Did You Know (Lobster Traps)

Photo by E.J. Lefavour

Did you know A lobster trap or lobster pot is a portable trap which traps lobsters or crayfish and is used in lobster fishing. A lobster trap can hold several lobsters. Lobster traps were traditionally constructed out of wood but they are now usually plastic coated metal. An opening permits the lobster to enter a tunnel of netting. Pots are usually constructed in two parts, called the “chamber” or “kitchen”, where there is bait, and exits into the “parlour”, where it is trapped from escape. Lobster pots are usually dropped to the sea floor about a dozen at a time, and are marked by a buoy so they can be picked up later.  A piece of bait, often fish or chum, is placed inside the trap, and the traps are dropped onto the sea floor. A long rope is attached to each trap, at the end of which is a plastic or styrofoam buoy that bears the owner’s license number. The entrances to the traps are designed to be one-way entrances only. The traps are checked every other day by the fisherman and rebaited if necessary. One study indicated that lobster traps are very inefficient and allow almost all lobsters to escape.  Yet, this inefficiency also allows younger lobsters to escape and breed, thus reducing the possibility of overfishing.  In other words, we only get to eat the not very smart lobsters that couldn’t figure out how to get out of the trap.

In the 1950’s, during the Great Lobster War, my father, Willis Lefavour, and his partner, Bob Winchell, did an underwater shoot in the Damariscotta River for Salt Water Farms in Damariscotta, Maine, of lobsters entering traps.  Their photographic documentation proved the previously unknown fact that lobsters enter the trap head first.  Before that it was not known for sure how they entered.  Since lobsters swim backwards, it was thought that they could have entered either backwards or head first.  For the shoot, they used ASA 10 film and kept their light meters in mason jars.

E.J. Lefavour

www.khanstudiointernational.com

Calling All Local Artists! 2nd Annual “Messy Art Night” is Friday, February 4th

The Essex PTO is searching for local artists to participate in the second annual Messy Art Night on Friday, Feb. 4th from 5-8pm.   Do you know anyone who would enjoy sharing their talent and love of art with kids for an evening? It’s a fantastic event that’s open to the public.  I’ve attached a brief summary that you can forward on to people who might be interested.  Thanks for the help and I hope you will come to the event.  It’s so much fun!  — Jess

MESSY ART NIGHT INVITATION–here are the details:

It is time for the second annual Messy Art Night in Essex on Feb 4th!   Last year’s event was a huge success.  Over fifteen local artists showed off their work to 150 excited kids and parents, taught them to try new techniques and helped them have fun making their own art.  It was amazing!  We hope you will join us this year!

We have two goals for the night:

  • To publicize the vibrant art world in and around Cape Ann
  • To inspire Essex residents to create their own art by trying a variety of artistic mediums and techniques.

This year, Messy Art Night is scheduled Friday, Feb 4th from 5-8pm. All of the festivities will be held in the cafeteria and hallways of Essex Elementary School.  We expect 200 people to attend and move freely from station to station talking with artists and trying out a variety of techniques. The price for the evening will be $5 per person, which we expect to cover our costs.

If you would like to participate this year, please let me know before January 14th. Also, if you know of any other artists whom we should invite, please let me know.  We would love to expand our offerings!  If you have any questions, please feel free to email jyurwitz@gmail.com or call me at 978-768-0142.  Thank you for your interest!

Jess Yurwitz Essex PTO President

My Year In Review as a GMG Author

 

One Year ago this Month I started posting on GMG.

It’s been an interesting year. Sometimes an idea for a post comes easy other times it’s hard as hell. Joey brought me on board to bring a little edge to GMG and take some heat off him when he “F”s up. We’ve had a few “moments”, but he learned to deal with my meltdowns pretty well.

But I did warn him in first official post. 

https://goodmorninggloucester.wordpress.com/2010/01/04/joeys-invitation-he-may-soon-regret/

Here’s another one of my first posts praising Joey’s Devotion to GMG.

Enjoy!

Repost from January 2010;

You Gotta Love Him!

No Matter What He’s Doing,

Joey’s Always Working Hard To Bring You Great Content!

Thanks Joey!

https://goodmorninggloucester.wordpress.com/2010/02/02/you-gotta-love-him/

 

Ice Cold Paddler

Walking on the beach yesterday was cold enough without purposely going into the water. I don’t get it, but I sure do admire these guys’ guts.

My new favorite term (via northshorewaterman)

Did you expect anything less from Maxfield? Read on and join the discussion at the site.

Listening to NPR in the car the other day  (don't panic…it was Sarah's car and within a few minutes those pussies had me ready to jump out of my skin), and there was a great term being thrown around: Information cascade. According to Wikipedia, an information cascade  occurs when people observe the actions of others and then make the same choice that the others have made, independently of their own private information signals. Because it is usu … Read More

via northshorewaterman

Atwood On The New Dining Initiative At Alchemy

Heather Atwood writes-
The half-block space on Duncan St. in Gloucester, that to the unschooled looks like a basement entrance to the CVS around the corner on Main St., has always been a restaurant to love. For years it was The Glass Sailboat, where everyone in Gloucester, from the fish piers to Bass Rocks, stopped in for good coffee, a homemade muffin, and maybe some homeopathic remedies from the Common Crow across the room. The place grew up a little, got liquor and music, and became the Sunny Day Cafe. While people mourned the old Sailboat, The Cafe was accepted in a community that doesn’t even like its vacant lots to change.

Check out the rest of her blog post about the Exciting New Dining Initiative At Alchemy-

http://blogs.gloucestertimes.com/foodforthought/2011/01/09/montmartre-or-gloucester/#more-3381

“The Cafe was accepted in a community that doesn’t even like its vacant lots to change.”
Wow! Pretty Ballsy Atwood!

After reflecting a bit on that comment I’d say that in defense of the community at large that they would like to see change on vacant and unproductive lots but all too many times the vocal minority of people who oppose everything get their way. It’s far too easy for them to manipulate and stymie progress through the insane permitting process on the waterfront.

To our current Mayors credit it seems she is involving the public big time on the I4 C2 lot. I just hope the people whose proposals do not get incorporated don’t try to stand in the way of the proposals that do.

“Talk of the Times” Happy Birthday GMG!

Got this Email from Joey informing of this article in The Gloucester Daily Times;

“They picked up that I call you Paulie walnuts!  That’s fucking awesome!”
http://www.gloucestertimes.com/local/x756276419/Talk-of-the-Times-SeniorCare-saga-heads-readers-top-10-story-poll

someday i’ll get the respect I deserve.

From the Gloucester Daily Times January 07, 2011

“Happy Birthday, GMG

One of the Times’ community blogs turned 3 last month.

Lobster dealer Joey Ciaramitaro of Capt. Joe & Sons began the “Good Morning Gloucester: My Life on the Docks” blog on Dec. 29, 2007. Thirteen thousand posts later, after its third birthday, Ciaramitaro is still promoting the city he loves.

“That first year I didn’t blog with the frequency I do now. There was several posts a day but not the hourly schedule of a post an hour every hour from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m. with the occasional midnight post thrown in,” Ciaramitaro blogged recently. “In the entire 3-year run there have only been 13 days that went without a post, the last being April 15, 2008.”

He doesn’t do it alone; regular contributors include Sharon Lowe, Mike Lindberg, Laurie Lufkin, Paul Morrison, Thom Falzarano, David Cox, Paulie “Walnuts” Frontiero, Manny Simoes, Joanne Silva, Beth Swan, among others.

The blog regularly features pictures of Gloucester at dawn, the fishing industry, St. Peter’s Fiesta, the Block Parties, food served at local restaurants, and art around Cape Ann.

Ciaramitaro has been honored by the Senate and Congress for his work on GMG, and received an Action Inc. Outreach Award.

“The No. 1 thing that I cherish about this thing called Good Morning Gloucester is the relationships and opportunities to create friendships with so many quality people and that is worth more than awards, more than money,” he wrote. “Friendships, love, passion for creating and an outlet to express it all. What more could a man ask for?”

Chickity Check It! LilyLings Paints Buoys On Her New Blog

Lily Lings (Linquata I think) has a cool newish blog in which she talks about music, local artisans and pimps her painted buoys.

Chickity Check It-
http://yourenotyour.blogspot.com/

Did You Know (Sea Serpent)

Photo by E.J. Lefavour

Did you know that sea serpent sightings around Gloucester became front-page news in 1817 and 1818?  On August 17, 1818, the Boston Commercial Gazette reported the following, under the title “The Leviathan of the Deep”: 

The famous Sea Serpent, was seen on the 16th near Squam Light House, by many persons, some of whom were within twenty feet of him. He is now described as being ‘perfectly harmless, and might easily be caught.’ . . . The knowing ones in Boston have been computing the average amount which will be derived from an exhibition of the Sea Serpent. One hundred thousand dollars is the sum decided on!

The serpent was said to be more than 130 feet long and to pass through the water “with the rapidity of a meteor through the heavens.” On September 5 the Newport Mercury ran the exciting headline “The Sea Serpent—Taken!” The serpent had been captured by several people near the lighthouse, according to the story, after it had dragged their boat for two miles. The newspaper The Watch Tower soon reported the disappointing news that the appearance of the serpent was “very different from when it was alive and swimming.” The creature caught was a mere 10 feet long, with a head “of a hard scaly substance, which a harpoon cannot penetrate.” The undersized monster apparently never earned its captors the vast sums of money they had hoped for.

While going back through my photos from the storm, I discovered that the sea serpent is back, and I had unwittingly captured him on film.  Anyone want to pay me one hundred thousand dollars for this rare photo? 

E.J. Lefavour

www.khanstudiointernational.com