
Endless opportunities to repair or renew your marine canvas or vinyl.
Contact Jeff at his 195 East Main St Gloucester Shop-
978-335-0502






My View of Life on the Dock


Last week the sun was so beautiful. When walking Shore Road, the ocean was so blue and white foam.

Hundreds of the library’s Gloucester Newspaper Microfilm Collection of monthly reels spanning 40+ years have been optimized for accessibility and are now fully searchable on line! The microfilm rolls and readers on site are up and running as well.
“The Sawyer Free Library digitized the Gloucester Daily Times from January 1923 through March 1965. You can access the collection through our website (homepage), or directly from the online collection.”
Sawyer Free Library
It’s as easy as click on the home page! Here’s Julie Travers, SFL’s Local History Librarian, walking me through the happy news. If you’d like to contribute to the library’s ongoing efforts, each roll costs roughly $175-$200 a piece.




Archives for All!

“HISTORY MAKING PLEA – ARCHIVES FOR ALL
Catherine Ryan, Jan. 3, 2017 here
The prohibitive costs of best practice historic preservation (ADA compliant, temperature and humidity controls, security, sustainability, in house scanning/OCR/audio transcription, etc.) is impossible for all the worthy collections in town, and pits them as foes when vying for funds. Let’s flip that impediment on its head and make Gloucester a model for the state. Its treasures would be available worldwide if they were truly accessible –digitized…”
How exciting that Gloucester’s repositories have been busy digitizing treasures from their archives. The GDT newspaper microfilm rolls are a welcome addition.
Dock Line…


Join us this Saturday April 22nd from 9am to 12 noon at 28 Gee Avenue in Gloucester (parking right in the lot in front of my barn). The race dories are sanded and ready for painting. Wear old clothing and and come as you are. We will provide paint, brushes, rollers, etc. Once we get the outsides done, we can clean up the insides the following Saturday (same time/place).
If all goes well, we should be able to launch them the weekend of May 6 (depending on the tides). Spring has sprung and dory season is upon us, so donate some time, pay your dues, and get out on the harbor this Spring!


Source: Reddit



Starting this week, on Thursday mornings from 10:30 to 11:30 am, the Sawer Free Library will be hosting Open Play at SFL@21MainStreet.
This unstructured open play for little ones and caregivers is an opportunity forsocial interaction and a nurturing way to introduce the very youngto the library. Booksand toys will be provided for caregivers to interact with their little ones andare best suited for ages 0-2. No registration needed.
Questions? Contact:jvitale@sawyerfreelibrary.orgor978-325-5505.
My hands-down favorite season in Gloucester is spring because of the tulips along the boulevard. Though it’s a little early in the short blooming season for tulips, it was exceptionally striking along the boulevard yesterday morning in the fog. Big fat heavy dew drops enhanced the beauty. For additional pictures and story details, please check out Pat D’s Photos and Adventures on Facebook. There’s a good chance you will see some of these photos on future products from Pat D’s Photos. Comment with your favorites to help me decide (including those on the Facebook page!)






Individuals and families will connect to place, food, the season and each other, while building practical sea and land skills to take into the future.

Starting on April 20th, for four consecutive Thursdays, from 6-8pm, Gloucester SaLT will gather with community at Cedar Rock Gardens, in West Gloucester. Farmer, Tucker Smith, fisherman, Captain Joe Sanfilippo and scientist, Bart Difiore will explore garden layouts, plant and fish species of Cape Ann, and the ecology of local soils. Participants will have the option to process and prepare fresh, whole catch using whatever species is available, fresh off a local boat.
SaLT aims to create deep, community awareness of the interdependence of sea, land and people. When fishermen, farmers, scientists and community have the opportunity to learn together, knowledge of place, neighbor, local food sourcing and preparation options is expanded. As SaLT facilitates an ever-widening network of local food connections, by working to reduce silos and competition, they aspire to increase collaboration, community resilience and local food security.
There is a lot of talk about wanting independence from powerful, external behemoths like the global food system. There is apparent desire to protect local heritage and Gloucester’s foundation — the fishery. The public seems to value small-scale, local farmers along with the benefits their existence brings. Yet a lack of actionable, individual and community choices creates a reality in which highly skilled, young farmers are fleeing north and experienced fishermen continue to leave the industry. Local youth continue to be discouraged from entering the industry. SaLT believes there will always be external forces influencing the fishing and farming industries, and therefore the region’s food security and resilience. SaLT wants locals to know, even in the face of those impositions, the community itself has the power to create the future it wants to see. They have just released a SURVEY for locals to gauge where the community has been, where it is now, and where it wants to head. The survey will take a bit of time and effort, as will a shift toward making choices at scale — choices that prioritize local food as local security. No one else is going to do it for the community. The people who make up the community must make it happen by taking the steps to make it happen.
Five spokes, together, turn the whole SaLT wheel.
1. PREPARE: the next generation of professional Fishers & Farmers
· merging fishing, farming, and ecosystem science in SaLT’s professional, multi-disciplinary program
· to source, grow, harvest & prepare local, seasonal seafood &
· to consider fishing and/or farming as recreation, life skills, income, way of life
3. EMPOWER: aspiring and existing local food-related businesses through SaLT’s brick and mortar incubator, market & exchange
· to more effectively source, grow, harvest, process, market, and distribute raw and value-added product
· to bond with each other, generate, and sustain mutually beneficial collaboration
4. ENGAGE: the public and policy makers
· to understand that sea, land, and people are one system whose parts affect each other profoundly, and that we each have the opportunity to influence that system.
5. CREATE: a dedicated community through SaLT’s interacting spokes
· who becomes acquainted with the various players in local food system
· who knows what is and is not in season when and why
· who knows how to source & prepare local foods they may previously never had access to or worked with
· who shifts toward local food-consumption and exchange — for security, economic development, and diverse community engagement
Now!
WHY?
According to the USDA, “As consumers across the nation express a growing interest in a closer connection to their food producers—whether through access to more localized markets and/or shorter supply chains— cities and regions have begun to regard the expansion of local food marketing activities as a critical component of their economic development strategies.” In addition, the federal government acknowledges,” As the pandemic has evolved and Russia’s war in Ukraine has caused supply chain disruptions, it has become clear we cannot go back to the
food system we had before.” Gloucester SaLT, even in its nascent stage, is already heightening community agility and interconnectivity by bringing people together to rethink the way Gloucester does food and security.
Gloucester, whose identity is founded on the men and women who harvest, process, and bring the people food, deserves —demands— a year-round, centrally located local food market, exchange, and training center. A place to raise up the next generation of fishers and farmers. A center to educate, engage, and feed the people. A market where buying a whole fish, in season, is as normal and easy as buying top-notch local oysters and a shucker to go. Where berries brighten the stands in summer, and a rainbow of root veggies holds the space in colder seasons. A venue where all members of the community can shop, learn about, and prepare local food together. A hub where organizations and individuals in the food system can cross pollinate ideas and pool resources, to make more money and energy available for where and whom it is needed most.
About Gloucester SaLT
Gloucester SaLT is a 501(c)(3), based in Gloucester, Massachusetts. Founded in 2023, their vision is to see fishermen, farmers, scientists, and community learning, engaging, and eating together in a highly collaborative, food secure community. They are facilitating agile, local food infrastructure, exchange, and training, by harnessing past experience, understanding current reality and shaping a view of the future that embraces land, sea and people as one interdependent system. Online: gloucestersalt.org