Subscribe to Guide
No Result
View All Result
Hamptons.com
  • Spotlight Magazine
  • Lifestyle
    • Featured
    • Entertainment
    • Arts
    • Community
    • Dining
    • Recreation
    • Trending
  • Guides
  • Events
    • Events Calendar
    • Post an Event
    • Gallery
  • Real Estate
    • Real Estate Features
    • Hamptons Real Estate Market Data
    • Search Real Estate
      • Open Houses
      • Search Sales
      • Search Rentals
    • Title Insurance
    • Happening In The Hamptons Podcast
  • Live Cameras
    • All Live Cameras
    • Live Weather Cams
    • Amagansett, Atlantic Avenue Beach
    • Bridgehampton, West Scott Cameron Beach
    • East Hampton Village, Main Beach
    • East Hampton Village, Main Street
    • East Hampton Village, Newtown Lane
    • Hampton Bays, Ponquogue Beach
    • Hampton Bays, Ponquogue Bridge
    • Hampton Bays, Shinnecock Fishing Dock
    • Hampton Bays, Tiana Beach
    • Long Island Aquarium | Coral Reef
    • Long Island Aquarium | Penguins
    • Long Island Aquarium | Shark Tank
    • Montauk, Downtown Circle
    • Montauk, Lars Simenson Skatepark
    • Montauk, Gin Beach & Inlet
    • Montauk, Sunset Beach & Inlet
    • Sagaponack, Sagg Main Beach
    • Sag Harbor, Bay Street
    • Sag Harbor, Foster Memorial Beach
    • Sag Harbor, Long Wharf Marina
    • Sag Harbor, Sag Harbor Bay
    • Sag Harbor, Windmill Beach & Bay
    • Shelter Island, South Ferry
    • Southampton, 39A to Montauk Hwy Merge
    • Southampton, Conscience Point Marina
    • Southampton Village, Coopers Beach
    • Southampton Village, Main Street (North)
    • Southampton Village, Main Street (Hildreths)
    • Westhampton, Pike’s Beach
    • Westhampton Village, Main Street (East)
    • Westhampton Village, Rogers Beach
  • Public WiFi
    • Public WiFi Map
    • Public Wi-Fi Support
  • Spotlight Magazine
  • Lifestyle
    • Featured
    • Entertainment
    • Arts
    • Community
    • Dining
    • Recreation
    • Trending
  • Guides
  • Events
    • Events Calendar
    • Post an Event
    • Gallery
  • Real Estate
    • Real Estate Features
    • Hamptons Real Estate Market Data
    • Search Real Estate
      • Open Houses
      • Search Sales
      • Search Rentals
    • Title Insurance
    • Happening In The Hamptons Podcast
  • Live Cameras
    • All Live Cameras
    • Live Weather Cams
    • Amagansett, Atlantic Avenue Beach
    • Bridgehampton, West Scott Cameron Beach
    • East Hampton Village, Main Beach
    • East Hampton Village, Main Street
    • East Hampton Village, Newtown Lane
    • Hampton Bays, Ponquogue Beach
    • Hampton Bays, Ponquogue Bridge
    • Hampton Bays, Shinnecock Fishing Dock
    • Hampton Bays, Tiana Beach
    • Long Island Aquarium | Coral Reef
    • Long Island Aquarium | Penguins
    • Long Island Aquarium | Shark Tank
    • Montauk, Downtown Circle
    • Montauk, Lars Simenson Skatepark
    • Montauk, Gin Beach & Inlet
    • Montauk, Sunset Beach & Inlet
    • Sagaponack, Sagg Main Beach
    • Sag Harbor, Bay Street
    • Sag Harbor, Foster Memorial Beach
    • Sag Harbor, Long Wharf Marina
    • Sag Harbor, Sag Harbor Bay
    • Sag Harbor, Windmill Beach & Bay
    • Shelter Island, South Ferry
    • Southampton, 39A to Montauk Hwy Merge
    • Southampton, Conscience Point Marina
    • Southampton Village, Coopers Beach
    • Southampton Village, Main Street (North)
    • Southampton Village, Main Street (Hildreths)
    • Westhampton, Pike’s Beach
    • Westhampton Village, Main Street (East)
    • Westhampton Village, Rogers Beach
  • Public WiFi
    • Public WiFi Map
    • Public Wi-Fi Support
No Result
View All Result
Hamptons.com
March 8, 2017

INTERVIEW: Bridgehampton Chamber Music Festival Founder Marya Martin On The Spring Series, Summer Shows, And The Festival’s Future

Nicole Barylskiby Nicole Barylski
in Arts
Home Arts

Bridgehampton Chamber Music Festival (BCMF) will launch its 3rd annual BCMF Spring series on Saturday, March 11th at 6 p.m. The trio of concerts will premiere with the Brahms Horn Trio with music by Eric Ewazen, including the world premiere of Divinities at Dawn – a piece that was written for Marya Martin, BCMF’s founder and longtime Hamptons cultural champion.

We caught up with Martin to chat about the upcoming performance, as well as this year’s summer festival.

“We love doing the concerts in the summer – we’ve done those now for 34 years, and this is only the third year we’ve done the spring series,” she shared. “It’s always exciting to start a new venture because we’re making sure we have a good audience.”

There’s a comfort in the spring series, as it tends to bring out festival regulars. “In the summer, we have a mixture of out-of-towners and locals. Mainly, in March, we found it’s mostly locals, and so it’s really interesting to see how we get to them,” Martin noted. “I’m always excited also to see – it’s funny, over the 34 years when I’m on the stage, I look out and I see all these familiar faces that I’ve known over the years, and so it’s like greeting old friends. It’s always a nice, warm feeling when I go out and welcome everybody to the concert. In March, you see all these old friends.”

Have you noticed any other differences between the summer and spring concerts?

MM: The summer is three concerts a week – so basically it’s a concert every three days. It’s very intense. You program slightly differently because you have 14 concerts in four and a half weeks. Here, you’ve got a concert every month, for three months. I thought of this three concert series not as three separate concerts, but as the development of one concert – so that the first concert is really celebrating the French horn and woodwind players. There’s a lot of work for flute and French horn, but one of the greatest works in the French horn repertoire is Brahms’ Horn Trio, and we are playing that on the first night. Most of the works are trios. In the April concert, we have string quartets, which is a whole different sound – a very different type of work. In the last concert, we have a string sextet. I like to think that when you make these different soundscapes, people come in and hear something different every time.

When you launched the festival in 1984, did you ever dream it would become the longest-running summer classical music festival?

MM: No, in fact I’m not sure I actually dreamt anything. I was young, and my husband and I had this idea to start a music festival – or we had this dream to have really good music in a place that we loved because, generally, at that time, I used to travel for the whole summer playing at various music festivals. It was actually my husband’s idea. He said we know we’re in a beautiful place, but there’s really not much music going on. Wouldn’t it be incredible to have great music out here? That’s as far as we dreamed. And, of course, we started with two concerts and four people. Now, with the summer and the spring, we have 18 concerts and 54 musicians.

What I love about it is in the very beginning, I guess I’m sure I was very idealistic. People said, “Oh people are too busy going to cocktail parties. They don’t want to hear music in the summer.” And I really thought that’s not true. There’s a real audience for classical music, especially these days when there’s so much strife in the world and there’s so much craziness and division – that to come into a very calm, peaceful building, which is the Presbyterian Church, the acoustics are beautiful. You can sit there and sort of be transported back in time. When you think of playing the Brahms’ Horn Trio that was written in 1865, we are playing it exactly the way it was composed. If you shut your eyes, it could be back in 1865. You can’t sit on a piece of furniture that was built then because they’re gone. It’s sort of a wonderful feeling to be able to honor beauty and our sense of history and everything else that goes with great music.

The spring series will include the world premiere of Eric Ewazen’s Divinities at Dawn, which was written for you. You must be thrilled!

MM: I am! Eric and I go a long way back. I’ve played a lot of his music, he’s written pieces for me, I’ve commissioned works by him, I’ve recorded a lot of his stuff – so it’s a very nice relationship and a very comfortable feeling. It’s exciting to give the first performance of a new work because he knows my playing so he basically composes, if he’s writing for me, he composes with me in mind and it’s always a very nice fit.

He had written the piece years ago, but set it aside. How did you convince him the timing was right?

MM: It was written in 2005. Recently, he and I were talking, and believe it or not, there’s such thing as the New York Flute Club – there’s thousands of flutists who belong to it. Last year, I had played the Ewazen Flute Sonata that he wrote for me, and we’re sitting after having coffee, and I said, “Eric, it’s time to get another piece for flute and piano.” He said, “You know, Marya, you’re absolutely right.” And lo and behold, he rethinks this piece he wrote and gives it to me. He’s a very talented man, composer, great teacher – he’s on the facility at Juilliard. And he’s written hundreds of works – he’s quite prolific. It’s very romantic in nature. The flute sonata he wrote for me, I premiered in 2011, and of course, nowadays, with social media, I was recorded and that was up on YouTube. The wonderful thing is now there’s a bunch of recordings up on YouTube – there’s all these people playing it, which is wonderful. To get a piece out in the world, it used to be difficult. That’s the amazing thing about social media or YouTube – it’s incredible.

BCMF features both veterans and rising talent. How do you curate each festival’s lineup?

MM: I’ve worked with all these people before. There’s certainly a personality for each player and some playing styles work better with some people. I always try and mix likeminded players. There are some people, for example, that play exquisitely but they’re more intimate in their playing. This program has the French horn, which is a big sounding instrument, so you have to think of the right person to balance the personality of the instrument, and the work that you’re playing.

What do you hope for the future of the festival?

MM: Last year we started a new idea, which was the very opening concert being a composer portrait and we did an entire concert of Mozart. We invited Alan Alda, who has been a great friend of the festival and he wrote a script. Mozart was a very prolific letter writer and all those letters – to his father, to his wife, to his sister – were kept. So Alan made this incredible script of these letters and Alan would tell a story of what was going on exactly in Mozart’s life when he composed that piece, and it was in Mozart’s own words – from the letters. It was just a great concert. So, this year, we’re doing a similar idea starting off with a composer portrait of Brahms Schumann, Robert Schumann, and Clara Schumann. There’s an amazing story there because it was sort of like a love triangle. So, 2017 is booked already. We are now booking the musicians for 2018 and deciding what the programming will be then.

I would love to bring in some young players and have them maybe for three days before the festival starts and have a mini residency where they go out into the community and do a bunch of free concerts – go to the Bridgehampton Library, the Sag Harbor Library, the community center and these would be posted and listed. People could go for just 30 minutes, walk in, listen to something and walk out. To me, music should be part of people’s lives and we haven’t gotten there yet. It’s difficult because music was taken out of public schools a couple of generations ago. It does matter when the education of music is not present anymore. People are scared about classical music. They think it’s elitist. They’re scared that they won’t know anything. I don’t care if people don’t know anything, if they clap between movements. I just want them to be open to listening to this music and feeling it. On the first concert, these young players would play with us. I love the idea of seeing a Starbucks – 11 a.m., people go get their coffee and then you have a string quartet playing for 30 minutes. It’s actually like the old days where in the old meeting places there would always be music, and people would just come and start playing.

The Spring Series will continue on Saturday, April 1st with the Brentano String Quartet, who are currently celebrating their 25th anniversary. The Quartet’s first BCMF performance will showcases quartets by Beethoven and Mendelssohn and string quartet arrangements of selections from Bach’s Art of the Fugue. The final program on Saturday, May 6th, features two of the chamber music repertoire’s gems: string sextets of Dvořák and Brahms.

Tickets range from $10 (students) to $50.

The Bridgehampton Presbyterian Church is located at 2429 Montauk Highway in Bridgehampton. For more information, call 631-537-3507 or visit www.bcmf.org.

Sign up for our weekly newsletter!

Get the top Hamptons events and latest scoop!

What's Happening in the Hamptons

Related Posts

New ColorPop Workshop Opens in Westhampton Beach This Valentine’s Day Weekend
Arts

New ColorPop Workshop Opens in Westhampton Beach This Valentine’s Day Weekend

February 10, 2026
Parrish Art Museum’s First Exhibition Explores Ecological Art, Environmental Action, and Community Collaboration
Arts

Parrish Art Museum’s First Exhibition Explores Ecological Art, Environmental Action, and Community Collaboration

February 3, 2026
Southampton Arts Center Launches New Arts Education Program in Partnership with Southampton School District
Arts

Southampton Arts Center Launches New Arts Education Program in Partnership with Southampton School District

January 27, 2026

Search Articles

No Result
View All Result

LOCAL EVENTS

Events

20
Feb
20
Feb
-
20
Feb

Art in Action (In-Person Sessions)

February 20 @ 11:00 AM - February 20 @ 12:00 PM
Parrish Art Museum
20
Feb
20
Feb
-
22
Feb

Sunset Theater Presents: Wuthering Heights

February 20 @ 02:00 PM - February 22 @ 09:00 PM
Sunset Theater - 2 Brook Rd, Westhampton Beach, NY 11978
20
Feb
20
Feb
-
20
Feb

Wölffer’s Candlelight Friday with Tom Wardle

February 20 @ 04:00 PM - February 20 @ 06:00 PM
Wolffer Estate Vineyard 139 Sagg Road, Sagaponack, NY 11962
20
Feb
20
Feb
-
20
Feb

WORD: Idenity – An Evening Celebrating Writers and the Written Word

February 20 @ 06:00 PM - February 20 @ 07:30 PM
The Church, 48 Madison Street, Sag Harbor, NY 11963
20
Feb
20
Feb
-
20
Feb

CountryLIVE

February 20 @ 08:00 PM - February 20 @ 10:00 PM
The Suffolk 118 E Main Street Riverhead, NY 11901
Load more listings
Next Post
Your St. Paddy’s Day Party Guests Will Be After These Mixology Pots Of Gold

Your St. Paddy's Day Party Guests Will Be After These Mixology Pots Of Gold

  • Top Hamptons Events This Weekend!⁠
⁠
🍷 Wölffer’s Candlelight Friday with Tom Wardle⁠
🗓 Friday, February 20th | 4PM⁠
📍 Wölffer Estate, Sagaponack⁠
Kick off the weekend with Wölffer’s rosé and live music by Tom Wardle.⁠
⁠
⛸ Katy’s Courage Fundraiser at Buckskill Winter Club⁠
🗓 Saturday, February 21st | 9AM–10PM⁠
📍 Buckskill Winter Club, East Hampton⁠
A full day of fun, community, and giving back.⁠
⁠
🦊 Animals in Winter Program⁠
🗓 Saturday, February 21st | 2–2:30PM⁠
📍 Quogue Wildlife Refuge, Quogue⁠
Learn how animals survive the winter season.⁠
⁠
🎭 Theatre Live: A Streetcar Named Desire⁠
🗓 Saturday, February 21st | 7–10:38PM⁠
📍 Guild Hall, East Hampton⁠
A front-row seat to the timeless masterpiece directed by Benedict Andrews.⁠
⁠
🎨 Drawing Workshop with Paton Miller⁠
🗓 Saturday, February 21st | 2–3PM⁠
📍 Southampton Arts Center, Southampton⁠
Artist and curator Paton Miller hosts a creative workshop for kids.⁠
⁠
🎳 90’s at 9⁠
🗓 Saturday, February 21st | 9–11:30PM⁠
📍 The Clubhouse Hamptons, East Hampton⁠
Bowl, dance, and dine while a DJ spins your favorite ‘90s hits.⁠
⁠
🎶 Lou Dog at The Stephen Talkhouse⁠
🗓 Saturday, February 21st | 8–10PM⁠
📍 The Stephen Talkhouse, Amagansett⁠
Sing along to all your favorite Sublime songs.⁠
⁠
🎬 Wuthering Heights⁠
🗓 February 20th–23rd⁠
📍 Sunset Theater, Westhampton Beach⁠
Margot Robbie and Jacob Elordi star in the iconic love story adapted from Emily Brontë’s 1847 novel.⁠
⁠
🍇 Long Island Wine Showcase⁠
🗓 Thursday, February 26th | 6:30PM⁠
📍 Cowfish, Hampton Bays⁠
Taste wines from six award-winning Long Island vineyards paired with delicious hors d’oeuvres.⁠
⁠
Check out more events at Hamptons.com (Link in Bio)⁠
⁠
#wolffer #hamptons #weekend #stephentalkhouse #katyscourage
  • Palm Tree Music Festival, the ultimate Hamptons party, returns for its sixth edition on Saturday, June 27th at the Shinnecock Reservation in Southampton. Known for blending world-class music with laid-back luxury,  the one‑day festival once again brings together an electric lineup and an atmosphere that captures summer at its absolute best. This year’s lineup includes headlining performances by Palm Tree Crew Co-Founder Kygo, The Chainsmokers, and Disco Lines, alongside additional sets by It’s Murph, Xandra, Will Sass, and Brooke Brazelton.⁠
⁠
“The Hamptons has always been at the heart of the Palm Tree Music Festival story,” said Palm Tree Crew Co-Founder Myles Shear. “The energy from the fans and the local community makes this show truly special. We’re thrilled to return for our sixth year and have a lot in store to take this experience to new heights for another unforgettable celebration.”⁠
⁠
The Hamptons return follows a milestone year for Palm Tree Crew. After a sold‑out fifth Hamptons edition, the brand expanded globally with debut festivals in St. Tropez and Sardinia, new U.S. destinations in Montecito and Napa Valley, and the announcement of its first Asia festival in Singapore set for April 2026. @palmtreefestival⁠
⁠
Read the full article at Hamptons.com (Link in Bio)⁠
.⁠
.⁠
.⁠
.⁠
.⁠
#palmtreemusicfestival #hamptons #southampton #kygo
  • 💘 Valentine’s Weekend in the Hamptons 💘⁠
⁠
🎨 Take Flight Art Show⁠
📅 Friday, February 13, 2026⁠
📍 Java Nations, 112 Maple Ln, Bridgehampton⁠
View local art by local artists while sipping Java Nation’s decadent coffee.⁠
⁠
🎬 A Special Screening of The Princess Bride⁠
📅 Saturday, February 14, 2026⁠
⏰ 7PM–8:40PM⁠
📍 Guild Hall, 158 Main St, East Hampton⁠
End the perfect Valentine’s Day with a special screening of this beloved classic.⁠
⁠
🦭 Seal Cruise in Southampton⁠
📅 Sunday, February 15, 2026⁠
⏰ 12PM–2PM⁠
📍 Stony Brook Marine Station, 8 Little Neck Rd, Southampton⁠
Join a Coastal Research and Education Society of Long Island scientist for a 2-hour expedition focused on seals in Shinnecock Bay.⁠
⁠
🎶 Latin-Inspired Dinner & Live Music at The Clubhouse Hamptons⁠
📅 Friday, February 14, 2026⁠
⏰ 7PM–10PM⁠
📍 The Clubhouse, 174 Daniels Hole Rd, East Hampton⁠
Enjoy a $40 prix-fixe dinner with live band Conjunto La Herencia. At 10PM, dance the night away with Nick Corredor and Smith Jozy at the DJ booth.⁠
⁠
💌 Dear Jack, Dear Louise⁠
📅 February 13–15, 2026⁠
⏰ 2PM & 7PM⁠
📍 Southampton Arts Center, 25 Jobs Lane, Southampton⁠
The perfect gift for your loved one—experience a moving WWII love story.⁠
⁠
🍷 Valentine’s Sip & Paint at Wölffer⁠
📅 Sunday, February 15, 2026⁠
⏰ 3PM⁠
📍 Wölffer Estate, 139 Sagg Rd, Sagaponack⁠
Create your own Valentine’s Day card and enjoy a complimentary glass of Rosé.⁠
⁠
🥾 Amsterdam State Park Hike⁠
📅 Saturday, February 14, 2026⁠
⏰ 10AM–11:30AM⁠
📍 Montauk Point State Blvd (Route 27), turn right at the Amsterdam sign (across from Deep Hollow Ranch)⁠
Explore Amsterdam State Park with a short, scenic hike.⁠
⁠
✨ Tag your Valentine (or your weekend crew) and make plans!⁠
⁠
#valentinesday #hamptons #weekend #wine #rosé
  • This past month, @thequoguewildliferefuge held their annual Light The Night Winter Walk. People braved the cold and enjoyed a relaxing illuminated walk and warmed up  with @hamptoncoffee hot chocolate. The refuge also invited people to explore their Ice Harvesting exhibit. #quoguewildliferefuge #nightwalk #quogue #lightthenight #winter
  • ⁠
We’re all bombarded with New Year, New Me posts on Instagram and TikTok as health takes center stage in everyone’s 2026 goals. Many choose to participate in “Dry January,” a challenge that encourages participants to take a break from alcohol. Non-alcoholic alternatives are also a great option for those who want to join the bar crawl without the stigma of holding a water bottle. With help from our friends at Kidd Squid Brewery, we sampled a variety of options at their tasting room in Sag Harbor. Here are our top picks.⁠
⁠
1. Wölffer Estate: Spring in a Bottle Rose⁠
⁠
You can’t go anywhere in the Hamptons without grabbing a glass of Wolffer’s iconic Rosé. Don’t fret! You can still enjoy the iconic, vibrant, fruity taste with their non-alcoholic version. ⁠
⁠
Tasting notes: It’s no surprise that it is a favorite in The Hamptons. The lack of alcohol doesn’t affect the rich, elegant rose, peach, and apple notes. This is a delicious, fresh, sparkling rosé.⁠
⁠
⁠
2. Hedlum⁠
⁠
Is a locally owned company that produces crispy non-alcoholic beers that perfectly mirror their alcoholic counterparts. I tried their Easy Down Lager, and it was perfect!⁠
⁠
Tasting notes: It pours out like a beer with a nice frothy top layer. It is crisp and smooth and reminds me of a Sapporo.⁠
⁠
⁠
3. Aplós⁠
⁠
Another locally owned company that produces non-alcoholic drinks crafted by award-winning mixologists. I fell in love with their credo, “Life should be sipped slowly.” I tried their Chili Margarita and loved the sparkling citrus notes with a bit of a kick. It’s infused with adaptogens and nootropics, which are thought to reduce stress, elevate your mood, and overall just deliver that perfect chill for any social setting.⁠
⁠
Tasting notes: Crisp and tangy, with very strong citrus notes, this reminded me of kombucha. It was very refreshing.⁠
⁠
#dryjanuary #nonalcoholic #aplos  #hedlum #springinabottle
  • Experience seals in their natural environment! The New York State Office of Parks, Recreation and Historic Preservation is pleased to announce that Montauk Point State Park will host a series of hikes to observe wintering seals. Beginning in January 2026 and continuing through April 2026, a State Park naturalist will lead visitors on a scenic beach walk to an area where up to five species of seals can be observed. ⁠
⁠
2026 Seal program dates and times are as follows:⁠
⁠
Saturday, January 31st: 11am – 1pm⁠
⁠
Sunday, February 1st: 12pm – 2pm⁠
⁠
Sunday, February 15th: 11am – 1pm⁠
⁠
Saturday, February 28th: 10am – 12pm⁠
⁠
Sunday, March 1st: 11am – 1pm⁠
⁠
Saturday, March 14th: 10am – 12pm⁠
⁠
Sunday, March 15th: 11am – 1pm⁠
⁠
Saturday, March 28th: 10am – 12pm⁠
⁠
Sunday, March 29th: 11am – 1pm⁠
⁠
Saturday, April 11th: 9am – 11am⁠
⁠
Sunday, April 12th: 9am – 11am⁠
⁠
Saturday, April 18th: 2pm – 4pm⁠
⁠
Sunday, April 19th:  2pm – 4pm⁠
⁠
To register, call the Montauk Downs at 631-668-5000 (ext. 0).⁠
⁠
#seals #hike #montauk #sealwatching #recreation
Facebook Twitter Instagram Youtube
Hamptons.com

Saunders Broadcasting Corp.

Phone: 631-613-8440
Email: [email protected]
Facebook: Facebook.com/HamptonsOnline
Twitter: @Hamptons
Instagram: @HamptonsOnline

About Us | Contact Us

Hamptons.com

  • Lifestyle
  • Events
  • Real Estate
  • Live Cameras
  • Public WiFi

Subscribe

Sign up for our weekly newsletter!

Get the top Hamptons events and latest scoop!

© 2025 Hamptons.com | All rights reserved
Saunders Broadcasting Corp.
Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | About Us | Contact Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Spotlight Magazine
  • Lifestyle
    • Featured
    • Entertainment
    • Arts
    • Community
    • Dining
    • Recreation
    • Trending
  • Guides
  • Events
    • Events Calendar
    • Post an Event
    • Gallery
  • Real Estate
    • Real Estate Features
    • Hamptons Real Estate Market Data
    • Search Real Estate
      • Open Houses
      • Search Sales
      • Search Rentals
    • Title Insurance
    • Happening In The Hamptons Podcast
  • Live Cameras
    • All Live Cameras
    • Live Weather Cams
    • Amagansett, Atlantic Avenue Beach
    • Bridgehampton, West Scott Cameron Beach
    • East Hampton Village, Main Beach
    • East Hampton Village, Main Street
    • East Hampton Village, Newtown Lane
    • Hampton Bays, Ponquogue Beach
    • Hampton Bays, Ponquogue Bridge
    • Hampton Bays, Shinnecock Fishing Dock
    • Hampton Bays, Tiana Beach
    • Long Island Aquarium | Coral Reef
    • Long Island Aquarium | Penguins
    • Long Island Aquarium | Shark Tank
    • Montauk, Downtown Circle
    • Montauk, Lars Simenson Skatepark
    • Montauk, Gin Beach & Inlet
    • Montauk, Sunset Beach & Inlet
    • Sagaponack, Sagg Main Beach
    • Sag Harbor, Bay Street
    • Sag Harbor, Foster Memorial Beach
    • Sag Harbor, Long Wharf Marina
    • Sag Harbor, Sag Harbor Bay
    • Sag Harbor, Windmill Beach & Bay
    • Shelter Island, South Ferry
    • Southampton, 39A to Montauk Hwy Merge
    • Southampton, Conscience Point Marina
    • Southampton Village, Coopers Beach
    • Southampton Village, Main Street (North)
    • Southampton Village, Main Street (Hildreths)
    • Westhampton, Pike’s Beach
    • Westhampton Village, Main Street (East)
    • Westhampton Village, Rogers Beach
  • Public WiFi
    • Public WiFi Map
    • Public Wi-Fi Support

© 2025 Hamptons.com | All rights reserved
Saunders Broadcasting Corp.
Terms & Conditions | Privacy Policy | About Us | Contact Us