainbows in a while.

This was the view over Cross Highway:

(Photo/Mark Yurkiw)

… and by the Saugatuck River, on Riverside Avenue …

(Photo/Michael Chait)

… and above Clinton Avenue:

(Photo/Jen Rago McCarthy)

Today’s forecast is for clouds, and a high of 62.

Tomorrow: rain, and 52.

Hey, summer was nice while it lasted.

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The Weston History & Culture Center continues its celebration of America’s 250th birthday next month.

“Sarah Treadwell: Connecticut Mom, American Patriot” opens with a reception May 9 (2 to 4 p.m.).

The exhibit honors a local woman who supported her family’s role during the Revolutionary War, highlighting the often-overlooked contributions of women during the era.

Treadwell’s family lived in North Fairfield, a section of the town that later became Weston, then Easton.

The exhibit explores her life during and after the war, her family and community roles, the pension process for veterans and widows of veterans, and her resilience as a wife and mother.

After the reception, it will be on view every Thursday (1 to 4 p.m.), and the first and last Sunday of each month (1 to 4 p.m.).

Also on view: the new interactive exhibit “Weston at Work,” in the Coley Barn; the exhibit “Local Patriots and Loyalists” in the Visitor’s Center, and guided tours of historic Coley House.

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OnwardWell Foundation — a therapeutic recovery support non-profit founded by 1992 Staples High School graduate Mark Lassoff last year — does great work.

To do it even more well, they seek donations of gently used furniture to outfit a new meeting room at their Trumbull offices.

The room will host recovery and support groups for families and friends of young men recovering from addiction and mental illness.

The small room can accommodate a small couch or loveseat, and a couple of comfortable chairs. Donations are tax-deductible, and can be picked up.

To donate, or for questions, email mark@onwardwell.com.

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These flowers, and this cardinal, provide a nice pop — and contrast — of color, for today’s “Westport … Naturally” feature.

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And finally … in honor of the Westport Weston Co-op Nursery School’s Touch-a-Truck event (story above):

(We are “grateful” for our “06880” readers — and “touched” that some support us with tax-deductible contributions. If that’s your jam, please click here. We thank you!)

Roundup: Tree Lighting, Tulips, Earthplace Thanksgiving …

Westport’s annual holiday tree lighting takes place at Town Hall on Thursday, December 5 (5 p.m.).

The Staples High School Orphenians will perform, and the Westport Museum for History & Culture will provide hot chocolate. All are invited!

The Town Hall tree. (Photo/Dan Woog)

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Andrew Colabella reports: “Over the last 2 years, a group of volunteers from the Representative Town Meeting planted 500 tulips. Most were at the Minute Man monument.

“In late spring, a landscaper mistook the stems there for weeds. Parks & Recreation Department parks superintendent Michael West was upset, and wanted to make up for it.”

Colabella requested 500 tulip bulbs as replacements. West, and Parks & Rec’s Jamie Boone and Rick Giunta, surprised him with 1,500.

The other day,Colabella and several fellow RTM members planted the bulbs at the Minute Man, and other spots in town like the Compo Beach entrance and Compo cemetery.

In addition, each RTM member who planted tulips took bulbs to plant in a public spot of their choice — without telling the others where it is.

We won’t see the results of their work until spring. But it will be fun to discover, and beautiful to see.

Planting tulips at the Minute Man monument. Front row (from left): Nancy Kail, Kristin Mott Purcell. Rear: Melissa Levy, Andrew Colabella, Don O’Day.

Planting bulbs at Compo Beach. RTM members Claudia Shaum and Julie Whamond flank Parks & Recreation Commission chair David Floyd.

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Looking for non-shopping activities over Thanksgiving? Got relatives from out of town, who want to do something Westport-special?

Earthplace is your place.

Their Story and Animal program, Birds of Prey feeding, “Saturdays at Earthplace” and Winged Wonders program are all intriguing. And Earthplace trails and 62-acre sanctuary are open to the public, from dawn to dusk.

The Story and Animal program (Monday through Saturday, 10:30 a.m.; age 5 and under) includes an animal-themed story, and an “encounter” with an Animal Hall resident.

Birds of Prey Feeding (daily, 11 a.m.; all ages), includes information about birds’ eating habits and behaviors.

Saturdays at Earthplace (November 30, noon; all ages; parent or caregiver must be present) is a nature-based arts and crafts activity.

Winged Wonders (December 1, 1 p.m.) is a bird-on-glove demonstration, to learn about raptors. This Sunday features Earthplace’s barred owl, Moody.

Also, starting Sunday, Earthplace participates in Westport Moms’ first-ever Elf Scavenger Hunt The “Earthplace Elf” will hide somewhere indoors, for one week. Spot it between December 1 and 8, and win a prize.

For more information on Earthplace and its programs, click here.

An Earthplace Winged Wonders demonstration.

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The Long Lots School Building Committee meets tonight (Tuesday, November 26, 6 p.m., Town Hall, Room 201/201A).

The agenda includes a project update; work session to review progress on schematic plans, and public comment.

Long Lots School Building Committee, in a meeting last year.

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As part of the Cross Highway Traffic Improvement project between North Avenue and Bayberry Lane, the Cross Highway bridge over Deadman Brook is proposed to be replaced with a new bridge.

The existing bridge is in bad shape, and cannot be modified to include the new sidewalk proposed for the corridor.

Construction is proposed for 2025. The goal is to replace the bridge during the summer, when school is not in session.

The town has submitted applications to the Flood & Erosion Control Board, Conservation Commission and Planning & Zoning Commission for an 8-24.

Meetings of those groups are December 4, 11 and 16, respectively. Meeting materials are or will be available on the town’s website for each board.

Questions? Contact town engineer Keith Wilberg: kwilberg@westportct.gov; 203-341-1128.

Cross Highway bridge over Deadman Brook.

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Achtung!

Staples High School German students did more than just showcase their skills and knowledge at the recent University of Connecticut German Quiz Bowl, competing against other high school German programs.

They finished Nummer Eins — Number One!

In addition to the competition, students participated in workshops. They also learned about job prospects with over 150 German companies operating in Connecticut. (Since 2019, Germany has been Connecticut’s number one business partner.)

Staples German students, at the University of Connecticut.

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Speaking of school: Last week, Greens Farms Academy broke ground for it new Athletics and Wellness Center.

The 30,000-square foot facility — set to open in the spring of 2026 — will
include 2 full-size basketball courts, 2 wrestling rooms, 2 squash courts with viewing galleries, a fitness center and training room.

It follows the expansion of Lower School facilities, including a new dining and student commons and a renovated assembly room, which opened last year.

The projects are funded through GFA’s Centennial Campaign, which will officially launch next fall 2025 as the school nears its 100th anniversary.

A model of Greens Farms Academy’s Athletics & Wellness Center.

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Jazz at the Post celebrates Thanksgiving a day early.

This year’s weekly musical treat is tomorrow (Wednesday, November 27; VFW Post 399), instead of the traditional Thursday.

Bassist Fima Ephrom headlines. He’s joined by his First Light Band: guitarists Idan Morim and Tim Jago, keyboardist William Evans, drummer Ben Silashi and saxophonist Greg Wall.

Dinner service begins at 7 p.m. Shows are 7:30 and 8:45 p.m. Tickets are $20; $15 for veterans and students. Click here to purchase.

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As Thanksgiving nears, Tammy Barry is grateful for an “extended autumn.” She spotted these “Westport … Naturally” beauties on Owenoke.

(Photo/Tammy Barry)

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And finally … Tina Turner was born on this date, in 1939. After a dynamic musical career, first with her husband Ike and then as a solo artist, she died last year, at 83.

 

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Looking Down On Westport

When a tree falls in Westport, who hears it?

Everyone.

Some of us lament the loss of every tree, whether felled by a developer, an arborist, wind or old age.

Others applaud the removal of dead, dangerous trees, or say it’s simply smart design to remove trees from near new, large homes.

Most of us, though, agree on one thing: Westport has “always” been a woodsy, New England town.

Most of us are wrong.

A look through photos in the University of Connecticut’s fascinating 1934 aerial survey shows that — well within the memory of some of our older citizens — much of this town was open fields or active farmland. South of the Post Road, in fact, there were virtually no woods.

Here is a shot from just 80 years ago. The railroad is the dark line near the top, running from west to east. South Compo is the white road, cutting southeast across the middle of the photo. Longshore is at the left; Sherwood Mill Pond is on the right in the middle, with Soundview Drive at the bottom right:

Westport south of Post Road - 1934 UConn aerial survey

Contrast that view with today. We’ve got much more development — and many more trees:

Westport 2013 south of South Compo Road

Further north, here’s the Saugatuck River (center), with Main Street/Easton Road shown from south to north on the right. Those squiggles just west of Main Street are Willowbrook Cemetery:

Westport - Easton Road 1934 UConn aerial survey

Today, it looks like this:

Westport 2013 - aerial view Saugatuck River

Much has changed — including the addition of the Merritt Parkway, at top.

We can see more trees in the1934 scene below. It shows Long Lots Road, heading northeast near the bottom of the photo (that’s the Post Road at the far bottom). There are substantial woods between the main north/south roads (from left: North Avenue, Bayberry Lane, Sturges Highway), but also plenty of open fields and farmland:

Westport aerial view 1934 - Roseville Road, North Avenue, Bayberry Lane

So what does all this mean?

Westport looks different, at different times in our history. Farms didn’t just happen; our ancestors had to clear the land. Gradually, though, that open space was built over. Trees were planted. Now some of them are coming down.

So when we talk about “preserving Westport,” we aren’t always 100% accurate.

Perhaps we should say, “preserving the current look — which may look substantially different, not many years from now.”

(Aerial video bonus: Check out this YouTube video of Compo Beach and Longshore, taken by a drone on November 9, 2013. If your browser does not take you directly there, click here.)