real estate • restaurants • houses • happenings • beaches • shopping

summer • fall • winter • spring • now

Sunday, April 25, 2010

Fishing Report From Our Own Jennifer Linick


They're baaaaack! The schools of Striped Bass are swimming north, following the warming waters (52 degrees being their impetus) and the running schools of herring, squid, bunker, porgies, sand worms, clams. What a menu! They wintered over in the Chesepeake and in their migration to warmer waters they can head as far North as the Cape. I fished for them as they made their way south in November as one of the few women surfcasters in the Montauk Locals Annual Tournament....which I didn't win. But it's not the wining or losing. It's being THERE at sunrise, chatting it up with my old time fishing buddies, listening to the screeching birds, playing the blitz. And now for some early spring fishing. Slowly I repack my car with freshly cleaned and oiled gear, and WD40 my rod rack for my new rod with my very own name in gold: GEORGICA JENNY (named after my fishing spot of choice).

It is, after all, why we are here.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Fairway Restaurant at Poxabogue closed after 20 years



Sunday was the last day of business for the tiny cafe at the Poxabogue golf course and driving range, and after its nearly 20 years in residence, a legion of regular customers was there to pay respects.

“We raised all four of our grandchildren here, and we watched Danny’s kids grow up here,” nearly tearful patron Pam Levy said of owner Dan Murray as she paid her check and gave longtime Fairway chef Michael Grant a long hug. “It’s like an appendage. Everything in East Hampton has changed. Here, they kept it the way it used to be. Now it’s going to change too.”

The fate of the Fairway was sealed last Thursday when a personal appeal by members of the Southampton Town Board failed to convince Poxabogue’s manager, Ed Wankel, to adjust the terms of the restaurant’s lease. Mr. Murray has said the terms of the lease offered to him by Mr. Wankel, who was awarded a five-year management contract by the towns of Southampton and East Hampton in 2007, are unfairly restrictive of his business.

“It’s despicable what they’re doing to him,” longtime customer Sandy Keidan said on Sunday.

Southampton and East Hampton towns purchased the Poxabogue property in 2003, using money from the Community Preservation Fund to save the golf facility, the only public golf facility in Southampton Town, from residential development. After negotiating annual leases for the restaurant space with Mr. Murray for four years, in 2007 the towns agreed to include control over the restaurant lease in the management contract for the entire property.

“We made it very clear that we would prefer to see Dan stay,” said Southampton Town Councilman Chris Nuzzi, who spearheaded the efforts to convince Mr. Wankel to renew Mr. Murray’s lease in recent months. “I don’t fully understand the reasoning behind his decision. He keeps reiterating that his offer was refused, and that he had proceeded forward, looking elsewhere, and that’s the direction he wants to continue to go.”

To read the entire article, pick up the Mar 31 issue of The East Hampton Press or the Apr 1 issue of The Southampton Press.

East Hampton Village Beach Update

One of our top agents just returned from a trip down Main Street to East Hampton Village Hall with the terse report that only 160 parking stickers for Summer, 2010, remain. This means that if you are counting on going to one of the Village Beaches this Summer, you had better make tracks to Village Hall or you're going to be biking or walking to the beach. Forewarned is fore armed (or something like that).

Sunday, March 21, 2010

A Decade Long Snapshot of The Hamptons Real Estate Market













Thanks to the Miller Samuel people and Prudential Real Estate, we have a very concise and graphic way to tell the story of Hamptons real estate since the turn of the millenium. Basically, as you can see from the graph, the number of sales as well as the average sales price marched upwards in a sustained and rather manageable fashion from 2000 to 2005. At that point the true pricing bubble (shall we call it "irrational exuberance") took hold and while the number of sales declined, the pricing skyrocketed for another two years or so, until the whole thing collapsed along  with the rest of the economy in '08. The last two years have seen very low levels of activity and declining prices which have combined to create a weak buyer's market in general, albeit with pockets of some strength. There are some indications that the market has hit bottom and is beginning to strengthen although it is a slow and tenuous rebuilding process, to be sure.

Nobu Popping Up In The Hamptons Summer 2010


Thursday, March 18, 2010

The Hamptons Take The Bronze in Resort Locations.

With luxury home prices at an apparent bottom, Wall Streeters -- and others whose bonus packages have already rebounded -- are re-emerging as buyers with the chance to score bargains and return the second-home market to its former glory. For those lucky investors, Barron's has ranked the top 10 spots for vacation homes, taking into account how far prices have dropped from their peaks in each submarket. Perennial New York favorite the Hamptons came in third, with prices coming in at a median $1.5 million, 30 percent off their peak. The posh vacation spot ranked as less desirable than Maui, which took the top spot with prices down 27 percent, and Kiawah Island, S.C. (No. 2), where prices are down 21 percent. Florida favorite Palm Beach ranked seventh and Captiva/Sanibel Island ranked eighth. Palm Beach and Capitiva/Sanibel Island homes prices are down 11 and 40 percent, respectively, each to a median $3.5 million. Gasparilla Island, a favorite of actor Harrison Ford's off Florida's southwest coast, was 10th on the list. The median price is $1.8 million, down 18 percent form its peak. [Barron's via WSJ]

Friday, January 22, 2010

East Hampton Beach Parking Permits on Sale Now

by Nick Epstein







Remember, 2010
beach parking permits go on sale in early February.

This is info from the Village of East Hampton...

"Non-resident permits are limited in number and are issued on a first-come, first-serve basis. Violators may be towed and subject to a mandatory $125 fine."

"You must display a valid village parking permit on your vehicle from May15th through September 15th. Main Beach and Two Mile Hollow Beach are the only village beaches where you can pay by the day for parking - $20 per day, weekdays only, not available on weekends or holidays. Village parking permits are free to residents of the village and cost $300 per vehicle for non-village residents with a valid vehicle registration. Parking permits go on sale in early February."

To get more information on how to get a beach parking permit go to East Hampton Village - Beaches. The Hamptons Web Beaches Page has a listing of the beaches in each town and which permits are required.

Buying Organic Produce in East Hampton














East End Organic Community (ECCO) Farm is my favorite farm stand these days for buying organic produce in East Hampton, NY. It stands in the fields on picturesque Long Lane. Although not all the produce at ECCO Farm is organic, John, the owner seems to have the most organic produce I have found in the area. Today I wanted cherries to make a cherry crisp I had seen on gluten free mommy blog and they were out, so I asked John, who was carrying a box of bananas, if he had any . He ran back to the truck to get the cherries and excitedly announced, "They aren't local but they are organic and they are as fresh as you can get." Juicy Naam is another favorite for people who are looking for organic fruits and vegetables. They also have fresh juices and prepared foods. On Fridays, the farmers market at Nick and Toni's Restaurant sells local produce and food.

Ecco Farm Stand
55 Long Lane
East Hampton, NY 11937
http://www.eecofarm.org/CONTACT-Index.shtml

The Juicy Naam
27 Race Lane
East Hampton, NY 11937
http://www.thejuicynaam.us/live/

Farmer's Market (Fridays 9am-1 pm)
Nick & Toni's Restaurant
(in the parking lot)
136 North Main Street
East Hampton, NY
http://www.nyfarmersmarket.com/regionmetrosuffolk.htm

Real Estate in the Hamptons...

Houses • Happenings • News • Events • Restaurants • Shopping • Beach • Summer • Winter • Fall Spring

HOME