Month: January 2011
Brace’s Rock Eats Lobster Traps For Breakfast
Things To Do- Researching Alone at Sea, an illustrated talk with author John Morris
Researching Alone at Sea, an illustrated talk with author John Morris
The Cape Ann Museum is pleased to present Researching Alone at Sea, an illustrated talk with author and Gloucester native John Morris on Saturday, January 15 at 3:00 p.m. Morris will be discussing how a personal journey to learn more about his ancestors led him to the Cape Ann Museum Archives. This program is free and open to the public. Reservations are required. For reservations please call 978-283-0455, x11.
John N. Morris’s grandfather, Steve Olsson, was a Gloucester doryman who disappeared at sea without a trace in 1935. Olsson and his dorymate lost contact with their schooner and were never seen again. Morris set out on a quest to discover what might have happened to his grandfather and what a doryman’s life was like. The result—after ten years of exhaustive research and dozens of interviews—is the most complete and authoritative history of the Gloucester fishing industry ever written. This epic highlights life at sea, life at home, and the industry that connected them, growing and then fading over more than 300 years. Alone at Sea is illustrated with over seventy period photographs and maps, many of which came from the Cape Ann Museum archives.
John N. Morris, Ph.D., is the grandson of one of the last Gloucester dorymen lost at sea. A native of Gloucester himself, John is descended from a line of fishermen going back to the seventeenth century. His father was a fish cutter, his mother a fish packer. Director Emeritus of the Institute for Aging Research at Hebrew Senior Life in Boston, a Harvard-affiliated hospital and research program, John has published widely in his field. A board member of the group preserving one of the last surviving Gloucester schooners, Adventure, he now lives in Tyngsboro, Massachusetts.
Funding for this program was made possible through a grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, which promotes excellence, access, education and diversity in the arts, humanities and interpretive sciences, in order to improve the quality of life for all Massachusetts residents and to contribute to the economic vitality of our communities.
The Cape Ann Museum is located at 27 Pleasant Street in Gloucester. Hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., and Sundays from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. The Museum is closed during the month of February, on Mondays, and on major holidays. Admission is $8.00 adults, $6.00 Cape Ann residents, seniors and students. Children under 12 and Museum members are free. Admission for Cape Ann residents is free during the month of January. The Museum is wheelchair accessible. For more information please call: (978) 283-0455. Additional information can be found online at www.capeannmuseum.org
Whoever is not living on the Edge is taking up too much room

This poem was written by my dear friend, Bina Benestante. It epitomizes life on Cape Ann to me, so I wanted to share it with all of you. You have to read all the way to the end to catch the magic.
EDGE
(“Whoever is not living on the edge, is taking up too much room!”)
By Sabina Troger Benestante
Out on the edge again
One step away: a deep, steep abyss,
Yawning before my feet.
I’m standing on a towering cliff top,
High above the sea.
Gusts of cold wind whip my face
Spraying white foam on roaring waves
Forever breaking, breaking at the rough rock’s edge.
A carnivorous bird is shooting like an arrow
Down at some hapless creature of the sea
As suddenly the clouds rip open, like a ghoulish wound
A sunbeam crashes through, furrowing
A narrow band of fiery lava
Into the waves, stretching as far as the horizon
The wind is howling…
Other people exist in soft, lush valleys, I complain,
Above them clear blue skies, sweet air, a feathery cloud.
Completely cozy, they listen to the willows’ whispers,
Growing around a calm and shallow pond
Maybe next to a brook, sheltered by elms,
With flimsy butterflies, dancing above unruffled meadows
Of fragrant summer grass…
While I forever find myself just barely hanging in there
My nails like claws, clutching bare rock, and by my teeth’s skin merely holding on: Why me?
Yeah, God answered. But you have the view.
City Hall Tower Series Part III
89th Annual Chamber Dinner Dance Saturday Jan 8th
Magnolia Polar Bear Swim

The day started with the GMG crowd meeting for morning coffee, the I went off to the 2011 Magnolia Polar Beach Swim. Â This years swim was a fundraiser for the Greater Boston Food Bank. Â Thank to all that participated in the event and helping make a difference in 2011.
Rockport Music Announces Winter/Spring Events in Shalin Liu Performance Center
Rockport Music is pleased to announce its 2011 Winter/Spring season, featuring over 25 concerts and events in the beautiful, oceanfront Shalin Liu Performance Center in Rockport, Massachusetts (Boston Globe – Best of the New 2010!). An intimate 330-seat venue, the Performance Center is unique in America, as it features stunning views of the Atlantic Ocean through a floor-to-ceiling glass window that serves as the backdrop to the stage. From January through May audiences will enjoy the finest classical chamber music, outstanding jazz with faculty from the renowned Berklee College of Music, a Celtic fiddler, an Austrian cabaret artist, legendary rock performers from the 1960s, high definition (HD) live broadcasts from the Metropolitan Opera and HD broadcasts from England’s famed National Theatre.
Thank You Guys
It was great to share such a great time with so many of you at the Rocky Neck Plunge Yesterday.
What a way to ring in the new year.
Remember for the rest of our lives we can always say we did it-together!
According to the Farmer’s Almanac,
Cut Hair to Retard Growth, Mow to Retard Growth, Castrate Farm Animals, Harvest, Pick Apples and Pears, Wean, Potty Train, Perform Demolition, Wash Wooden Floors, Wash Windows, Start Diet to Lose Weight, Advertise to Sell, Buy a Car
So if you are motivated, I hope this list helps you with your chores! 🙂
By the way, I’m starting the 365 Project where you post a photo everyday for 2011. If you took a picture yesterday, you can get started too! I was going to do this on my own, but I think doing the Project will keep me motivated. Here is yesterday’s post 
Click in the photo and it will take you to the project. Let me know if you are going to do it! Â —Sharon
Diane Britton Photo
Rocky Neck Plunge Slide Show From Wendie Demuth
Kevin Henry Crushin On Sista Felicia’s Rosa Rugosa Jelly
YMCA SKI/SNOWBOARD TRIPS – Jan 8, Feb 12 & Mar 12
YMCA SKI/SNOWBOARD TRIPS – Jan 8, Feb 12 & Mar 12
The YMCA is hosting a Ski/Snowboard Trips for grades 6 and up; younger children may participate if accompanied by a parent. Trip fee is $70 per trip and provides for Lift Ticket, Motorcoach Transportation, Equipment Rentals, Snowtubing and Lesson Tips.
Saturday January 8: & Saturday March 12: Pat’s Peak. Saturday February 12: GUNSTOCK. Transportation is provided with drop-off and pick-up at the Rockport Teen Center and the YMCA. Space is limited – Pre-registration required. For more info, please call Rick Doucette at 978-283-0470 x1702 or visit www.cayteenandcamp.org
Rocky Neck Plunge 2011
Rocky Neck Plunge Video From Marty Del Vecchio
Rocky Neck Plunge and Art Rock Kindness
That today was the annual New Year’s Day Rocky Neck Plunge sponsored by Imagine of Rocky Neck.  If you missed it, you can see a little of it here. If you were there, now you can relive it (assuming you’ve warmed up enough to want to). Great fun was had by all. You can click on the link below to see some video, since I haven’t figured out how to embed it into the post yet.
Also, when Paul Frontiero posted his last Art Rock location at Good Harbor Beach, for the first time, I knew where it was (along with at least 5,000 other people). I wanted to go look for it, but the storm had started, so I let it go and went out shooting around Annisquam instead. Today at the Rocky Neck Plunge, Ed Collard, who had gone and found the Good Harbor Beach Art Rock, presented it to me as a gift. Ed and Paul, may your kindness be returned to you a hundredfold. I have to say that the people of Cape Ann have proven in my short time here, to be the kindest people I have ever met. Here is my precious Art Rock.

Happy New Year
Some Boston fireworks and New Year wishes for everyone here on Cape Ann (or wherever you are right now reading GMG).
Photo by E.J. Lefavour of Boston’s 375th Celebration fireworks
Kindness

Did you know?
That millionaire philanthropist, and 10th generation Gloucester inhabitant, Roger Ward Babson (1875-1967), provided charitable assistance to unemployed stonecutters in Gloucester during the Great Depression, by commissioning them to carve inspirational inscriptions on approximately two dozen boulders in the area surrounding Dogtown Common. This boulder is the one I chose for January’s image in my 2011 Dogtown and Babson Boulders calendar because I think the message is the most important one to start out any new year with. If we all resolve to spend the New Year performing random acts of kindness, what an amazing year 2011 will be.
E.J. Lefavour
http://www.khanstudiointernational.com/gallery_dogtownandbabsonboulders.htm









