December 4, 2020

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The Greenwich Weekly Newspaper, where we celebrate our hometown with Greenwich news, people, and events.

December 4, 2020

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Back Countr y | Banksv ille | Belle Haven | By ram| Chickahominy | Cos Cob | Glenv ille | Old Greenw ich | Pember w ick | R iverside | Bedford, N Y

A Hungry Humpback

New Hope Against Severe COVID-19

Hyperbaric oxygen therapy administered by Ellen Stacom, RN, (left) and Sandra Wainwright, MD, medical director, Center for Hyperbaric Medicine and Wound Healing.

By Emma Barhydt Emerging evidence shows hyperbaric oxygen therapy – best known for treating scuba divers for decompression sickness – can effectively deliver much-needed oxygen to COVID-19 patients. Greenwich Hospital is one of six medical facilities nationwide – and the only one in Connecticut – slated to take part in a yearlong trial to treat 600 COVID-19 patients with hyperbaric oxygen therapy. The hospital has already treated three COVID-19 patients with hyperbaric oxygen therapy with some promising results. One patient who had severe symptoms, including difficulty breathing, said his airways began to

medicine is often used to treat difficultto-heal wounds that have not responded to traditional treatments. Now COVID-19 patients are finding relief in hyperbaric chambers that increase oxygen levels to extremely high levels when patients need it the most. Delivered while patients lie in an enclosed chamber, the treatment fully saturates red blood cells and plasma with oxygen to combat the harmful effects of the coronavirus on the lungs. Patients receive the 90-minute treatment for five consecutive days. “Patients with severe pneumonia due to COVID-19 can’t get enough oxygen on their own to sustain their organs,” explained Dr. Wainwright. “They’re

One patient who had severe symptoms, including difficulty breathing, said his airways began to clear after 10 minutes in the chamber. clear after 10 minutes in the chamber. “This treatment may help some critically ill COVID-19 patients avoid intubation and mechanical ventilators, which so often impact recovery and survival,” said Sandra Wainwright, MD, medical director of Greenwich Hospital’s Center for Hyperbaric Medicine and Wound Healing. At Greenwich Hospital, hyperbaric

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CORRESPONDENCE PO Box 279 Greenwich, CT 06836

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G r e e nw ich i s aw a sh w it h f i sh . Thousands and thousands of fish. “They’re below the Mianus River Dam in Cos Cob – thousands of f ish,” reports Cynthia Ehlinger. “They’re in the Byram River at the Mill Street bridge, going almost all the way down to Costco – maybe 50,000+ fish,” reports Matt Popp. And John Ferris Robben has “seen them die in mass up stream in Binney Park and near the dam on the Mianus River... someone said they died from lack of oxygen in the water.” These fish sightings by Ehlinger, Popp, and Robben as reported on Facebook last weekend, Ehlinger identifies as Atlantic menhaden. “AK A bunker. Schools in session. They spawn in late fall, supposedly off the Atlantic coast. This group may have had a detour. Sometimes a predator can drive them upriver.” So, perhaps it was a predator driving that swarm of menhaden this reporter found this Tuesday swarming around at the foot of Greenwich Harbor where the ferry boats are docked. They were a sizeable size bunker – 10 to 12 inches in length. And they were swarming there three weeks earlier. They've obviously found a safe haven. Thus, what also was found in that Facebook thread intrigued. Greenwich’s former Conservation director, Denise Savageau, had added her take on Ehlinger’s mentioning a predator might be driving these fish up and into our

shores. “Definitely. This is what the whales are following. They saw a whale in Old Lyme a [few] weeks ago.” On October 28, fishing guide Joe Diorio, as owner of the Joe Diorio Guide Service was out on the Sound with a client off Old Lyme when he saw some action on the water. As reported in the news he says to his fishing client, “We must be having some dolphin around, but the next thing you know, I see this big bunker shooting out of the water and this big mouth shooting up and ate 1,000 bunker in one gulp." Diorio managed in his excitement to take a video of that fleeting feed. What he captured on camera of that humpback’s breach is what stays in the memory worthy of a call of congratulation. “I've been f ishing that area for 25 years,” says Diorio. “And I've never seen one. Never in Old Lyme. But I've seen them in Block Island. I've seen them in other spots but never inside Long Island Sound.” To learn more about that menhaden fo o d s ou r c e m a k i n g t he S ou nd s o attractive to a humpback, we contacted Dr. Justin Davis, Assistant Director of the CT Department of Energy and Environmental Protection’s Fisheries Division. “We’ve had a very high abundance of Atlantic menhaden in Long Island Sound this year,” he says, adding, “which is a great thing for our local ecosystem.” He cites the “robust nature of the coastal population or ‘stock’ is due in part to more conservative

management of menhaden f isheries by the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission (ASMFC) in recent years…so Mother Nature has been good to the coastal menhaden stock in recent years.” “Menhaden tend to be ‘patchy’ in the marine environment,” he tells, “They will concentrate in different areas from year to year, for no apparent discernible reason (who knows why a fish decides to swim where it does). So, while we definitely have been in an era of high menhaden abundance coastwide – the abundance in Long Island Sound this year was even higher than it’s been in other recent years due to this ‘patchiness.’ For whatever reason, menhaden really wanted to be in Long Island Sound this year. “They will migrate south in the fall – wintering in the New Jersey– Carolinas area. However, they will sometimes linger into the late fall (like they seem to be doing in large numbers this year) and we have seen instances in the past where menhaden have successfully overwintered in Connecticut.” It was Dr. Davis’s DEEP Fisheries Division that reportedly confirmed Diorio’s film capture as a humpback whale, with added news of another humpback sighting made earlier that week near New London. One has to wonder - was that humpback headed in our direction? Read more about these whales from Jim Knox on page 16.

Charity Calls to Action from Kate Noonan The Battle of the Badges Blood Drive is this Saturday, December 5 between 8:00am and 1:00pm at the Greenwich Public Safety Complex, 11 Bruce Park Drive. Join in this friendly competition by picking your favorite Greenwich emergency response organization and giving blood for their team. To schedule your appointment call 1 800 733-2767 or go to www.redcrossblood.org Nugs not Hugs ~ Holiday Edition, sponsored by Garden Catering and local non-profits is providing full holiday meals to 500 local families. A $9 donation will cover the cost of a holiday meal for one, a $54 donation covers a family meal and Garden Catering is offering a buy one give one deal. Donations can be made at Gardencatering.com Police Toy Drive: Let’s fill up a police cruiser with toys for Toys for Tots this Saturday, December 5th.

Come to the Greenwich Police Station at 11 Bruce Park Drive from 8:00am to 1:00pm. No need to sign up, just come fill up the cruiser. The Junior League of Greenwich is supporting the YWCA Domestic Abuse Services and families in need with a Merry Meal Drive. Locally cooked meals along with a bottle of wine can be ordered through the Junior League’s website: https://www.jlgreenwich.org/. Order you meals today to enjoy on Sunday December 13, 2020 and support domestic abuse services. TAG needs volunteers to help drivers deliver bags of food from Neighbor to Neighbors Food Pantry on Arch Street from Monday to Friday at 9:30am-12:30pm. Come join TAG to help your neighbors. Please call 203-637-4345, email: debbie@ridetag.org or just stop by Arch Street any weekday morning before 9:30am. TAG is Covid responsible: using masks, gloves and social distancing.

Connection & Safety

STORY IDEAS Publisher@ GreenwichSentinel.com COLUMNISTS Columnists and community impact. Jenny at CommunityImpact@ GreenwichSentinel.com

By Anne W. Semmes

By Jill S. Woolworth, LMFT During moments of marital stress, each of us favors either connection or safet y. Both are essential to relationships. We typically choose a partner with the opposite priority because we are attracted to his or her complementary personality. Which is your priority? Connectors tend to be effervescent and outgoing. Partners who prioritize safety are usually reliable and steady. The challenge arises during inevitable disagreements when the one who favors connection pursues an argument the way a dog pursues a bone and the one who favors safet y w ithdraws behind a stone wall. One yells and the other won’t talk. The more connectors won’t let go, the more partners who prioritize safet y retreat. This often escalates into an infinity loop of unhappiness.

Brighten Christmas at Nathaniel Witherell The residents at Nathaniel Witherell, Greenwich’s skilled nursing facility, will only have a handful of visitors for Christmas this year, if any, because of COVID-19 restrictions. You can help make their Christmas bright by sending personally signed holiday cards. Please encourage family, friends and organizations in which you participate, to send signed Christmas cards with a note of cheer. Please send holiday cards to: Chaplaincy Card Drive; Nathaniel Witherell, 70 Parsonage RoadGreenwich CT 06830. You can also contribute towards a fund that will provide an appropriate small gift for each resident by including a check for $5.00 (or any amount), with the notation XMAS GIFT and made payable to “Friends of Nathaniel Witherell”. A deluge of Christmas cards will warm the heart, raise the spirits, and brighten the holiday for each resident, just knowing that someone cares.

All is Bright on the Avenue

Illustrated by Wajih Chaudhry

SENTINEL

constantly panting for air, breathing at about 45 to 50 breaths per minute. That’s a breath almost every second.” Fourteen to 18 breaths per minute is considered normal. But once in the chamber, patients begin to relax and their breathing slows down. “You see the fear start to leave their eyes. Their muscles relax. Some patients take a nap,” she said. “For a precious 90 minutes, they actually feel normal again.”

The spotted humpback whale breaching off the coast of Old Lyme. Photo by Joe Diorio.

Though it is diff icult in the moment, when we remem ber that the “attacker” really wants connection, and the “stone wall” longs for safety, we can shorten our arguments and become allies. Jordan and Caitlin were at each other’s throats until they understood that Jordan was d e s p e r a t e fo r c o n n e c t i o n a n d Caitlin wanted safet y. Prior to that, the more Jordan “came after” Ca itli n , th e m ore Ca itli n “ ra n away.” Seeing each other’s need as 100 percent normal changed their perception of each other from hostile to compassionate. Greenwich resident, Jill Woolworth is author of the book, The Waterwheel, which is available locally at Diane's Books (203-8691515) or info@dianesbooks.com) or at Amazon.

Photo by Neil Vigdor

On Thanksgiving Night, the final touches were made on a s p e c t a c u l a r d i s p l ay of lights along Greenw ich Av e n u e . T h r o u g h t h e col la b orat ive f u nd ra isi ng efforts of Greenwich residents, Sebastian Dostmann and Alyssa Keleshian-Bonomo for Greenwich Community Projects Fund (GCP), the ageold custom of lighting the trees in the town center once again graces the Avenue. The

gorgeous tree lighting of past tradition is a much-needed diversion in a most unusual holiday season. “With so much uncertainty about what lies ahead, we believed that bringing back the tree lighting t r a d it i o n wo u l d b e m o r e important than ever. We hope it provides much-needed joy and vitality to our beloved downtown during the holiday se ason “, sa id Kelesh ia nBonomo.

Dostmann and KeleshianBonomo would like to thank a l l G r e e nw i c h r e s i d e nt s , commercial businesses, the Office of the First Selectman F r e d Ca m i l lo, R ick K ra l , and the Greenwich Parks & Recreation Tree Division for their gracious support of the tree lighting effort and help in its’ execution. Under the d i rection of S ebast ia n Dost ma n n, t he C h r i s t m a s Tr e e L i g ht i n g Comp a ny a nd G r e enw ich Pa rk s & Recreation ca me together to prepare, prune, a nd ador n t he t rees w it h lights and holiday cheer. “It has been an absolute pleasure to raise money for and facilitate something that makes so many of us smile. We hope everyone will come out to see the lights, visit our downtown, and support our vibrant local community of shops and restaurants.” For more information, visit https://gwchavenue.com/.


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