• Portage Pie gets local news treatment

    In case you missed it, the family-owned Westfield business Portage Pie was in the news last week.

    Maki Becker, who covers Chautauqua County for Buffalo’s 7 News WKBW, visited the business on the day before Thanksgiving when the shop expected to sell at least 500 pies (yes, 500). While the written story is brief, there is also a video segment which includes short interviews with both customers and staff. That includes co-owner Connie Thayer, who suggests Portage Pie’s hand-rolled crusts set their baked goods apart from other pie shops. Thayer said she has customers travel from as far away as Cleveland for orders.

    If you’re interested, there’s a bit of online history to Portage Pie’s current location at 42 North Portage Road. You can read more about that here.

  • Update: Westfield Village Antique Center will remain in business

    Earlier this month I reported on the death of Laurie Wroda, owner of the Westfield Village Antique Center. Following Laurie’s death, her husband Jim announced the WVAC would close at the end of 2025.

    Well, as Lee Corso would say, not so fast! On Monday, the WVAC shared good news with their Facebook followers:

    “We are pleased to announce that after a brief reorganization under new management at the Center, there will be a FEBRUARY 2026 RE-OPENING! Many of your favorite vendors will be staying on with exciting new changes ahead also! Stay tuned for developments as they come and meanwhile, stop in to browse or chat.”

    The WVAC provided an additional update on Tuesday when it posted that Matthew Wroda Auctions (owned and run by Jim and Laurie’s son, Matthew) will continue to operate in the rear of the building and will be expanding their footprint.

    You can follow WVAC on Facebook here for additional updates.

  • Westfield Village Antique Center owner dies; business to close end of 2025

    Some sad news I spotted on the ever-helpful Westfield Facebook group: Laurie Wroda, owner of the Westfield Village Antique Center, has died, according to a post on the Center’s Facebook page. An obituary shared by the Center states Wroda died of cancer on October 28, 2025, two days before her 60th birthday.

    Laurie’s husband, Jim, posted on the Westfield Facebook page that the Center will be closing on December 30, 2025. The Center’s website states that Jim and Laurie co-founded the space, and that it hosts more than 70 vendor spaces. Jim says they owned it for nearly ten years.

    WVAC is the largest antique store in Westfield and houses a treasure trove of art, furniture, jewelry, and housewares.

    There is no word yet on what will become of the business or the space occupied by Westfield Village Antique Center, located at 58 East Main Street.

    Laurie was a supporter of the organization Golden Bond Rescue, which has launched a donation website for those looking to give in her memory.

  • Allow myself to introduce … myself

    Hi all! My name is Michael De Dora, and I’ve just launched this news blog, the Forest Park Register. For those unaware: Forest Park is a small private lakeside cottage community along Route 5 in Western New York — about an hour south of Buffalo, right on the shores of Lake Erie, just outside of a little town called Westfield.

    I should make clear up front I am not from Forest Park, or even Western NY. I’m from Long Island, and I’ve lived in New York City or adjacent to it for most of my life. So what exactly am I doing here?

    To put it simply: I married into the Walton family. Members of the Walton family first visited the park back in the 1920s — at times staying in a cottage that has now mostly collapsed into the lake — and over the years descendants have purchased several cottages.

    My first visit to the park was in 2017, and I was immediately taken in. As a boy I spent summers with my grandparents in the small towns and backwood of the Poconos. The charming little community of Forest Park brought back memories of those summers past. Kids riding their bikes on safe streets, parents relaxing and chatting in lawn chairs, people from different places and backgrounds socializing at the beach and around late night fires, and the occasional (and often entertaining) small-town drama. It clicked right away for me.

    At that time my girlfriend Jean and I were living in Washington, D.C., and I remember thinking I wanted to spend every summer in Westfield. At one point I recall not wanting to miss out on a Sunday at the lake, so I drove back to Washington, D.C. on a Monday morning at 4 a.m. so that I could enjoy Sunday but still make it to work in time.

    Fast forward two years to the COVID-19 pandemic, and Jean and I felt trapped in our one-bedroom apartment, with a lease renewal approaching. Instead of continuing to pay rent to live in a city we couldn’t enjoy, we decided to put our stuff in storage and move to Forest Park to join the Walton pandemic bubble. Just a few months later, in August 2020 Jean and I were married on the front porch of The Pines, the original Walton cottage which her grandmother purchased in the mid-1960s.

    My work being fully remote, I was now living in this new place and thinking of how I could engage with it. Some of that ended up being handyman-type work around the park. But with a career in writing and journalism, I started to realize there was very little in the way of news updates on Forest Park or Westfield NY on the internet. The only newspaper expressly dedicated to the town, the Westfield Republican, doesn’t publish online and barely publishes in print. What people knew of happenings in the area was mostly spread through word of mouth, either through personal interactions or on the What’s Happening, Westfield NY? Facebook page. While the latter is a quite active community information sharing group, I still felt a lot of interesting material was falling through the cracks.

    After nearly two years living in the park, in 2022 my wife and I moved back to NYC, but we’ve never stopped spending quality time here (indeed, I’m writing this post from The Pines). I also remain deeply interested in helping to provide updates to the Forest Park and surrounding community. If anything, my interest has grown since I’ve “left.” Maybe because I don’t live here anymore and miss the place so much.

    Enter the Forest Park Register. The aim of this blog is to ensure people in the Park, and people who care about the Park but live outside of it, are aware of the latest news and other relevant developments that might impact them. Along the way I’m hoping to tell some deeper stories, too: the history and development of Forest Park, the origins of certain cottages, the radical changes to the natural shoreline, and the future of the park, to name a few. More on that to come.

    One last thing: I’m only one person, who only lives in Forest Park on a part-time basis. And like any human, I’m not perfect. So I welcome news tips and suggestions. Got something to add? Got a question? Drop me a line at forestparkregister@gmail.com

    See you around the park!

    [Pictured: me, in front of the root ball of a tree that washed up on the beach near Forest Park during the winter of 2020]

  • Hello Forest Park!

    Welcome to this news blog dedicated to providing updates for the residents of Forest Park, a private lakeside community in Westfield, NY, and the surrounding area.

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