Sag Harbor's Tight Lines Tackle To Cut Bait, Move to Southampton Village - 27 East

Sag Harbor Express

Sag Harbor's Tight Lines Tackle To Cut Bait, Move to Southampton Village

icon 1 Photo
Ken Morse, the owner of Tight Lines Tackle in Sag Harbor, is moving his store to Southampton Village. STEPHEN J. KOTZ

Ken Morse, the owner of Tight Lines Tackle in Sag Harbor, is moving his store to Southampton Village. STEPHEN J. KOTZ

authorStephen J. Kotz on Sep 27, 2023

Tight Lines Tackle, which has served recreational fishermen from the Sag Harbor area for more than 20 years, will move to Southampton Village next month.

“I’m going to try to pack up and be out between October 7 and 10,” said Kenny Morse, who has run the business out of a side building at the Sag Harbor Yacht Yard on Bay Street since 2001.

His new store will be at 260 Hampton Road in Southampton Village, next to Ted’s Market.

Morse said he would miss the customers who stream into his small shop to pick up a rod-and-reel combo, a couple of lures, or just to share a little fishing news, but that he hoped his new shop would be close enough so he could continue to serve his existing clientele while giving him access to more year-round traffic.

“Honestly, I believe one door closes and another door opens,” he said. “The thing about Bay Street that is difficult is that it is very quiet in the off-season. If you think about a marina in the winter, once your boat is wrapped for the season, there is no reason to come back until springtime.”

In his new location, Morse said he expected to see a more steady flow of customers nine months of the year. While Sag Harbor is busier in the summer, it gets so crowded that many customers don’t come in as often as they used to, he said.

Moving in early October would have once meant pulling up stakes at the busiest time of the year when striped bass could usually be counted on for a sustained run along the ocean beaches as they headed south for the winter. But that’s not necessarily the case any longer, Morse said.

“If we go back 30 years, I’d say so,” he said, “but the fall has changed so much. The fall run happens a little later in the year, and the later the fall run happens, the more people are out of the area.”

Morse, the son of two physicians, grew up in Riverdale in the Bronx, but his parents bought a house on Moriches Bay in Westhampton. It was a time of abundance, Morse said, with the bay bottoms practically paved with clams, crabs and fish.

“I preferred being out here,” he said. “I always hated as a kid having to leave Westhampton and go back to the city.”

Morse spent two years at Southampton College before completing his education at Unity College in Maine, where he received a bachelor’s degree in ecology with an emphasis in marine biology. After college, he worked for a time at the Morton Wildlife Refuge in Noyac before landing a job as manager of the tackle department at the Bayview Seafood Market, which is now a house owned by Billy Joel.

When Bayview closed its doors at the end of 2000, Morse bought the inventory and moved down the block and across the street.

Like any small business, Morse has to keep a large inventory on hand to match the sometimes overnight changes in the demands of fishermen. And like many other small businesses, he has to struggle with online competition.

“What’s painful is when someone literally says to my face, ‘Oh, they have that on Amazon for $30 less,’” said Morse.

Customers who want to remain on Morse’s good side know better than to mention the “A” word in his presence. “They don’t sell bait, they don’t give you advice, they don’t help you put line on your reel, and they don’t show you knots,” he said. “That’s why you come to me.”

Morse said he would have stayed put in Sag Harbor, despite its challenges, if his landlord would have given him a multi-year lease. Howard Lorber, the head of Douglas Elliman real estate, and Herman Goldsmith, who owns a series of luxury car dealerships up-island, owned the yacht yard and would only give him year-to-year deals, which Morse said left him with no choice but to look for a more permanent home.

Ironically, last June, Lorber and Goldsmith sold the property, and the new owner offered Morse a lease — but he said he had already agreed to rent the new space in Southampton Village.

You May Also Like:

Sag Harbor Village Police Reports for the Week of July 17

SAG HARBOR VILLAGE — Police were called Friday night after what was described as an “altercation” between a male couple and a group of juveniles, one of whom is said to have called the couple a homophobic slur. One of the men held the youth until police arrived. The youth’s parents were contacted, and the mother came to pick up her son, who apologized to the couple before they left. The male who held the youth was “advised that in the future, he should contact police immediately rather than attempt to handle the situation himself.” SAG HARBOR VILLAGE — A ... 16 Jul 2025 by Staff Writer

Town Hosts Its Annual Mike Diveris Battle of Southampton Lifeguard Tournament

This year’s annual Mike Diveris Memorial “Battle of Southampton” Lifeguard Tournament on July 8 at ... by Drew Budd

New Traditions, Same Spirit: Sag Harbor Cup Raises Over $50,000 for Junior Sailing Scholarships

The 43rd annual Sag Harbor Cup, hosted by the Breakwater Sailing Center & Yacht Club, ... by Michael Mella

Dun Done

The iconic “Jaws” poster by artist Roger Kastel was not based on a great white shark, but rather a shortfin mako head that Kastel studied at the American Museum of Natural History, where the specimen remains today. Looking back on the artistic choice 50 years after the film first thrashed into theaters, it’s hard to second-guess it. The image is chilling, menacing and easily the most instantly recognizable film poster in cinema history. But the poster, depicting a larger-than-life shark lunging upward, toothy mouth open, toward a woman doing the freestyle stroke, is also one of the ways that “Jaws” ... by Editorial Board

Sag Harbor Native Darlene Rozzi Publishes Debut Novel Inspired by Life in South Korea

Sag Harbor native Darlene Rozzi, who currently lives outside Seoul, South Korea, was recently back ... by Stephen J. Kotz

Sag Harbor Rolls Out Employee Parking Passes, but Not Everyone Is Happy

Two days before the Fourth of July, Jesse Matsuoka and Kevin Menard, who are both ... by Stephen J. Kotz

Hamptons Youth Triathlon Sees Over 160 Finishers for Second Year in a Row

For the second year in a row, over 160 youth triathletes crossed the finish line ... 15 Jul 2025 by Drew Budd

HBCL All-Stars Defeat the ACBL All-Stars; Southampton's Quintano Named MVP

The Hamptons Collegiate Baseball League All-Stars held on to an 8-5 victory over the Atlantic ... by Drew Budd

Fluke and Bluefins Keeping Rods Bent

There’s plenty of good fishing to be had around the South Fork as we get ... by MIKE WRIGHT

If the Shoe Fits, Should I Buy It for Pickleball?

Pickleball shoes have hit the market, big time, this summer. On the East End, we’re ... by Vinny Mangano