Monday, May 27, 2013

Memorial Day

In villages, towns, and city's all across America today we are honoring all those who have lost their lives to keep  Americans free.
Growing up in the small Village of Northport, N.Y. My brothers and I would run down to the Main Street and wait along the curb for the start of the parade.9:30 sharp! My mother would dress us in patriotic color's. The parade  was always led by Dr. Fredricks a local vetrinarian, riding atop his trusty steed. A palamino whose mane was braided with red, white. & blue carnations. He wore a red riding coat and shiny black riding boots.Down Main Street toward the harbor he would ride flanked by hunting dogs his head up blowing his horn.
The local high school band...the best in all the land would follow, boy scouts, girl scouts...firemen driving vintage trucks. We would look for my older brother with his cub scout troop and my sister who played the Glockenspiel in the marching band .
The Lewis Oliver Dairy would have a tractor pulling a flatbed filled with hay and farm animals whom we all knew by name.
Then the veteran's would march by and some who could not walk would ride in convertibles all gleaming and waxed to perfection. I still can see the shiny chrome reflecting in the sun.
Young soldiers with their rifles perched upon their shoulders would pass by and I remember feeling amazed that real United States soldiers were right before me.
After it was barbecues and back yard games.
Today we would like to thank all of the men and woman who have kept this country safe.... and who continue to do so every minute of everyday. To my Uncles, John, Ken , Bob, Dave, and Frank my father in law Harold all who  were all part of the greatest generation .Thank you for your service to our Country.
Happy Memorial Day !

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Custom Driftwood Signs

One of our customer's favorite goodies are our custom-made driftwood signs.  I am often told that people love their rustic authenticity.  Tomorrow is the first day of spring and our driftwood signs are a wonderful way to add a unique and charming element to your front porch or garden gate.  Indoors, they add interest when combined with a grouping of photos on the wall or hung above a doorway in your home.

We love designing them with our customers and really love to hear about all the neat places they end up like this one, that will be going on a boat!


This 5' sign went to a waterfront home in coastal Texas...

And this to a home in Cape Cod, MA.  A replica of the local lighthouse was hand-painted on this sign...

Another sign made for a boat...

They don't all go to beach towns, this one went to a mountain home in North Carolina...

We have many customer's order their family's name...
...


We also stock driftwood signs with some of our favorite saying's...


Look for our Spring-inspired driftwood signs coming soon!

Saturday, March 2, 2013

March Beach Walk

A walk along the beach never requires good reason or a destination but today's just happened to be...seals.  It's the right time of year to see them here on Long Island and this morning's tide was perfect.  But the seals must have been off swimming, fishing or lounging on rocks off some other beach because they were not here.  Its about a 2 mile walk to get to them but with so much  beauty along the way, disappointment was as absent as the seals today.

Buoys on Driftwood

A path to the beach

A lone, simple shell

Beach dog, tracking deer prints on the beach...thus the sand on his nose

Driftwood

Conch Shell
Ruining my shot!

Seaside horses



Where the seals should have been, instead we found...

a lone Seagull and...

...a pair of Brandt ducks

Jingle shells

Crazy dog, swimming in March!

A purple sea urchin...1st time I have seen any sea urchin on Long Island

Favorite driftwood of the day, love the rock embedded in the wood.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

Valentines Day

The Shell was a gift; I did not find it. It is unusual on the island. One does not often come across such a perfect double- sunrise shell. Both halves of this delicate bivalve are exactly matched. Each side, like the wing of a butterfly, is marked with the same pattern;translucent white.except for three rosy rays that fan out from the golden hinge binding two together.

Anne Morrow Lindbergh
"Gifts From The Sea"

Friday, February 8, 2013

2012 Dans Papers Literary Contest

This past summer Krishtia received an invitation to attend the first literary award ceremony at Guild Hall in East Hampton, L.I.
A few months prior she submitted her short story to "Dans Papers", whose weekly publication is graced by a different artist. Unknown artist to the likes of Andy Warhole have drawn people to pick up a free copy and wonder whats inside...and whats inside is wonderful!

Krishtia at Guild Hall

Dan Rattiner who founded "Dans Papers", over forty years ago while in college is known for his white fedora with wisps of his Alpine hair flipping up from the edges. He is the Author of "In the Hampton's", and "Still in the Hampton's". His satirical articles about the comings and goings of life on the East End of Long Island make you wonder...do I love "Dans Papers" for the beautiful covers, the articles, the storys about the celebrities who share their summer place with the Shinnecock Indian? Or all of the above? We think its all of the above.
 Grabbing a copy to read at the beach in summer or with a cup of tea in winter is a short vacation. Krishtia's love of "Dans Papers" is what lured her out of her writers closet to enter. Four hundred applicants submitted their non fiction short story's about a real experience that took place on the East End. The winner would have a cash prize and their story read by the actress and daughter of Grace Kelly, Pia Lindstrom.

 A Shinnecock Indian named James was the winner. He wrote about the handmade shirt that he wears when he performs their traditional dance. A well deserved winner and a terrific story!



View from our table at B. Smiths Restaurant

Celebrating witha delicious lunch! Yum!

 All four hundred story's we have heard may soon be published! It was a fun late summer's day at Guild Hall.Afterwards we celebrated at B. Smiths dockside restaurant. I would like to share with you Krishtia's story. I'll wait while you make a cup of tea..... ready?






A Tale of Two Lights

Montauk Light House  Photo by Steven Lindgren






For Christmas this year, my husband gave me a good quality 35mm camera, one worth getting out of bed in the wee hours of a frigid January morning to drive out to Montauk and photograph the sunrise.  I hadn't been up this early in awhile and sadly, I'd forgotten how rewarding it is.  Truth be told, it was my brother who inspired me to go.  He’s a talented photographer and was planning to spend the day after New Years getting some shots of Montauk at daybreak.  I’m always down for a good adventure and I knew it would be a great opportunity to use my brand new toy.  Though a sunrise was reason enough to go, we had also heard reports of harbor seals on the rocks off the end of the Seal Haulout Trail in Block Island Sound.  My husband and my big, brown dog were also feeling up for a road trip, so the four of us packed up our truck in the wintry frost and headed East into the darkness.






We first catch a glimpse of a seasonally vacant Memory Motel about an hour before sunrise.   Montauk and its inhabitants lie dormant as we pass the traffic circle and continue straightaway down Montauk Highway.   We arrive at Montauk Point amid deer and dedicated surfers beginning to stir in the pre-dawn light.  Salty air seeps through the exposed skin on my face.  Today, Mother Nature kindly blesses us with soft winds.  Dignified and noble, stands the lighthouse upon the hill.  I briefly take notice of the light atop it.  But what I am enchanted by is a dimmer, demure light about one hundred feet below the famed one.  A lamp glowing softly in one of the lighthouse windows.  “Someone lives there?” I quietly think to myself.  Beyond the bounds of possibility says the cynic in me.  “A lighthouse keeper?”  My nostalgic heart skips a beat at the thought.  

A lighthouse keeper is really there quietly watching over a two hundred year old beacon still guiding mariners in our modern world of GPS and iPhones.



I am grateful for things like this in life.   That automation and technology did not replace the lighthouse keeper and her gigantic black Newfoundland is one redeeming point in the plus column for the human race.  Awestruck, I stand there in the parking lot for quite some time imagining the interior space in which she lives.  A perfectly frayed quilt strewn across a rocking chair next to an old, wooden table with a book or two and that softly glowing lamp upon it.  Beside it, her dog cozily curled up on an oval-shaped, braided rug.   Perhaps a pot of coffee brewing in a homey, no-frills kitchen.  Faded black and white photographs of past lighthouse keepers hanging on the walls of the hallway.  






Inspired before the sun even comes up, we walk Paumanok Path down to Turtle Cove just West of the fabled lighthouse.  Quiet solitude gives way to the roaring waves of the Atlantic crashing into shore.  The sunrise does not disappoint, it never does.  The seals are awesome too.  Later that day, we head back into town for pancakes, though I won’t say where.  The debate over the better of the two pancake proprietors in town is a heated one that I prefer to watch from afar.  Besides, we get a better taste of Montauk’s quirky, rural flavor watching a portly pot-bellied pig take his belly-dragging morning walk down S. Etna Ave.  This makes for some great photographs though the most haunting image of the day is still that lamp in the window.  I never photographed it, I never even thought to.  It remains etched in my mind, a romantic beacon of hope.  Hope for a new day’s sunrise, a new year’s promise.  Hope that some simple good things don’t go away in time.