The Fishermen win their opening game defeating Lynn Classical with just a couple of minutes left on the game clock. Kind of a typical Gloucester-Lynn Classical game!
Month: September 2016
Gloucester Smiles-358
Visitors from Connecticut
Pet of the week- Alex

Alex here and full of energy! I love checking out new toys and going for adventures in the park, around the block, in the car and up the mountain. I am an active and intelligent little guy looking for his match in love, life and the everyday! I don’t know exactly what my breed mix is but the folks here suspect I have dachshund relatives with maybe some terrier types mixed in. I am about a year and a half old so I still have plenty of puppy energy pent up in this little body but I am maturing and I should pick up on new tricks quick! I am looking for a family with some dog experience and one with children 14 years and older. I definitely have a small dog personality and can be a little bossy but a whole lot of fun! If you like that terrier personality and enjoy training then I am your guy.
For more information on the available dogs and cats at the Christopher Cutler Rich Animal Shelter please g o to our website: capeannanimalaid.org
That Time of Year Again
School is back in session….which can only mean one thing…it is the time of year that I need to start complaining about packing school lunches. This will be the only time that you have to hear about it though. I think. If you listened to yesterday’s podcast you have already heard some discussion about lunch packing….
So, first full week back at it and here are today’s lunches and snack bag snacks.
Lunch: spicy tuna rolls, strawberries, mini peppers, and a granola bar.
Snack Bag: Cinnamon english muffin with apple butter spread, cheddar goldfish, and an apple.
Can’t dare forget the water bottle….or the 4 individual ice packs that keep their food cold enough during the day.
The boys will, undoubtedly, still get in the car at 4:00 when I pick them up from “after care” at school and tell me that they are starving….so there will be a pre-popped bag of popcorn waiting for them.
In their defense, their schedule today looks like this:
Leave the house at 7:30
School from 8:00-4:00 (which, on a Monday, also involves a 30 mins. recess, a 45 minute fitness class for Finn, a 90 minute kayaking trip for gym class for Thatch, and then a full hour on the playground after school while I finish up my work.
Then, Finn has hockey practice from 5:00-6:00….and Thatch takes the ice from 6:00-7:00.
So….there also needs to be some extra apples and bananas in the car waiting for the ride home from the rink…to get them by until dinner.
Their appetites are insatiable lately (understandably) and I swear they eat more in one day than I eat in three.



GloucesterCast 199 With Jim and Pat Dalpiaz, Al Bezanson, Monica and Gerald Osmera, Nichole Schrafft, Kim Smith and Joey C
GloucesterCast 199 With Jim and Pat Dalpiaz, Al Bezanson, Monica and Gerald Osmera, Nichole Schrafft, Kim Smith and Joey C
Topics Include:
Beauport Review from Pat and Jim Dalpiaz
Al Bezanson 32nd Schooner Festival Recap
Monica and Gerald Osmera From Nebraska Accommodations at Rocky Neck Recap
Back To School With Nichole
Yellow Crowned Night Heron
Zuiderdam Returning Saturday The 24th Of September and Thursday the 29th
Muskrats
The Importance of teaching your children Mandarin, not letting them play football and keeping them off the race track
Gloucester Stage Totalitarians Review
Jeff Zinn Director also Managing Director Lewis D Wheeler and actor in the Totalitarians was in Black Mass
David Calvo new sign for Brass Monkey is going up this week
Weber Kettle Kept Temps between 289-291 throughout entire taping without adjusting vents once.


Joey invites you to check out the Amazon App and get $5
Use my referral link to get a $5 coupon at Amazon for signing into the Amazon App the first time:
Here’s the link
I’m a huge fan of Amazon Prime. Free movies and TV Shows, Free music, free two day shipping on your orders. But even if you don’t use Amazon Prime, I use the Amazon App to research products I’mean interested in. If you want to check it out by downloading it for free, Amazon will give you $5. No Brainer city baby!
SHORT FILM: EXACTLY WHAT TO DO IF YOU FIND A SEAL ON THE BEACH
Over the past few weeks there have been reports of seals on our local beaches. This short film was created because several summers ago a Harbor Seal came ashore at Good Harbor Beach. It is in people’s nature to want to help an animal that appears to be in distress, and the little Good Harbor Beach seal was no exception, quickly becoming the object of many people’s attention.
Finding seals on the beach is natural. They may be injured, but more often than not, simply need to rest. After making the film, I learned an additional reason as to why seals haul out and that is because sharks may be present. Forcing the seal back into the water by getting too close may be driving the seal toward the very creature it is trying to escape, and to its death. The distance recommended is 150 feet, at the very least.
GSC “The Totalitarians” is alive, funny, passionate, and crazy. Representing the very best of live regional theatre…
Tom Hauck reviews the Gloucester Stage Company’s current production, “The Totalitarians.”
In the New England premiere of “The Totalitarians,” the rollicking new play by Peter Sinn Nachtrieb now at the Gloucester Stage Company, we meet four hapless souls who have each latched onto a personal mission that they think will give their lives meaning.
Perky blonde Penelope Easter (Breean Julian) desperately wants to get elected to any high office in the state of Nebraska. In her Quixotic quest she is aided and abetted by Francine (Amanda Collins), a hack campaign manager who sees in Penny a potent vehicle for her own nationwide ambitions. Meanwhile, Francine’s physician husband, Jeffrey (Lewis D. Wheeler), wants his wife to set her sights on having children. He’s pulled into the election drama by his patient Ben (Alex Portenko), a mentally unstable cancer victim who’s convinced that Nebraska is being prepped for a dictatorship.
The result is a dark comedy in which the four characters expend tremendous energy—both emotional and physical—in pursuit of their objectives. The audience’s laughter is quickly followed by gasps of horror as the stakes get higher and the plot hurtles toward the inevitable collision of competing desires.
There are many good reasons to hurry to the Gloucester Stage Company before the show closes on September 24 and heads to New York. Cristina Todesco’s scenic design, a foreboding wall built of mysterious doors, is stunning. The four actors, ably directed by Jeff Zinn, hurl themselves into their parts with astonishing energy and passion. The message of the play is timely yet everlasting. But perhaps the best reason is that “The Totalitarians” is alive, funny, passionate, and crazy. Representing the very best of live regional theatre, what unfolds on the stage is an experience that you can’t get anywhere else at any price.
Now playing September 1st through September 24th. For more information and tickets, visit the Gloucester Stage Company website here.
Strong language – mature audiences only.
A Day for Quiet Reflection
More Cape Ann Wellness News http://www.capeannwellness.com

Karen Pischke B.S.N., R.N., C.C.R.N. Alumnus. Certified Hypnotherapist, Tobacco Treatment Specialist, Usui Reiki Teacher/Komyo Shihan. Owner/Founder of Dreamtime Wellness LLC. Promoting Optimal Wellness for Body, Mind and Spirit www.DreamtimeWellness.com. Find us on Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/pages/Dreamtime-Wellness-/348619611849199
Disclaimer: This blog provides general information and discussion about health and related subjects. The words and other content provided in this blog, and in any linked materials, are not intended…
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Backyard Huddle

Never forget that horrible day September 11, 2001
This morning at Gloucester Central Fire Station there was a service remembering September 11, 2001 and a reception at Gloucester’s City Hall. A woman named Patrice Schaffer made an incredible quilt and her brother-in-law, Daniel who lives in Gloucester, is a survivor September 11, 2001. He told me he walked down 74 flights of stairs and was able to survive. Here are a couple of photos from this beautiful memorial service.
The Third Banded Seagull Sighting at Captain Joe and Sons
Here’s some pictures of today’s banded seagull and ones form year’s past-
Today’s Banded Seagull With Band ID “9EM” Sighted at 1:15PM at Captain Joe and Sons Lobster East Gloucester MA-
After some research and a call out for help we discovered that the banding was done by Dr Julie Ellis
You can check out her blog here which details some of the gull sightings and why they band them.
The Gulls Of Appledore
Sightings of gulls banded in Maine by Dr. Julie Ellis
Banding and Tagging
Initial trapping was conducted throughout January, February, and March 2008, utilizing three methods: a walk-in nest trap, Steele’s net, and rocket net. All methods successfully captured the targeted species, although the rocket net and Steele’s net were much more effective and efficient. Starting in the fall of 2008, a net launcher and net gun were exclusively utilized for trapping.
Following capture, all birds are fitted with an aluminum federal leg band. A uniquely numbered colored leg band is placed on the opposite leg of all birds [Picture 1]. Finally, on most birds, a colored, uniquely numbered wing-tag is attached to each wing. These wing-tags make long-distance identification possible, particularly when it is difficult to see or read the leg bands [Pictures 2-4]. Wing-tags are color-coded based on the capture site’s proximity to either Wachusett or Quabbin Reservoir [Picture 5].
You can also read more about Dr Julie Ellis at the SEANET Blog
SEANET Blog
The latest news from the Seabird Ecological Assessment Network (SEANET)
Here is a link to the first post in which I caught a baby black backed gull with another band-
Anyone Know Of A Seagull Banding Program? This Seagull Had a Band On Its Leg Reading OK9
Here is that first banded seagull marked OK9-
COME FROM AWAY IS A HEARTWARMING STORY OF HOPE AND COMPASSION FOR 9/11
Come From Away tells the story of 6,579 travelers whose planes were grounded in the tiny town of Gander, Newfoundland after the attacks of 9/11. Locals from Gander and surrounding towns opened their hearts and homes for over a week, sharing what little they had. Read more about the musical here.
One of those helped by these kindhearted people was the passenger Shirley Brooks-Jones. Shirley and the other passengers tried to pay the townsfolk back, but they would not accept their money. While there she learned that many of the local children were too impoverished to attend school. Brooks-Jones had the idea to start a scholarship. This lasting legacy of the 9/11 attacks, the Lewisporte Area Flight 15 Scholarship Fund, has raised over a million dollars and sent 228 kids to college. Brooks-Jones recently gave an interview on NPR and you can read the transcript here.
FOX NFL Sunday clever Hamilton Garoppolo Patriots parody
Dead seal on Long Beach

Gray vistas spanned the beat of life and death in nature and prompted basic questions about shelter and what do you think happened here? We stepped over a seagull’s still and headless body and a fury of feathers. Seagulls were fighting over the remains of a sting ray we thought was a horseshoe crab. They didn’t want to see the dead seal. Was it the same seal we saw resting yesterday, the seal my son was relieved to report he saw dip back into the sea? Maybe, I said. A passerby asked if I reported it to a wildlife agency. Enough nature for one morning, my sons turned home to shoot hoops. We heard the sweet sounds from piping plovers, someone raking seaweed, and joyous chatter from a family of 4 swimming before the coming storm.







Gloucester Smiles-357
Visitors from France
September 11, 2016
To commemorate that awful day. Be kind to one another today.
The New York City Fire Department’s 5-5-5-5 bell calls will sound around Cape Ann on Sunday morning.
Fifteen years after hijacked jets crashed into New York’s World Trade Center, the Pentagon outside Washington, D.C., and into a field in western Pennsylvania, fire departments around Cape Ann will host ceremonies commemorating the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. And New York’s 5-5-5-5 signal — the call sounded there as a firefighter’s final bell, said Gloucester Deputy Fire Chief Barry Aptt — will be part of the services.
All the Cape Ann services will be Sunday morning, loosely in line with the time line of the attacks, which killed 2,996 people, left more than 6,000 injured, and led to an undetermined number of later deaths of responders who sustained lung damage from air pollution at the World Trade Center site in New York City.
On that clear Tuesday morning, the hijacked United Airlines Flight 11 out of Boston’s Logan International Airport and bound for Los Angeles crashed into the north tower of the World Trade Center at 8:46 a.m. A second plane, United Flight 175, also out of Boston and bound for Los Angeles, then slammed into the WTC’s south tower at 9:03, while united Flight 77 out of Dulles International Airport in Virginia crashed into the Pentagon outside Washington at 9:37.
United Flight 93 out of Newark International Airport in New Jersey crashed into a field in Somerset County, Pennsylvania, after passengers who had contacted family members and friends mounted an effort to overtake the hijackers.
The schedule of Cape Ann events commemorating the 15th anniversary of the attacks Sunday is as follows:
GLOUCESTER: Gloucester Fire Chief Eric Smith will open ceremonies at Central Fire Station at 9:55 a.m., with announcements over the Fire Department’s radio channel calling for a moment of silence to remember those lost in the 2011 attacks.
The brief ceremony will include the sounding of the bells, with the full department at attention in dress uniforms. The dismissal from the ceremony is targeted for 10 a.m.
ROCKPORT: Rockport’s 9/11 memorial service will begin at 8:30 a.m. at the Central Station on Broadway.
Members of the town Fire Department, in full dress uniform, will then march to T-Wharf for a memorial service slated to begin at 9 a.m.
ESSEX: The Essex Fire Department will host a 9/11 memorial service beginning at 9:55 a.m. in front of Memorial Fire Station at 24 Martin St.
Fire Chief Daniel Doucette said all retired firefighters and members of the public are are welcome to attend the brief program.
MANCHESTER: The Manchester Fire Department will hold its 9/11 memorial program starting at 9:45 at the fire station, 12 School St.
Chaplain David Forsythe will serve as the primary speaker, and, as with the other Cape Ann services, residents are encouraged to attend.
Remembering
































