

My View of Life on the Dock


Originally posted on The Bean’s World
I got Skitter the hamster at the pet store. He did not live long. He only lived three months but I enjoyed his life in his cage.
We buried him when he died.
Now I will tell you about when he snuck out of his cage for one week.
We found him a week later in the vacuum cleaner.
We did not tell Dad because he would get mad. My mom saran wrapped his cage and stuck the vacuum cleaner inside and then my grandfather took some net and wrapped it around skitter’s cage.
The end.
Click for video page link forwarded by Dwight Hebert
Photo © Kathy Chapman 2012
http://www.kathychapman.com
Send in your entry to goodmorninggloucester@yahoo.com
First entry From Misti @GlostaJoes
We Will Rebuild!!!

Paul Morrison-
Posted on October 29, 2012 by Paul Morrison & RD
My son the barbecue expert without fail leaves an empty Heineken on the barbecue. I woke up to this devastation this morning. How will I break the news? We will get a FEMA loan and I promise- We will rebuild.
The Bean and Snoop Maddie Mad Entry-
Craig Kimberley reports for Good Morning Gloucester
The HMS Bounty which was the feature ship in Gloucester’s Schooner Festival Last Summer was taking on water out at sea and it’s 17 person crew just abandoned ship.
Uhmmm does this not beg the question-
Somebody’s got some splainin’ to do!
By NBC News staff
Seventeen people aboard a replica of the HMS Bounty abandoned ship early Monday while stranded at sea off the North Carolina coast, the U.S. Coast Guard said in a press release.
"The 17 person crew donned cold water survival suits and life jackets before launching in two 25-man lifeboats with canopies," the Coast Guard said in a statement.
The ship issued a distress signal late Sunday and was taking on water, the U.S. Coast Guard said.
The owner of the 180-foot, three mast ship — which was built for the 1962 Marlon Brando movie, "Mutiny on the Bounty" — lost communication with the crew and alerted the Coast Guard to the situation.
Here she is when she arrived in Gloucester Last Summer-
PORTSMOUTH, Va. — The Coast Guard has received word that the crew of the HMS Bounty has abandoned ship approximately 90 miles southeast of Hatteras N.C., Monday.
The 17 person crew donned cold water survival suits and lifejackets before launching in two 25-man lifeboats with canopies.
The Coast Guard continues to monitor the situation and assess the weather conditions to determine the soonest Coast Guard aircraft or surface assets can be on scene to conduct effective rescue operations.
Coast Guard Sector North Carolina initially received a call from the owner of the 180-foot, three mast tall ship, HMS Bounty, saying she had lost communication with the vessel’s crew late Sunday evening.
The Coast Guard 5th District command center in Portsmouth subsequently received a signal from the emergency position indicating radio beacon registered to the Bounty, confirming the distress and position.
An air crew from Coast Guard Air Station Elizabeth City launched aboard an HC-130 Hercules aircraft, which later arrived on scene and reestablished communications with the Bounty’s crew.
The vessel was reportedly taking on water and was without propulsion. On scene weather is reported to be 40 mph winds and 18-foot seas.
More Pictures of the HMS Bounty In Gloucester Last Summer-
Posted on August 31, 2012 by Marty Luster
Len Burgess Submits-
September 1st & 2nd.
HMS Bounty…at one with the sea…global voyager…movie star…dedicated to preserving the fine art of square-rigged sailing.
The HMS Bounty is one of the most famous ships in the world. Known for the storied mutiny that took place in Tahiti in 1789 on board the British transport vessel, the current Bounty, a replica, has survived to tell the tale. Built for the 1962 movie “Mutiny on the Bounty” with Marlon Brando, HMS Bounty sails the country offering dockside tours in which one can learn about the history and details of sailing vessels from a lost and romanticized time in maritime history. Since her debut in “Mutiny on the Bounty”, HMS Bounty has appeared in many documentaries and featured films such as the Edinburgh Trader in Pirates of the Caribbean Dead Mans Chest with Johnny Depp.
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You may wake up and think that this thing is no big deal. Just be aware that the big time winds won’t be here til this afternoon. 70MPH SUSTAINED winds which won’t be here til later today are damaging.
Pictures taken 6:50AM-7:00AM
Be careful and take precautions. Better to be safe than to be sorry.
USCG Grand Isle Still Not Deployed (probably a good thing)
Fishing boats tied up securely at the State Fish Pier
Video uploading now
Stevie Black writes-
Karen Ristuben, the President of the Rocky Neck Art Colony, asked me to send along this press release announcing the development of and preliminary Call To Artists for the Teaching Artist Partnership Pilot Program that will supplement the arts programs of middle school students. Focused initially on O’Maley School in Gloucester, the program partners TAP coordinators with emerging or professional artists allowing the artists to share their unique talents or experiences with the students.
The Rocky Neck Art Colony and its Teaching Artist Partnership (TAP) program are funded, in part, by a grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Council. Recognizing the benefits of a strong visual arts education to middle school students, and responding to curriculum gaps from recent budget cuts, the Rocky Neck Art Colony will offer instruction through a variety of workshops by two professional artists per semester through 2014. The TAP program will take place at O’Maley Middle School during school hours and will result in student exhibitions at the Cultural Center at Rocky Neck, the program’s base of operations.
For more information contact:
Shayla Kaufmann – TAP Co-coordinator: shayart@gmail.com978.879.8183
Kyle Browne – TAP Co-coordinator: kybro13@gmail.com 347.623.0644
Karen Ristuben – RNAC President: karen.ristuben@gmail.com978.758.1210
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
Stevie Black Marketing Director Rocky Neck Art Colony
A POSTCARD TOUR OF MANCHESTER DURING THE GILDED AGE
Tuesday, November 13, 2012 7:30 P. M.
Waterline Center, Essex Shipbuilding Museum
66 Main Street, Essex, Massachusetts 01929
Using vintage picture postcards from the extensive collection of the Manchester Historical Museum, curator John Huss will trace the evolution of the town from its humble origins as a small fishing village into its preeminence as THE preferred destination of the Rich and Famous during the Gilded Age (1880 – 1920). Please join us on a visit to seaside mansions, enjoy the amenities of the famous Masconomo House Hotel, set sail from the yacht club and play croquet at the Essex County Club during your pictorial tour.
Admission $8 members, $10 nonmembers Order tickets on our website
(www.essexshipbuildingmuseum.org)
Phone (978-768-7541) Tickets will be available at the door.
The City of Gloucester Open Space and Recreation Committee, Get Fit Gloucester! and City Councilor Melissa Cox will be hosting a community forum on ways to make Downtown Gloucester more bicycle-friendly. The forum will take place THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1 from 6-8, in the 3rd Floor Conference Room of City Hall. Encouraging bicycling around Gloucester can bolster local businesses and help residents lead healthier lives.
The Committee will present conceptual lay-outs for bike lanes and bicycle sharrows on Rogers and Main Street and proposed bike route signage for a “Round the Cape” bicycle route through Downtown Gloucester.
Hi Joey
I wanted to share the spectacular and unusual multiple rainbow phenomenon that was a harbinger of Hurricane Sandy late this afternoon over Gloucester Crossing.
There were three rainbows and two sundogs for a total of five! The rainbows were not parallel, but arced at different angles-it was like nothing I have ever seen in my sixty three years.
Caroline Haines
Cape Ann Community Cinema, the unique, living room-style digital movie theater at 21 Main Street in Gloucester, has earned a reputation as "the film festival that never ends," and from November 1-18, they up the ante with 32 films, plus visiting filmmakers, live events and music, HD operas from Europe, and one Bond girl via satellite.
"The Festival is like a Whitman’s sampler of all the things we offer at the Cinema all year long," explained Robert Newton, creative director of the Cinema and the Festival. "It’s like a whole season on fast-forward, delivered in just 2 1/2 weeks."
Most of the Festival’s events take place at the Cinema at 21 Main Street, with a handful happening at Film Haven, located inside The Hive at 11 Pleasant Street.
"Like in our year-round line-up, we program as many quality local films as we can," Newton added, "and like in our year-round line-up, we balance them with the best films we can find from around the state, around the country, and around the world."
The 5th Annual Cape Ann Film Festival’s Opening Night is Thursday, November 1st at 7:30pm, when CinemaSalem’s Paul Van Ness and naturalist Kristina Lindborg present their short feature, "This Perfect Place: A Natural History Of The Massachusetts North Shore." Also part of the evening is a selection of Festival trailers, and free pizza from La Trattoria.
"Paul’s CinemaSalem was part of the inspiration for the CACC, so showing his film is a great match for this year’s Festival," Newton said, "and his steady output of original homespun fare has inspired me to do the same for our Cinema." Newton is now raising money for "Over Cape Ann HD," a planned 45-minute feature to replace the dated flyover video that has been airing on Cape Ann TV since 1988.
The Cape Ann Community Cinema has been open for over four years now. Newton got his start showing movies on Cape Ann in 2007, when he started showing independent movies every week at John Williams’s Gloucester Cinema on Essex Avenue. He has been an exhibitor since 2003, when he retired from 17 years in the video rental business. He had stores in Hamilton, Swampscott, Auburn, and Worcester, the latter of which he sold to Hollywood Video.
GUESTS GALORE
The CAFF’s Guest of Honor is character actor extraordinaire Stephen Tobolowsky, aka "The Guy Who Everybody Knows (But Nobody Knows They Know)." He has appeared in over 200 movies and TV shows, and is known best as Ned Ryerson in "Groundhog Day" and Sammy Jankis in "Memento," plus series like "Deadwood," "Glee" and "Californication." He appears at the Festival on Monday, November 12th at 6:30pm, when he will perform a story from his new book, "The Dangerous Animals Club" (which he will sign copies of) and host a Q&A.
Former 007 girl and "X-Men" star Famke Janssen will appear via satellite after the Saturday, November 3rd at 7:30pm screening of her first film as writer-director, "Bringing Up Bobby." The film features "Resident Evil" star Milla Jovovich as a con artist who moves with her young son to a conservative neighborhood in Oklahoma. It has been called "sensitively acted, carefully written and directed with heartfelt compassion" and "an engrossing little independent film.
POLITICS! POLITICS! POLITICS!
A more local guest visits on Sunday, November 4th, when Cape Ann’s own professional prankster and Presidential candidate Vermin Supreme brings his film "Vote Jesus: The Chronicles Of Ken Stevenson." The political satirist’s documentary details his trip behind the moral iron curtain and into the steamy viscera of American Fundamentalism, disguised as a right-wing politician. Speaking of politicians, voters are invited to watch the election results come in starting at 6:30pm on Tuesday, November 6th (presented by The Gloucester Democratic City Committee). On Thursday, November 15th at 6:30pm, the Festival hosts "The JFK Experience," a live, multimedia encounter with history featuring historic performer Mike Lowe as John F. Kennedy. Lowe’s presentation is impressive, immersive, and interactive, with audience members able to actually ask questions of the 35th President of the United States.
ART FOR ART’S SAKE… AND FOR A CAUSE
A quartet of local filmmakers makes up the Thursday, November 8th at 7:30pm "ArtShorts" line-up, with "Boo," "Citgo Dance" and "The Builder" by Elizabeth Cornaro; "Princess" and "Icarus" by Christy Park; "No More Gloomy Sundays" by Robert Newton & Kristen Miller; "Où est Fleuri Rose?" by Mark Warhol.
Ipswich filmmaker Brendan Fay brings his debut feature "Weekend In Summer" to the CAFF on Friday, November 9th at 7:30pm. The coming-of-age hometown homage, made on a budget of $1,200, is about two days in the lives of three friends just out of high school.
Inaugurating the Cape Ann Community Cinema’s "Dinner & A Movie" series is the all-time Greek box office champ "A Touch Of Spice," playing Sunday, November 11th (doors at 6:00pm, movie at 6:30pm). The night, which features a light Greek meal by Brothers Kouzina in Peabody, benefit’s Cape Ann’s food bank, The Open Door.
MUSIC MATTERS
The Gloucester Unitarian Universalist Church hosts the classic 1973 crime drama "The Harder They Come" starring reggae legend Jimmy Cliff on Wednesday, November 14th at 7:30pm. Rockport artisan Leslie Wind has partnered with the CACC in bringing folk musicians Debra Cowan and John Roberts on Friday, November 16th at 7:30pm. Later the same evening at 10:00pm, Manchester’s Allison Sigrist and her all-girl Queen tribute band, Gunpowder Gelatine, hit the stage, followed by a special movie treat. Additionally, two HD operas from Europe are also part of the Festival line-up – Wagner’s "Siegfried" (from Milan’s La Scala) on Sunday, November 11th at 12:00pm and Tuesday, November 13th at 2:00pm, and Mozart’s "The Marriage Of Figaro" (from London’s Royal Opera) on Sunday, November 18th at 2:00pm.
…AND EVEN MORE LOCAL STUFF
The Healthy Gloucester Collaborative debuts "Our Town," their new teen-made PSAs on Saturday, November 17th at 12:00pm.
Gloucester’s Mick Verga hosts an encore presentation of the adoption story "Somewhere Between" on Saturday, November 17th at 5:00pm, and will read the children’s book that he wrote called ‘The Lonely Little Horse.’
The Festival closes on Sunday, November 18th at 6:00pm with a work-in-progress version of "Maritime Capsule," the new documentary on dory boats by Gloucester guys Sal Zerilli and Keith Palazzola. Palazzola will present the film and host a Q&A session after.
ETCETERA, ETCETERA, ETCETERA…
The other films in the 5th Annual Cape Ann Film Festival are: "An Affair Of The Heart," "Ai Weiwei: Never Sorry," "All Together," "The American Scream," "Arrugas (Wrinkles)," "Atlas Shrugged – Part II: The Strike," "Beloved," "The Best Of The New York Children’s Film Festival," "Compliance," "Detropia," "FDR: American Badass," "Fear and Desire," "Holy Motors," "The Invisible War," "The Island President," "Kumaré," "Nine Nation Animation," "Samsara," "Searching For Sugar Man," "Tales Of The Night," "Trade Of Innocents," "The Well-Digger’s Daughter," and "Wuthering Heights."
Operas and the "Touch Of Spice" Dinner & A Movie event are $17.50 adults, $15.00 for Members. The Debra Cowan & John Roberts show and the Guest of Honor night are $15.00 adults, $12.50 for Members. The "Our Town" event and the screening of "FDR: American Badass" are free. All other films and events cost $9.75 for adults, $8.25 for students and seniors (60+) and $6.75 for Members.
A full schedule, trailers, advance tickets on select presentations, and more information on all Festival films and events can be found on the Festival’s official website, www.CapeAnnFilmFest.com.