Good Morning Gloucester Podcast April 18,2013 With Guest Bill O’Connor From North Shore Kid

Podcast Host Joey Ciaramitaro and guest Bill O’Connor Taped April 18th, 2013

Click to listen-

Host Joey Ciaramitaro and Guest Bill O'Connor

Topics Include:

North Shore Kid Top Three School Vacation Family To-Do Ideas

Good Harbor Beach Footbridge Over/Under Prediction

Earth Day Plans

Paul Morrison

Getting Flocked

Beach Reclamation

Plum Island Homes

Check Out Bill’s Site- North Shore Kid

Jim Dowd’s Post On Good Morning Gloucester Makes The Washington Post

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Attention, terrorists: In Boston, history and grudges are forever

Posted by Melinda Henneberger on April 18, 2013 at 6:37 pm

The Post Melinda is referring to is here-

https://goodmorninggloucester.wordpress.com/2013/04/17/jim-dowd-responds-to-the-attack-on-the-boston-marathon/

Community Photos 4/18/13

My garden is finally coming alive.

Len Burgess

PurplCrocus_6458


Janet Rice Submits-

Hi Joey-

Wondering if this Kitty and this Owl were the inspiration for this book?!

Best-Janet Rice

DSCN7686 - Copy


Joey, Some great looking Lobsta Art in the men’s room at Clayton’s Siesta Grille, Sarasota, Fla. Really good Lobsta Art. Worth checking out for a true Lobsta Guy.
Billy Trefry.

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Congrats To Jim Dowd For Having the 4th Top Blog Post Out Of The Millions of Daily Blog Posts On WordPress.com April 18th, 2013

 

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Here it is:

Jim Dowd responds to the attack on the Boston Marathon

Flocked! Alright Who’s The Wise Guy?

Woke up yesterday morning to a flock of Pink Flamingos in the front yard.  Figured they were for the Mrs but nope.  They were for me according to the card.  Who’d like to fess up to being the Flocker?

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Joey C’s Proposal For Changing School Vacation Week Locally

Kids missing school isn’t a good thing.  It’s not good for the students.  Not good for the teachers who have their performance tied to standardized testing.  Not good for education in general.  I’m fairly certain we can all agree on that.

With all public schools taking the same exact school vacation week off what it has created in the travel industry is a huge demand all at once and if anyone wants to travel during school vacation week prices not only double, but they often times triple or quadruple.

So parents who would like to take their kids away often times take their kids out a week before or a week after a winter vacation and once those kids are in third grade or so they can lose a fundamental building block of their education.   Teachers whose job performance are increasingly tied to state standardized test scores are penalized for children’s absence if they aren’t there to learn and those students bring their average test scores down.

So I ask, why not just move school vacation week forward or back a week so we don’t have to compete with the entire state for flights to Orlando or some other vacation destination at the very same time? 

You would have better attendance because parents wouldn’t pick an off school vacation week to go away.

The people who wouldn’t take their kids out of school on an off school vacation week might be able to afford to take their children away if every public school district in the State didn’t take the same exact week off.

Teachers would benefit from higher attendance rates and presumably higher standardized test scores because the kids would be in class.

I see it as a win all the way around.

Community Stuff 4/18/13

Cape Ann Art Haven Updates
Spring Cleaning & Summer Classes

RUMMAGE SALE FUNDRAISER THIS SATURDAY

Find a bargain on art and craft products!

Come to The Hive in Gloucester for a one-day rummage sale full of all kinds of art supplies. Over the years Cape Ann Art Haven has acquired many great art and craft supplies. We’ve used a lot in our classes, but there are some materials that we just don’t have room for anymore. We’re cleaning out our closet and raising money for Art Haven so we can keep offering a creative space and inexpensive art classes to the community. We have paints, fabric pieces, books, matte board, paper, frames and more! The sale will take place Saturday, April 20th from 9AM to 3PM at Art Haven’s new community center, The Hive, 11 Pleasant St., Gloucester. For more information, email thehive@arthaven.org or call 978.283.3889.

SUMMER SCHEDULE ONLINE

Art Haven kids’ program starts June 24th

working on a whale!

Our summer class schedule is ready! Check it out here. We have weekly sessions of a fun, global program where we will be exploring art and culture of a different country each week. We also have two weeks of collaboration with Maritime Gloucester and one week with Cape Ann Museum.
On top of our full-day week-long sessions, we will also still have some regular classes like pottery, open studio, family open studio and darkroom. Take a look at the website for more information!
We’re still working on our summer classes and workshops for teens & adults at The Hive, so keep an eye on our facebook page for announcements.

NEXT SESSION: MAY 13- JUNE 21

Upcoming Classes at Art Haven & The Hive

kids’ clay project

Before the summer, we will have one more session of regular classes at Art Haven and The Hive. At Art Haven, we will have clay, pottery, drawing/printmaking and painting for kids. The class schedule will be the same as the current session on our website.
At The Hive, we’ll have pottery classesTuesday 3-5pm and Thursday 6-9pm. We’re also excited to be adding a pastel classThursdays 3-5pm and charcoal portrait drawing Thursdays 6-9pm. Photoshop will still be Tuesday nights, from 6-8pm and Open Studio on Wednesdays from 6:30-8:30pm. The Hive will be launching a new website soon where students can register online; "like" The Hive Community Center on Facebook to stay up to date!


Good Morning Joey,
    The AMVETS Ladies Auxiliary Post 32 is holding a yard clean up
raffle for all residents / businesses of the Cape Ann Area.  Tickets
are $10 each and the winner will win a minimum of 10 hrs of labor
resources to aid them with their Spring Clean up.  Some of the funds
will help to offset the costs of our upcoming convention for our
officers.  Any remaining funds will be used to benefit veterans, their
families and or our community.  If anyone is interested in purchasing
tickets they may contact us on our Facebook page, via email or call
Carrie-Ann at 978-879-3834.  I have attached a flyer with additional
details that I hoped you may be able to share in the coming weeks.
Thank you,
Jennifer GannettPresident
AMVETS Ladies Auxiliary Post #32
LIKE US ON FACEBOOK<http://www.facebook.com/pages/AMVETS-Ladies-Auxiliary-Post-32-Gloucester-MA/360566197355435>
Visit our website for more information:
http://amvetspost32ma.org/LadiesAUX.html

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Gloucester Post 3 Sr. Legion Baseball Tryout

Gloucester Post 3 Sr. Legion Baseball Tryout

The 2014 Gloucester Post 3 Sr. Legion team will hold a tryout on Sunday, May 5th from 11 am – 1 pm at Nate Ross Field at O’Maley School in Gloucester.  Legion baseball is available for players between the ages of 14-19.  This year Gloucester will only field a Sr. Legion team and not a Jr. Program.  Registration will take place for the tryout starting at 10:30 am on the day of the tryout at Nate Ross Field.  All questions should be sent to Gerald MacKillop at Post3baseball@gmail.com.  Post 3 is available for residents of Gloucester, Rockport, Manchester and Essex.

Good Morning Gloucester Podcast April 17,2013

Podcast Host Joey Ciaramitaro and guest Paul Morrison Taped April 17th, 2013

Click to listen-

Earth Day

The Word “Broad”

Revisiting The Good Harbor Beach Repair Timetable Predictions

Rubber Duck Race

Craig Kimberley’s Bikini Speedo Dodgeball Movie Premiere At the farm Bar and Grille

Blackburn Challenge Registration

O’Maley Soda Bottle Garden From Roger Davis

Roger Davis Submits

Last Friday, the O’Maley Middle School cafeteria served lettuce in its salad bar… and students actually ate some!  The real news is that this lettuce was grown by the sixth grade students of Island House… in the school library!  Under the direction of science teacher Roger Davis, the students created planters out of two-liter soda bottles, linked together in a siphon-fed watering system.  A three-liter bottle supplies the whole class’s set of lettuce planters, and the siphon passes the water from one planter to the next.  The plants absorb the water by cappilary action, so the plants never need to be watered.  With the garden and water all held in these containers, the lettuce bed was set in the school library, whose large sunroof gives the plants plenty of light.  Six weeks later, the students harvested the first cutting, with more still to come.  With this project students are learning basic plant science, indoor or container gardening techniques, and the principles of water and air pressure used in the siphon water system.  Seeds and soil for this project were donated to the school by Wolf Hill Garden Center.

Jim Dowd responds to the attack on the Boston Marathon

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[Two products of our fair city. Both will kick your ass.]

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Oh man, you screwed up, didn’t you?

Yes, your little RadioShack experiment for evil hurt and killed some people and got you the attention you were obviously so desperately seeking. Point for you there, asshole. But I get the sense you really don’t know what you’ve done here, do you? Are you from out of town? I have the strong sense that you are.

If that is the case, allow me tell you a little something about the city you screwed with. This town is not your run-of-the mill medium sized regional capital. In picking Boston as a target you picked has the unique condition of having a ridiculously huge number of completely off-the-wall genius techno-wizards co-existing right alongside some of the most psychotic angry, violent motherf&*^ers on the planet. I guarantee you that bringing these two groups together for common cause will turn out to be a massive miscalculation your part.

Do you have any idea what I’m talking about? This small city produced both Stephen J Gould and Whitey Bulger.  This place gave us Leonard Nimoy and Mark Wahlberg.  Southie and Cambridge. Brookline and Brockton. This place will kick the screaming piss out of you, come up with a cure for having the screaming piss kicked out of you, give it to you for free, then win a Nobel prize for it and then use the medallion to break your knuckles. See what I’m talking about?

Go to other towns with smart people. Do they have the tattooed, scarred, pent-up hard-cases to match? Every time I go to a bar in Palo Alto or Zurich I get the distinct sense that I could pretty much take everyone in there while still holding my own in Words With Friends on my iPhone. Not that I’m some huge tough guy by any stretch of the imagination, it’s just that Boston and the other “smart” towns are in different leagues. It’s like the Bruins going up against some “Magic The Gathering” gamers at pond hockey. (And not our the Magic The Gathering players in Gloucester, either. I’ve seen those dudes and they actually look like they could hold their own pretty well. I certainly wouldn’t try and cast a dubious spell with those guys, they’re hardcore.)

Boston produces two distinct stereotypes: Huge, giant geeks and angry Catholic tough guys. You know what? Both of those are true and you, you dumb shit, just gave them a reason to team up. And on top of it you attacked our signature event, one made up of exceedingly fit people who pursue a hobby of enduring incredible searing pain for hours on end. This is what they do for “fun”. You think these guys aren’t going to go to the ends of the Earth to catch you? Trust me, this town will never forget and never give up. We have a thing here called “Irish Alzheimer’s”- it’s when the only memories you have are grudges.

You terrorist asshole, I can assure you that right now, just as I am writing this, that there are dudes sitting in conference rooms and labs a few blocks away in Cambridge drawing elaborate flow charts on whiteboards that describe exactly how to deploy arcane, unheard of and incredibly complicated technology involving quantum entanglement and nanobots to pinpoint, as much as the universe will allow considering the Heisenberg Uncertainty Principle, your sorry, sorry stupid pathetic little ass.

And behind me in the North End and across the channel to the bars on Summer St. there are similar groups of dudes debating the scientific merits of different electrical voltages applied to the various soft tissues of the human body in order to elicit maximum amounts of excruciating pain over time. They have formulas for this [V/NADS over Time= Screams that they will hear in Worcester]. This is not a theoretical discussion; they are speaking from practical experience.

You’d better pray the BPD catches you first. No, scratch that, you’d better pray for the FBI. No, wait, all those dudes went to Holy Cross. For your own good you might want to turn yourself in to the CDC or the National Geospatial Agency or something like that. They might let you live. Maybe.

And worse yet for you, Boston is provincial in a way that makes Sicily look like Epcot. We don’t care if you’re going to school here, just moved from half a world away or are up for a long weekend. When you’re in Boston, you’re Boston. We watch each other’s backs, always have and always will. And we live for an enemy and a purpose. This is not going to end well for you. Over the past three centuries we’ve taken on Imperial England, slavery and Krispy Kreeme. Note that given time, Boston wins every time.

Come to think of it, a lot of those Geospatial guys went to MIT. Oh man, you are so effed.

Cape Ann Trail Stewards Gloucester’s Goose Cove Reservoir on Sunday, April 21st

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CAPE ANN TRAIL STEWARDS

Inaugural Event

Cape Ann Trail Stewards (CATs), a new non-profit organization, announces its upcoming inaugural event. 

Cape Ann Trail Stewards was founded by citizens of Gloucester, Rockport, Manchester and Essex to help landowners and conservation organizations protect, maintain and expand Cape Ann’s trail networks.

By matching volunteers with trails in need of stewardship, CATs will connect Cape Ann residents with the vast network of trails in the area and help preserve these recreational resources for our community. Cape Ann Trail Stewards will arrange workdays where volunteers can learn about trail construction and maintenance.

The board of directors includes residents of Gloucester, Rockport, Essex and Manchester, and representatives from the Essex County Greenbelt, Essex County Trails Association, Cape Ann Climbing Coalition, the New England Mountain Bike Association and other user groups.

Cape Ann Trail Stewards invites the public to join the inaugural clean up workday at the city of Gloucester’s Goose Cove Reservoir on Sunday, April 21st (the day before Earth Day) beginning at 1PM. 

We will meet in the lot along Gee Avenue. Participants should wear sturdy shoes and dress appropriately for the weather (the event is rain or shine). Bring rakes, shovels and buckets if you have them. CATs will supply gloves and other materials.

Register for this event, join our roster of regular volunteers and learn more about us at www.capeanntrailstewards.org

This Is How They Reclaim The Beach At Barefoot Beach Bonita Springs Florida

Beach Reclamation Project Barefoot Beach Bonita Springs Florida

Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce Business After Hours Thursday Evening

Programs to Grow Your Business and our Economy

Join Us For Our Next Business After Hours!

Thursday, April 18

5:00 to 7:00 pm

Want to network and make new connections? Do you want to grow your business through referrals? Attend our Business After Hours to mix and mingle with members in a relaxed atmosphere and learn to master the art of networking! 

Business After Hours is the place for business professionals to come together to grow their network and their business by sharing contacts, referrals and ideas.

$20 for Members

$30 for Future Members 

For more information or to register,

please contact Emily Harris at emily@capeannchamber.com

or call 978-283-1601.

Top Junior Players in the Northeast Hit MAC Tennis Courts for Training Camp

This weekend, Manchester Athletic Club welcomed 24 of the most elite junior tennis players across the northeast region of the nation to come together for a two-day, high-intensity camp that focused on player training, character on and off the court, and the roles of players, parents and coaches. This weekend’s camp is one of several of this caliber held at Manchester Athletic Club since the club was named a Regional Training Center by the United States Tennis Association (USTA).

Players born between 2000 and 2002 who display the greatest potential in their age groups were hand-selected by USTA regional player development directors and national coaches to train together for this prestigious two-day session. Many players already have national rankings, with seven of Manchester Athletic Club’s MAC Tennis Academy players in the mix, including: Chris Li of Westford, Sydney Weinberg, Nilos Makino and Julia Thompson of Winchester, Lexi Kubas of Ellington, CT, Grace Campanella of Wells, ME, and Alex Finklestein of Raynham, MA, who took home the USTA Courage Award.

Leading the USTA RTC Camp this weekend were nine USTA Regional Training Center Pros from across New England, as well as the Eastern and Middle States section, including USTA National coach Jay Devashetty of New York and MAC Academy coaches Francisco Montoya, Ricardo Munar and Todd Carpenter.

“Being the only USTA Regional Training Center in New England has brought our program many advantages.” said Todd Carpenter, Director of Tennis at Manchester Athletic Club. “Being able to offer our players the opportunity to play against their peers at the highest level in the country right here at their home training base is certainly one of those advantages.”

MAC players and members of the surrounding community will have another opportunity to watch tennis at its top level when Manchester Athletic Club becomes home to the Boston Lobsters, New England’s professional tennis team, this summer.

Manchester Athletic Club is located in Manchester by-the-Sea, MA, and is one of only 17 USTA regional training centers in the country. The full service health club features 11 tennis courts, the Gymazing! Child Center for preschool-aged children, iXl programs for young teens, a fitness and strength training center staffed with certified professional trainers, indoor aquatics center, multiple group exercise studios, and an outdoor pool with playground. For information about the MAC Tennis Program, contact Todd Carpenter, Director of Tennis, at Manchester Athletic Club: 978-526-8900 ext. 238 or tcarpenter@mactennis.com.