Community News, January 5 - 27 East

Community News, January 5

icon 3 Photos
East Hampton High School joined forces with East Hampton Kiwanis Club to host a toy drive for Toys for Tots.

East Hampton High School joined forces with East Hampton Kiwanis Club to host a toy drive for Toys for Tots.

Serving Our Nation 
U.S. Navy Aviation Structural Mechanic 3rd Class Sage Witty from Sag Harbor is serving aboard the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN 68). Recently he worked on the main landing gear door from an E-2C Hawkeye while aboard the carrier. Nimitz is in 7th Fleet, the U.S. Navy’s largest forward-deployed numbered fleet, conducting routine operations. It routinely interacts and operates with 35 maritime nations in preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific region. COURTESY U.S. NAVY

Serving Our Nation U.S. Navy Aviation Structural Mechanic 3rd Class Sage Witty from Sag Harbor is serving aboard the aircraft carrier USS Nimitz (CVN 68). Recently he worked on the main landing gear door from an E-2C Hawkeye while aboard the carrier. Nimitz is in 7th Fleet, the U.S. Navy’s largest forward-deployed numbered fleet, conducting routine operations. It routinely interacts and operates with 35 maritime nations in preserving a free and open Indo-Pacific region. COURTESY U.S. NAVY

The Coalition for Women's Cancers and Lucia's Angels hosted a volunteer appreciation dinner last month at  the Plaza Café. Volunteers help at numerous events throughout the year to raise money to support the two organizations that assist those affected by breast and other cancers.  COURTESY LUCIA'S ANGELS

The Coalition for Women's Cancers and Lucia's Angels hosted a volunteer appreciation dinner last month at the Plaza Café. Volunteers help at numerous events throughout the year to raise money to support the two organizations that assist those affected by breast and other cancers. COURTESY LUCIA'S ANGELS

authorStaff Writer on Jan 2, 2023
EAST HAMPTON Medicaid Basics East Hampton Library will present a program, “Thriving at Home on the East End: Medicaid Basics,” on Tuesday, January 10, at 5:30 p.m. Attorney Britt Burner,... more

You May Also Like:

Sunsets and Soil

Not too long after I began farming, I also began writing these weekly columns. While there is a tradition of farmer/writers, the two professions don’t marry, and so if you want to do both, you’d better decide that ONE of them is a hobby. The day I chose to make writing a hobby and farming the full-time job, my brother and I were moving irrigation in the potatoes off Daniels Lane. We had 350 acres to get over, and rain was nowhere in the forecast. It was a Sunday, and I had a Monday deadline. My father arrived at the ... 29 Jul 2025 by Marilee Foster

Fish Tales

When I retired from teaching, the Ponquogue Bridge became a fixture in my daily exercise. It was also my muse. During my walks, I stopped my brain chatter, opened my senses and observed. I saw road work and thought of plastic surgery. Piping plovers, an endangered species, connected me to another endangered species: letter writers. Surfers in stages of undress suggested a piece on public nakedness. So began my memoir, “Bridge Walker.” Over the years, I have exercised less and less. Now, I am trying to get back into the habit of walking the bridge, which ends with a stroll ... by Denise Gray Meehan

Zeldin Under Fire

As a Suffolk County resident, Lee Zeldin is a rarity, as a high official in a U.S. government administration. A Google search requesting the names of Suffolk County residents in appointed positions in the current and recent federal administrations is topped by Zeldin’s but goes no further with other appointees. Zeldin, in his seven months as administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, a position to which he was appointed by President Donald Trump, has been facing strong criticism. Democratic members of the U.S. Congress have crossed swords with him, environmental organizations have been greatly critical of what he has ... by Karl Grossman

Community News, July 31

YOUTH CORNER Circle of Fun East Hampton Library, 159 Main Street in East Hampton, will ... 28 Jul 2025 by Staff Writer

Not-So-Still Life

Twenty-five barn swallows are resting on the metal slope of the shop roof. White tin and the deep blue of their feathers makes for a corner of brilliance in an otherwise quiet farmyard. The birds are not still; because they are fledglings and perhaps exhausted by the morning’s workout, they slide a little. Feathers splay before regaining purchase; the group shimmers. Adults, still on wing, make wide, gliding circles throughout the familiar complex. The heat pours on, little showers come at night, dew enough to keep the lettuce alive, but the humidity threatens to rot it. At the point, when ... 23 Jul 2025 by Marilee Foster

A Hallmark of Diversity

The Long Island Pine Barrens Society has embarked on an initiative titled “The Best of the Rest,” an effort to protect 3,800 acres of Pine Barrens, an addition to one of the great environmental achievements for this area. That’s the state’s Long Island Pine Barrens Protection Act of 1993, through which some 106,000 acres of Pine Barrens in Suffolk County have been protected. The 3,800 additional acres involve a diversity of Pine Barrens land. Diversity has been a hallmark of how saving of the Pine Barrens in Suffolk County has come about. It has involved bipartisan political leadership, notably former ... 22 Jul 2025 by Karl Grossman

Members Only

In the Hamptons, late spring and early summer are full of possibilities. And by possibilities I mean new restaurants. We have a steady turnover of restaurants in the East End, because restaurateuring is hard. There’s no margin in food. Rents are high. It’s difficult to get experienced staff. But you know all this. You’ve seen “The Bear.” I haven’t. “The Bear” is too stressful and nerve-wracking for me. I prefer to watch this shirtless guy on my Instagram who bakes cakes and let’s his pug lick the spoon. The guy’s abs are rock hard, and he cracks eggs on them. ... 21 Jul 2025 by Tracy Grathwohl

Community News, July 24

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

‘Something Celestial’?

This column could be for those of you who consider yourselves unlucky. But how many of you have been unlucky enough to be hit by space debris? There is only one person on the planet who can claim that dubious distinction. First, the example of Skylab, which some readers might recall. If people were ever to have dangerous space debris rain on them, it was in 1979, when the vehicle was to tumble from space. Many people were genuinely frightened. Others made bets about when and where the falling space station would reenter Earth’s atmosphere. Newspapers offered prizes for finding ... 15 Jul 2025 by Tom Clavin

Staring Into the Past

In addition to potatoes, carrots grow well in Sagaponack. Our soil type can sustain their thirsty character while letting that long, singular, sweet tap root seek itself deep and straight into the dirt. Thus anchored, the carrot prospers until the day I loosen the dirt around it, and pull. We sell carrots two ways, with greens or without. Most want without, and I am happy to leave the substantial foliage here in its field and not have it end up dislocated in a dumpster far from “home.” These are vigorous carrots, and I have a system for removing the greens, ... by Marilee Foster