Month: January 2015
Looks like some weather coming in Monday at dusk
Found on the Hard Drive January 2008
Found on the Hard Drive January 2008
The Gloucester Fleet
Watch “On the Waterfront: Episode 2” From Shep Means and Cape Ann TV
On the Waterfront: Episode 2: Featuring Tony Gross, Cruiseport, and Captain Joe and Sons with host Shep Means.
Erich Archer Writes-
Hello friends of Cape Ann TV,
The second episode of Cape Ann TV’s new original series On the Waterfront is here!
On the Waterfront is a water-to-table concept with each episode highlighting a different form of sea life. We fish it, process it, cook it, and eat it. All along the way we meet the people of Cape Ann making their living On the Waterfront.
On this episode we feature one of the most celebrated and economically important species on Cape Ann – the lobster!
Join our host Shephard Means as he pulls traps with Captain Tony Gross, offloads at Capt. Joe and Sons, and prepares a delicious lobster bake with VInwood Catering aboard the Beauport Princess at Cruiseport. All along the way we learn just how important the lobster is to this community as one of the few sustainable fishing industries left on Cape Ann.
We hope to surpass the success of the first episode featuring clams (seen here: http://ow.ly/GXtTG), so if you enjoy episode two please share it with friends!
Baby It’s Cold Outside!
Sea Smoke
Sea Smoke this morning seen from Singing Beach and White Beach in Manchester by the Sea. COLD!
This About Sums It Up Today
Nichole’s Family Picks of the Weekend 1/10 and 1/11
Ummmm…..Brrrrrr. It is kind of hard to think of doing anything other than a mad movie marathon or intense family game day under blankets, sprawled on the living room floor, but here are some ideas.
Want to feel like you are in the tropics, even though we aren’t?
Pick #1 is to visit an indoor garden and it might just help you forget these frigid winter temperatures!
Here are two great choices.
The Tower Hill Botanic Garden in Boylston
While it may be too cold to enjoy some of the outside gardens, there are some gorgeous indoor spaces and you are always welcome to hike around outside as long as you can handle the temps. Be sure to visit the Limonaia, or Lemon House, and the Orangerie. The Winter Garden is also not to be missed!
Or there are the Margaret C. Ferguson Greenhouses at the Wellesley College Botanic Gardens.
The Margaret C. Ferguson Greenhouses house the most diverse collection of plants under glass in the greater Boston area.
There are sixteen interconnected greenhouses comprising 7,200 square feet under glass. Many plants in the greenhouses have cultural value as food and spice around the world. Some plants in the greenhouses have historical significance to Wellesley College, the most prominent being the 130-plus year old Durant camellia which came from the founder of the college.
The Desert House showcases cacti and succulents in a series of miniature landscapes, demonstrating a range of adaptations to different desert environments and providing examples of convergent evolution. Larger landscape plantings give a realistic impression of desert plants in nature. Annuals such as desert bluebells are added to enhance the landscape as appropriate. This house is kept cool during the winter months to encourage spring bloom.
The Tropic House is the tallest of the greenhouses, allowing small trees such as palms, cycads and banana to grow in a central in-ground planting area. The house provides a general impression of a tropical forest understory, demonstrating adaptations such as aerial roots and large leaves with drip tips. Vines and lianas are encouraged to grow up appropriate hosts, and epiphytes are grown on trees or simulated trees.
Aerated pools in the Hydrophyte House provide suitable growing conditions for aquatic plants as well as plants adapted to wet root zone conditions, such as mangroves and papyrus. A range of water-loving plants, from floating aquatics to rooted emergents to floodplain species, is demonstrated in and around these unique pools.
Other houses and collections include the Seasonal Display House, Mabel A. Stone Cryptogam (Fern) House, Warm Temperate House, economic plant collection, caudiciform collection, sensory plant collection, and carnivorous plant collection.
Pick #2
Need to shake off the chill? Try the pot….The Melting Pot, that is.
I have such fond memories of fondue family nights spent hanging over our mustard yellow super 70s fondue pot! While this experience may be slightly more modern than my memories (and more than a wee bit more expensive) it is worth it for a fun treat! There are locations in Bedford/Burlington and in Boston’s Back Bay.
Pick #3
To help take care of some of that holiday excess that you may have enjoyed….
Hit the gym. The Metrorock Climbing Gym
“Climbing for the Day” passes are $20 for adults, $10 for children under 7, and FREE for children under 4.
There are locations in Newburyport and Everett.
Fisher Cat In Ipswich Photo From Mike Doody
Joey on the way to work from Ipswich this morning I saw this lying beside the road near Foote Bros Canoe and as I went by new it was the elusive Fisher Cat. I turned around to go back and grab a quick photo as did another driver who told me he lost six of his chickens over the weekend likely by the same animal. Living in Ipswich I have heard them at night and have also caught a glimsp of one or two. Thought you would like. Have to work on the photography skills though.
Breathtaking Temperature & View From Good Harbor Beach
Even at minus 2 degrees the ocean is telling a story
Thursday January 8th , 2014 Cape Ann Weather…
Marine Forecast :
Today W winds 15 to 20 kt with gusts up to 35 kt. Seas 2 to 4 ft. Freezing spray likely this morning.
Tonight SW winds 15 to 20 kt…increasing to 20 to 25 kt after midnight. Gusts up to 35 kt. Seas 2 to 4 ft.
Pod Cast Weather :
http://www.spreaker.com:80/episode/5451308
Hourly Forecast :
GEAR I DIG- BOGS TILLAMOOK BAY REVIEW -PERFECT FOR THE DOCK
Down the dock we’re constantly sloshing around in water or herring juice that drips out of the fish totes an inevitably on top of your feet.
If you want to keep your feet dry you have options.
You can wear clunky boots that come up to your knees or calf but when you’re on your feet for 12 hour days heavy boots are just not a great choice.
Enter Bogs. I discovered the low cut “Journey” style Bogs a couple of years ago and since then it’s all I wear down the dock (and around town for work) year round. They are just incredibly comfortable but at the same time keep my feet dry.
Much like my love for Dry Fit shirts Bogs use moisture wicking technology and with the combination of keeping your feet dry from outside elements like herring juice or the water from the lobster tanks splashing all over the place and then wicking the moisture away when you sweat, Bogs just provide an unmatched combination of comfort, dryness level and quality that I just haven’t been able to duplicate with any other boot.
I just got a pair of the Tillamook Bay Bogs. They’re just like the Journey. Low cut and comfy while keeping my feet dry.
You can get them at Palazolas downtown and if they don’t have the style you want they will get it for you.
Gloucester Filmmaker Dennis Lanson’s “To Hear the Music” Airs on PBS This Sunday!!!
Dear Friends and Family,
I thought you might like to know that Gloucester filmmaker Dennis Lanson’s fine documentary about the organ we (C.B. Fisk) built at Harvard University will be shown on WGBH Channel 2 at five o’clock on Sunday, January 11.
It’s called “To Hear the Music,” and it not only follows the construction and installation of our Opus 139 at Harvard’s Memorial Church, but also looks back at the 54 year history of our unique Gloucester company, and at the life of Charles Fisk, our founder and mentor.
Here’s a link to the trailer, and other info as well.
Please help us get the word out by forwarding this on to folks you know who might be interested.
Best wishes for the new year,
Greg
Gregory R Bover
V.P. Operations, Project Manager
C. B. Fisk, Inc.
LOST DOG! ESSEX

For All the Patient Dads We’ve Ever Known and Loved!
Winter Sky
Punta Arenas and Torres del Paine N.P.
We disembarked from Via Australis at Punta Arenas overlooking the Straits of Magellan, explored the town and then proceeded by bus to Puerto Natales. The next morning we began our two day exploration of Torres del Paine National Park, one of the most remote and beautiful places I can imagine.











































