Community Stuff Monday

Leo Maguire writes-

Stop at the Crafters Cottage at 128 eastern ave (RT133) Essex pick up some hand made quilted things made by local people they also had some hand made christmas ornaments an some american girl doll clothes . Maybe some of your blog readers could use a shopping idea. Ive got some from your blog before. Thank you Leo

North Shore United Way Op Ed 

Why do you give?

By Margo Casey

Executive Director, North Shore United Way

I spend a lot of time throughout the year asking and encouraging others to be generous.  During this hectic season of spending and giving, I took the time to step back and reflect a bit on why people are generous?  Why do people give?  And, in particular – since it is my job – why do people give to the North Shore United Way (NSUW)?  We asked some of our donors those questions recently. As we all think about our own giving over the holidays, I wanted to share some of your neighbors’ thoughts on generosity.

Helps my neighbors.

Many who try to “buy local” also want to “give local.” The North Shore United Way is the best way I know, one donor told us, to offer a safety net of resources to our neighbors in need.  Someday I might need the help, another said.  While many of us struggle to get through our gift list, people in our own community struggle to meet the basics like housing, heat, healthy meals for their family and affordable childcare.  Needs are growing, while government funds are slashed. Many programs that offer help couldn’t exist without NSUW support.

Does my homework.

How do we sort through all the worthy causes that crowd our mailboxes, flash across our smart phones, or interrupt our dinners with a recorded call? Especially at this time of year!  Many donors told us that the NSUW is a “smart way to give,” because life is busy.  The NSUW takes the time – engaging knowledgeable community volunteers – to diligently evaluate programs to ensure that donor contributions are turned into effective service delivery.  No one agency can address all needs. The NSUW network provides support in many areas, including food pantries, rental and heat assistance, job search, health care, child care and in-school counseling programs for students, parents and teachers.

Brings people together.

People want to give, but they also want to connect with other like-minded folks in acts of “collective generosity.”  NSUW recently launched a new initiative called Women in Action, bringing together more than 80 women and men in just its first educational breakfast to address childhood obesity and increase access to healthy food and activity for low-income families. This powerhouse group has already raised more than $20,000 to help their neighbors on the North Shore.  The new fund will expand upon NSUW funded programs like The Open Door that brings neighborhoods together while offering fresh, healthy food through its “mobile markets.”

Can contribute more than just money.

Generosity comes in many forms. More people of multiple generations want to contribute and get involved, and they don’t just want to write checks. More than 100 NSUW volunteers give their time and talent each year to serve as board members, rigorously evaluate the programs NSUW supports, and raise money.   The NSUW Family Community Service Project brings together dozens of families to work on short-term volunteer projects – a great way to teach our children about giving. NSUW does more than collect checks; it supports and provides opportunities for collective action.

Engaging generosity is our job at NSUW and that’s particularly satisfying this time of year when I hear why people support the NSUW. I know, too, that generosity comes in all sizes.  All gifts – whether $10, $100 or $10,000 – go a long way to serving those in need.  A contribution to the NSUW is not just a gift for the holiday season or year-end tax deduction.  Your generosity now serves needs that know no season.

Join me – and your neighbors – in collectively making the world and our North Shore community a better place for everyone.

Margo Casey is the executive director of the North Shore United Way.  You can donate at http://www.nsuw.org, by sending a check to NSUW at 248 Cabot St., Beverly, MA 01915 or by calling the office at 978-922-3966.

Santa and Mrs Claus visit Rockport during the North Shore holiday toy
drive. They were so happy they skipped down Dock square.

Photos from Anthony Marks-

The Pledge To Plunge Updated List, A Food Drive and A Chance To Win A $100 Gift Card To The Azorean

Y’all know all the cool people will be taking the Plunge New Year’s Day at Rocky Neck.  Here’s our list of people who have pledged to plunge-
Optional to meet at Passports at 10AM beforehand and Plunge At Oaks Cove Beach New Years Day at Noon!
I can tell you it is incredibly invigorating and the very best way to start your year. It sets you up to overcome a fear and once you do it the rest of the year you feel like you can and will do anything!

Here’s the way this list works- you commit to plunge ahead of time, get your name on the list and show up, whoever plunges we pick a name out of the people who pledged out of a hat and that person wins a $100 Gift Card To The Azorean that Our Terry Weber donated to the cause!
If you pledge to plunge and then bail out for ANY REASON, that gives us free license to ridicule you for the entire year!

Is your name on here?  If not comment on this post and I’ll add you to the list of plungers to join us!

Joey C, Donna Ardizzoni, Rick Moore, Ed Collard, Paul Morrison, Rick Paolillo, Melissa Cox, Dr. Ray Cahill, Colleen Apostolos-Marsh, Lotus Marsh, Lukas and Lasse Struppe, Owen, Henry, and Jon Hardy, Alexandra Rhinelander, Charles Du Deaubien Gaspien (or something like that), Ericka Hyam, Steve LeBlanc, Jamie Verga, Kevin Ryan, Patrick Ryan, Denny Cunningham, Carolyn Kirk, Bill Kirk, Amanda Nash,Tom Robinson Cox, Mike and Eva DiLascio, Amandacakes and Beasley, Keara the chick with the heavy green eye shadow (I forgot her last name), Vickie Van Ness,Greg Bover, Brian O’Connor, Skip Montello,Kane Oshiro,Barry “Cuda” Pollack, Charles Rodgers, the bald guy that was second on the list, Terry Weber. If you told me you were plunging last night and you don’t see your name please alert me so I can add you. I somehow misplaced “the list” we complied last night at the XMAS party.

Last year’s plunge photos-

Click the picture below to see the slide show from Manny Simoes

Well Carol McCarthy is organizing a food drive for the Open Door Food Pantry.  here’s the deets-

Just a heads up that I am organizing a food drive the day of the Plunge… PLunge will be at Noon and the food drive is to benefit The Open Door..  They are in real need this year and Its time we give back on the Neck..   I asking everyone to bring what is needed by the Pantry.. I emailed Judy Cox and she is posting in the newsletter this week.. We need to make a HUGE push for the food pantry… What is desperately needed!!!!   Barrels will be set up at the entrance of Oak Cove Beach for the non-perishables.. Thanks Joey..

Cathy McCarthy  8978 317 2352

TUNA, Peanut Butter, Pasta Sauce, 100% Juice, Baking Items, Breakfast Cereal…

West End Walk

WEST END WALK

 

Her shadow preceded her by many feet

as she whisked up Main Street in the still West End,

strongly backlit by the sun low in the sky.

 

The glare also gave brief life to the streetlights

and they glowed as if they were old gas lamps, not

those a modern day designer has copied.

 

Facades and doorways and holiday wreaths were

accented by the intense low rays of the

same sun that shined when these buildings were first built.

 

It seemed odd to me that a person should be

moving so quickly through a momentary

scene that the strobe- light sun sought to freeze in time.

 

Marty Luster

More pics from the Christmas Party of the year

Good Morning’s Christmas Party at Fred Bodin’s on Main Street.  We all had such a great time and thanking everyone who made this the PARTY OF THE YEAR….

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Smiles

A Party to Remember GMG Christmas Party Pics From Fred Bodin

Paul Morrison, Sushi King Dan Leahy, and Father Matthew Green attack the sushi brought by Mark McDonough from Lattitude 43. R Duck doesn’t like sushi.

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A great crowd  of 100+ at the GMG Christmas party at Bodin Historic Photo

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Theo MacGregor and Jerry Oppenheimer, FOB’s and FOG’s (Friends Of the Gallery)

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Sally Jackson, Brewmistress of the Boston Brewing Company (Sam Adams) and husband look at an 1884 map.

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An indication of a really good party- and this was only half way through.

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Fredrik D. Bodin

Bodin Historic Photo

info@BodinHistoricPhoto.com

Like us on Facebook- http://www.facebook.com/BodinHistoricPhoto

Did You Know? (Jacques Cousteau in Lanesville)

In 1943, Jacques-Yves Cousteau and Emile Gagnan invented a system that would revolutionize the world of deep-sea exploration and push diving into the mainstream, allowing people around the world to become exposed to the magical oceanic wilderness they had been unable to experience before. The system is known as the “Aqua-lung.”  Jacques-Yves Cousteau, invented and tested the “Aqua Lung” SCUBA regulator in Lanesville. 

E.J. Lefavour

Christmas Whimsy

Vintage Christmas Decorations ~ snowflake, cupcake tree, circus Noël , nutcracker frog prince, and music box Santa

Happy Holidays!

gimmesound music lineup & new give-away ~ Check Peter’s spanish


We have a new give-away starting Monday (12/19/11).  Here is how it works:

  • There will be a trivia question in every lineup video (Monday – Friday)
  • After you see Friday’s Video and you have all the answers
  • click the ANSWER LINK under the video to give us your answers
  • The FIRST person with the correct answers wins the prize.  A Jalapenos $30 Gift Certificate plus 4 jars of their signature sauces.  Its a great prize that I want to win but I can’t so GOOD LUCK to you!

Get today’s live music lineup and check out Gloucester’s best local music!

Where’s Kory?  Those of you who have been following us know that he moved back to Gloucester from LA having worked in the film business.  We were lucky to have him join us for a couple of months.  Now he’s got a big, fancy associate producer job in Boston and no longer has time for us little folks.  Good Luck Kory!

The Lobstah Crackah sampler

I went to the Friday performance of the Lobstah Crackah at The Annie.  It’s an ingenious new Gloucester seafood-flavored take on the Christmas classic The Nutcracker.  It’s not the Russian Ballet, but there is enthusiasm and humor – and live accordion music accompanying the score!

Here are some clips and snapshots to give you a feel for the production.

  • Dec. 15-Jan. 1
  • Thursdays-Sundays 7PM & 2PM Sunday matinees
  • $15 suggested donation
  • located at the corner of Rogers and Washington Street, in the Blackburn Tavern building, above Giuseppe’s (entrance on Washington Street)

Happy Feet from the Good Morning Christmas Party..

What a great time at the party last night at Fred Bodin..  lots of fun, food, drink and good friends….

here is a tease for more to come

March of the Penguins by Melissa Cox

Melissa Cox’s creation

December 17, 2011 party 013

Guess who

Gloucester Gig Rowers Club 7:30 AM row last Tuesday From Janet Rice

Janet Rice submits-

Gloucester Gig Rowers Club 7:30 AM row last Tuesday. -Brrrrr!

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Yeah, you can do this kind of stuff anywhere.  Nothing special at all. Winking smile

Joey Ciaramitaro, a blogger from Gloucester, Mass., called it “ridiculously disfigured” and “horribly disproportionate.”

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Yeah, that pretty much sums it up.

New York Times, Front Page.  It’s What We Do.

Click here for the entire story

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Excerpt-

When Jonesport joined Beals to make a lobster trap tree on the island for the first time last year — it was 56 feet tall — Joey Ciaramitaro, a blogger from Gloucester, Mass., called it “ridiculously disfigured” and “horribly disproportionate.”

Mr. Ciaramitaro said he preferred his hometown’s tree, which stands about 35 feet, illuminating a plaza in the fishing city’s downtown. Each year, a local arts group invites children to decorate buoys as ornaments, which are auctioned off to raise money for the group. There are 353 on the tree this year.

“I think ours has a lot more soul in it than the other trees,” Mr. Ciaramitaro said. “It’s not just a bunch of traps all stacked up.”

Gloucester is believed to have started the tradition of the large lobster trap tree when it built its first one in 2001. Janice Lufkin Shea, who was a Gloucester shopkeeper at the time, was frustrated that Main Street had no holiday display. She saw a tiny lobster trap tree in someone’s yard and thought a bigger version would be perfect for downtown.

Legend has it that when people in Rockland, Me., learned of it, they decided they had to have one, too.

Click here for the rest of the story at The New York Times Website

I mean was there ever any question?  Last year’s fair and balanced poll proved out the numbers without a shadow of a doubt- the Gloucester Lobster Trap Tree Is Clearly the Most Beautiful.   Especially when you factor in the love and care from Art Haven and 353 sweet children who pulled together to adorn our tree with community messages and incredible art work.  You see, Gloucester isn’t just one dimensional.  Sure we have a great fishing community but it is so much more.  The Arts, The Food Scene, The Literary Scene, we’re not just a one dimensional fishing town.  We’ve got it all!

The Gloucester Lobster Trap Tree Has Been Constructed and Adorned With Buoys Hand Painted With Love and Special Messages Of Peace, Joy and Hope By The Children Of Gloucester.  And then there are the sterile generic boring trees erected by prisoners of the Maine criminal system who have been incarcerated for unspeakable crimes against the elderly and sick and destitute.

We’ve Got God On Our Side.  The Results Of The Poll Were Inevitable.

The numbers don’t lie, here’s the poll-

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Nice That The Bean’s Buoy Was Featured In The Article-

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Here’s the Bean painting her buoy last week at Art Haven-

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Community Stuff Sunday

Ralph Bates, of Manchester, Heats Things Up at The Open Door

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Julie LaFontaine writes-

Hi Joey,
I am excited to share some news with you and the GMG readers! The Open Door received a generous donation of $8.000 from Ralph Bates, of Manchester, to replace and and install a double-convection oven for the Community Meals kitchen. The oven is a Turbofan Convection oven that will speed up cooking times in the kitchen and make meal time more efficient.

This generous gift came at a time when the ovens that had served the kitchen for more than fifteen years finally gave out.
"Ralph Bates has a quick wit and a heart of gold," said Julie LaFontaine, "Through the years, he has shown up just when we needed him most."
Over the years Ralph Bates has also provided a commercial refrigerator and a gas range for The Open Door’s kitchen. More than 40 groups from the community use the kitchen each year between 15,000 and 18,000 meals are prepared in the kitchen each year to guests needing food and companionship.
Dressed in a Red Sox hat and jacket, Ralph Bates joked as he posed for his photo between Kenn Taber, the Community Meals manager, and Julie LaFontaine, executive director, but he was serious when he said, "It just makes me feel good to know I am helping others."

The mission of The Open Door is to alleviate the impact of hunger in our community. We use practical strategies to connect people to good food, to advocate on behalf of those in need, and to engage others in the work of building food security.

Pictured left to right: Kenn Taber, The Open Door Community Meals manager, Ralph Bates, of Manchester, Julie LaFontaine, The Open Door executive director

Julie LaFontaine