Community News, September 15 - 27 East

Community News, September 15

icon 8 Photos
Four members - two retired and two active - of VFW Post 5350, William M. Hughes Jr. Charles Breaux, William Hughes III and Antonio Perez Reynoso,  in Westhampton Beach completed a 22-mile crossing by kayak of the Long Island Sound on September 2 to further awareness to the alarming suicide rate among veterans.

Four members - two retired and two active - of VFW Post 5350, William M. Hughes Jr. Charles Breaux, William Hughes III and Antonio Perez Reynoso, in Westhampton Beach completed a 22-mile crossing by kayak of the Long Island Sound on September 2 to further awareness to the alarming suicide rate among veterans.

William M. Hughes Jr. Charles Breaux, William Hughes III and Antonio Perez Reynoso.

William M. Hughes Jr. Charles Breaux, William Hughes III and Antonio Perez Reynoso.

Four members - two retired and two active - of VFW Post 5350, William M. Hughes Jr. Charles Breaux, William Hughes III and Antonio Perez Reynoso,  in Westhampton Beach completed a 22-mile crossing by kayak of the Long Island Sound on September 2 to further awareness to the alarming suicide rate among veterans.

Four members - two retired and two active - of VFW Post 5350, William M. Hughes Jr. Charles Breaux, William Hughes III and Antonio Perez Reynoso, in Westhampton Beach completed a 22-mile crossing by kayak of the Long Island Sound on September 2 to further awareness to the alarming suicide rate among veterans.

Tony and Patty Sales at the Bonac BBQ at the East Hampton Historical Farm Museum on North Main Street on Sunday. Everything was locally sourced Bistrian corn, Accabonac Farm burgers and hot dogs, locally grown melons and music by Chart Guthrie's

Tony and Patty Sales at the Bonac BBQ at the East Hampton Historical Farm Museum on North Main Street on Sunday. Everything was locally sourced Bistrian corn, Accabonac Farm burgers and hot dogs, locally grown melons and music by Chart Guthrie's "Dance All Night" band. RICHARD LEWIN

Jennifer Edwards, Jack Peltier and Valerie Foerster at the Bonac BBQ at the East Hampton Historical Farm Museum on North Main Street on Sunday. Everything was locally sourced: Bistrian corn, Accabonac Farm burgers and hot dogs, locally grown melons and music by Chart Guthrie's

Jennifer Edwards, Jack Peltier and Valerie Foerster at the Bonac BBQ at the East Hampton Historical Farm Museum on North Main Street on Sunday. Everything was locally sourced: Bistrian corn, Accabonac Farm burgers and hot dogs, locally grown melons and music by Chart Guthrie's "Dance All Night" band. RICHARD LEWIN

Leah and Molly Kochanasz at the Bonac BBQ at the East Hampton Historical Farm Museum on North Main Street on Sunday. Everything was locally sourced: Bistrian corn, Accabonac Farm burgers and hot dogs, locally grown melons and music by Chart Guthrie's

Leah and Molly Kochanasz at the Bonac BBQ at the East Hampton Historical Farm Museum on North Main Street on Sunday. Everything was locally sourced: Bistrian corn, Accabonac Farm burgers and hot dogs, locally grown melons and music by Chart Guthrie's "Dance All Night" band. RICHARD LEWIN

On August 31, the Phoenix House in East Hampton hosted a day of events in recognition of International Overdose Awareness Day, including, a mural commemoration and honorary luminary making an interactive discussion on the needs and resources of our community and Narcan training and a vigil.   KYRIL BROMLEY

On August 31, the Phoenix House in East Hampton hosted a day of events in recognition of International Overdose Awareness Day, including, a mural commemoration and honorary luminary making an interactive discussion on the needs and resources of our community and Narcan training and a vigil. KYRIL BROMLEY

Representatives from the East End Fund for Children, Citarella owner Joe Gurrera and local and state officials gathered on September 8 at the  Bridgehampton location to  announce the final tally of the second annual summer shopping fundraiser. A total of $105,000 was raised through community donations and $17,860 was raised through the sale of East End Fund for Children tote bags.  DANA SHAW

Representatives from the East End Fund for Children, Citarella owner Joe Gurrera and local and state officials gathered on September 8 at the Bridgehampton location to announce the final tally of the second annual summer shopping fundraiser. A total of $105,000 was raised through community donations and $17,860 was raised through the sale of East End Fund for Children tote bags. DANA SHAW

authorStaff Writer on Sep 12, 2022
MONTAUK Craft Fair Is Coming The Montauk Historical Society will hold a Craft Fair this weekend, Saturday and Sunday, September 17 and 18, at Second House Museum. The fair will... more

You May Also Like:

I Know What Moms Want

Mother’s Day is next week, and I’m thrilled. The hockey pucks don’t live with us right now, so I’ll be getting what most moms want on Mother’s Day: peace and quiet. I’m lucky. Many of my friends’ adult children’s apartment leases have ended, and they’ve moved back home to save a little money until they find a new place. This stinks for my friends, because when grown kids come back, they revert to teenagers. Even the most capable adult children — those with 401Ks and car insurance — backslide. Once home, these “grownups” leave their half-empty cups on every flat ... 30 Apr 2024 by Tracy Grathwohl

Sole Source

“If we look to western Long Island, there are a lot of lessons that should be applied to us — how a lot of mistakes were made regarding water,” environmentalist John Turner was saying. Turner was speaking about far-western Long Island — Brooklyn — and how it blew its underground water supply more than a century ago. Brooklyn then tried to tap into the aquifers under the Pine Barrens of Suffolk County for potable water but was rebuffed. So it needed to look for water from reservoirs built upstate. These days, the 2.6 million residents of Suffolk and Nassau counties ... by Karl Grossman

So Cool

It’s tractor season in Sagaponack, the time of year you’ll see the most tractors with the widest array of implements ahead of you on the road. You see the bright orange triangle of the reflective SMV (slow moving vehicle) sign. You, at 40 mph, close in on the contraption; the tractor rolls at about 10 mph. The person operating the tractor has ear protection on. He’s wrapped in coveralls and, as if riding a horse, is hunched slightly forward. He won’t look back until he reaches the speed bump and the crosswalk. You don’t think he sees you, but he ... by Marilee Foster

Community News, May 2

YOUTH CORNER Circle of Fun The East Hampton Library, 159 Main Street in East Hampton, ... 29 Apr 2024 by Staff Writer

A Life-Changing Experience

It was fitting that Suffolk County, with some of the richest soil in the world and still on the New York State’s list of its top agricultural counties (No. 4 based on “farm sales”), was the setting in recent days of a “Docs Equinox” series of documentaries with the theme “Cultivating Connections: Soils, Farms, Food.” Last year, the “Docs Equinox” series focused on drinking water and the aquifer. There were outstanding documentaries and speakers. The documentaries and speakers on April 12-14 this year — again in honor of Earth Day — were most outstanding, too. Indeed, after viewing a documentary ... 22 Apr 2024 by Karl Grossman

Community News, April 25

YOUTH CORNER Circle of Fun The East Hampton Library, 159 Main Street in East Hampton, ... by Staff Writer

Immigration in Irons?

Lately, I’ve been sniffing a little shift in the immigration winds. I think it started with the tragic collapse of the Francis Scott Key Bridge in Baltimore. Four workers died that night. Four men doing the hard, dangerous work most of us once took pride in and now want to avoid. Four men peacefully struggling to earn their daily bread. Fathers working to feed their children. Brothers sending money home. Churchgoers. A dad who laughed with his young daughter at a water park kind of men. In other words, men with the family values so many Americans cherish. They were ... by Carlos Sandoval

VIEWPOINT: Life’s Quiet Wonders

The solar eclipse, as advertised, was something to see, or partially to see, depending on where one stood. What is less observable yet just as remarkable is the way we apprehend such phenomena, the state of wonder we enter as we stand quasi-mesmerized before things we do not understand, and over which we have no control. Wonder. We feel it at an eclipse and, equally, though not in the same way, when something horrific happens, like the disaster at the bridge in Baltimore. Something occurs beyond rational comprehension. The sky darkens or the water blackens, and we gape, open-mouthed, like ... 19 Apr 2024 by Roger Rosenblatt

In Bloom

Spring gives us all the distraction we need. You can tune out the world news and breathe in the fragrant air. You sense the sweetness and take a deeper breath. What is that? I stand up from my tractor seat to have a better look. Is it a stand of daffodils? An old row of “bolting” collard greens? Really, everywhere you look, there is something in bloom. Maybe the scent originates behind the privet, a grove of something special: great flowers outside an empty mansion. Maybe it is all the dandelions, the hearty ones that dot the headland — simple ... 16 Apr 2024 by Marilee Foster

From Camelot to COVID

There is an amusing scene in the film “Casablanca” when Rick Blaine says he came to Casablanca “for the waters.” When told there are no waters there, he replies, “I was misinformed.” It looks like, this year, two of the three presidential candidates will be competing for who can misinform the most voters. I thought about this a couple of weeks ago when, by the windmill in Sag Harbor, several people had set up a table to promote the delusional interests of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. The table has not reappeared since, but a poster remains at the foot of ... 15 Apr 2024 by Tom Clavin