Rough Rider Steam Gillnetter From Bill Hubbard

Here’s one from out of the past.  The "Rough Rider" was a steam gillnetter built in Manitowoc, Wisconsin in 1904.  My great, great grandfather Axel B. Dahlmer bought her in 1909 and fished her out of Dunkirk, New York.  She here dimensions were  10gr.tons X 39′ length X 10′ beam and 5′ draft.  Axel sold her to my grandfather, John A. Dahlmer around 1910 and repowered her with a gasoline engine.  He brought her to Gloucester in 19

Visit my artists website and Blog at:
http://bill-hubbard.artistwebsites.com

 

Roughrider

Community Stuff May 17th

Island Art & Hobby news

Hi Joey,
Island Art & Hobby has launched a frequent buyers club..  any chance you could post the blurb from our FB site??
We would like to recognize and appreciate all those who have supported us. So beginning today we have implemented a frequent buyers club.. For each $10 spent in the store you will have a star placed on your ID card kept at the register.. Collect 10 stars and you will receive a 10% discount on your next purchase. Stop by and get your ID card today!!! …and our heartfelt thanks for supporting local !!!
Many thanks,
Don Boye
Island Art & Hobby 117 Main Street
Gloucester, MA 01930  978.879.4511
islandartandhobby.com


On the next Cape Ann Profiles show host Rich Sagall interviews movie writer, director and Shawn Goulard and movie actor Nick Decoulos, the creative team behind the movie Devil’s Island. The movie, which recently premiered to a sold-out audience at the Gloucester Cinema, is an eerie tale of intrigue shot here on Cape Ann.
Cape Ann Profiles can be seen on Cape Ann TV Channel 12 on Friday, May 18 at 10:30AM and 7:00PM and on Sunday, May 20 at 2:00PM. It repeats on Friday, May  25 at 10:30AM and 7:00PM and on Sunday, May 28 at 2:00PM.


Please join us at the Lanesville Community Center Sunday, May 20, 3 – 5 PM for an exhibition of Helen Jacobson’s art and a taste some of her much loved chocolate!  Helen Jacobson lived from 1918 – 2011 and she loved Lanesville and Cape Ann.  At 3:30 PM, the LCC will unveil a stone dedicated to Helen.  All are welcome to join us!


Cover for Ann's Eyes

Local author and musician Barry Stacks has written two more novels using Gloucester and Cape Ann as the platform on which the stories take place.  124 Main Street: When We Was

takes place in and around the business that once occupied that address (Nick’s Pool Room).  It is the tale of four Italian cousins all born in 1946.  The story follows the four cousins as they attempt to navigate the treacherous waters of the 1960’s.  Simply put, they were told all through their informative years that they were capable of achieving anything they wanted.  As a storm tide blew in the wake of the war in Southeast Asia, they found they were ill equipped to face the challenges they faced.  It is a moving story, at time very funny and at other times very sad.

Following the success of his successful  All in Vein saga and the popular  House on Marchant Street the author has now turned to a very different  genre.  Ann’s Eyes: The Twins of Thacher Island is a tale that will surely raise the hair on the back of your neck.  The two main characters are twins who live with their parents on Thacher Island.  Their father is the lighthouse keeper.  He is married to a beautiful woman, who like himself, is of Finnish ancestry.  Murder and mayhem follow the twins through their lives.

Look for part iv if the All in Vein series in the fall of 2012.

When We Was Final Cover


Spiran Lodge #98 is having an Open House on Motif #1 Day, May 19th from 11:30 AM to 2:00 PM. The Lodge is located on the corner of Broadway and School Street in Rockport. Please come join us for refreshments and learn more about our Lodge.

Submitted by Judith Harris

Gloucester MA Harbor Walk Walking Tour

The camera battery dies just as we get to one of the most important parts, Maritime Gloucester, but it’s still a nice video.

Click here to view it

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Eating In Italy- The Slide Show

Click here to view the slide show

No, I didn’t eat all of it but I gave it my best.  Here are the food photos I took along the way.

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Italy Day 6: Ravello

Start the day driving from Positano to Ravello for cooking class with world renowned Mamma Agata. Ravello just edges out Positano for favorite small place in Italy. Classy, laid back, naturally beautiful and less touristy than Positano and much less than Amalfi.

The cooking class like this trip is a once in a lifetime kind of experience. Mamma Agata and daughter Chiara exude that same warm genuine friendliness like my Grandmother Felicia had.

The food spectacular, the hospitality wonderful, the views priceless.

Observation about Italian food (not Mamma Agata’s but in general):

I’ve eaten lots of bread since I’ve been here and for some reason it’s rather blah. We should be very grateful for the special bakeries we have in Gloucester. I haven’t had bread anywhere in Italy that comes close to Virgilio’s, Sclafani’s or Alexandrea’s. Nowhere near as close. Our breads are nice and crusty on the outside soft in the inside and pack way more flavor than the Breads I’ve eaten here.

This isn’t the case for pizza dough or pastry. The pastry here are outrageous creations of art and the pizza dough is light and wonderful.

On coffee:
While espresso is nice and cappuccino is everywhere I miss a good ol cup of coffee from Lone Gull, Cape Ann Coffee and Pleasant Street like you read about. In a large paper cup-to go-to sip on over the course of a half hour or so.

We couldn’t ask for better weather and the Mrs itinerary has been spot on, with help from our friends Randy and Stephanie. Wouldn’t change a thing with the places we’ve stayed or eaten or length of visits for each.

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Update: Series- A question About The 100 Year Old Gloucester Postcards From Peter Dorsey- A Gloucester Fisherman

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Jonathan Olly writes-

Hello Joey C,

While doing a Google search just now I came across the postcard you posted on March 22 of the old fisherman posing in oilskins.  Would you happen to know the name of this man?  I ask because I’m a graduate student down here in Providence, RI, and I’m writing a dissertation chapter on old salts.  They’re found around the world, but in the United States they’re almost exclusively found in New England.  Your postcard photo (which is rare, and one of the old salt postcards I’m still hunting for) may have been done by Gloucester photographer/engineer Herman Spooner, who photographed a number of retired fishermen (John Scott, Lemuel Friend, Oliver Emerton, and David Stanwood among them).  But, I don’t recall seeing this image in his photo collection at the Cape Ann Museum.  So if you have any additional information about your postcard I’d be happy to hear it.

Best regards,

Jonathan

Greg Bover & Francie Fitch Pics from "A Thousand Sunday Mornings" Courtesy Rick Isaacs

Commercial Fishing: Rome

Apparently commercial fishing in Rome is alive and well.  In my opinion you can tell how well the boats are doing by how well they are maintained.  These boats are all in good shape and devoid (mostly) of rust so they must be doing alright.

Click below to see the photos

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2012 Membership Power Luncheon on Wednesday, May 23, 2012 featuring Massachusetts Department of Transportation Secretary and Chief Executive Officer, Richard A. Davey

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Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce Membership Power Luncheon

The 2012 Membership Power Luncheon Speaker Series kicks off with guest speaker Richard A. Davey, Massachusetts Department of Transportation (MassDOT) Secretary and Chief Executive Officer on Wednesday, May 23, 2012.

A key member of Governor Deval Patrick’s Cabinet, Secretary Davey will lead off the series by providing updates and insights on major transportation initiatives on Cape Ann and throughout our region. The goal of this new Chamber series is to inform, educate, and empower members through a diverse array of speaking programs and seminars.

In 2010, the Boston Business Journal named Secretary Davey a “Top 40 Under 40” award winner. He also serves on the Board of Directors of the Immigrant Learning Center, a non-profit center providing free English classes to immigrants and the Board of Advisors of Samaritans, Inc. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the College of the Holy Cross and a Juris Doctorate summa cum laude from Gonzaga University School of Law. Secretary Davey and his wife live in Boston, where they are regular users of the MBTA system.

The Membership Power Luncheon will be held at the The Elks at Bass Rocks, 101 Atlantic Road, Gloucester, at noon on Wednesday, May 23, with registration and check-in starting at 11:30 am. Tickets for members are $35 in advance or $40 week/day of and $50 for future members. For more information or to RSVP for this event, please contact Robert Heidt at robert@capeannchamber.com or call the Chamber at 978-283-1601.

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Battle Royal To Be First In Line At Costco To Buy Industrial Sized Portions Of Toilet Paper.

Broads were boxing out and taking no prisoners. Best to stand back and let them get in there.

Dangerous!

This morning the Tea Party Ship Eleanor was towed to Boston Photo Kathy Chapman

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This morning the Tea Party Ship Eleanor was towed to Boston.

Photographs © Kathy Chapman 2012 http://www.kathychapman.com

The Eleanor

The original Eleanor was one of several vessels owned by leading Boston merchant, smuggler, and Boston Board of Selectman, John Rowe. His holdings included stores, warehouses and Rowe’s Wharf, a current Boston landmark. Rowe was an active smuggler and inciter in the years preceding the American Revolution. He was influential in protesting British authority, specifically Britain’s tightening restrictions on colonial trade.

Can we do away with pennies already?

Imagine how much time, energy and space we could save by simply eliminating pennies? Can someone explain the reasoning behind not eliminating pennies and making the smallest coin the nickel?

Is it true that the value of the commodity copper is currently worth more by weight than what a penny is worth as currency or not?  Just seems like such a waste of time.

Here’s an idea- Instead of wasting time legislating whether or not bake sales in schools should be allowed, why not legislate pennies out of use and make things more efficient for commerce.

Italy Day 5: Praiano and Amalfi

A lazy start to the day after the huge feast at La Tragliate last night. Up for breakfast on the sunny terrace- cappuccino, croissants, grapefruit juice and sun!

The huge yachts look like small sailboats from our high perch above to Mediterranean. It’s 400 steps down from our room to the beach. You can stuff yourself with pizza at the bottom on the beach and by the time you work your way back up to the room you’re ready to eat again, lol.

The plan is to hop in the car and discover a few new Amalfi Coast cities. We get going around 11:30 AM and hit the first town of Praiano. Praiano is just south of Positano with stunning views back toward The Positano Bay. Praiaino is much more laid back than Positano but still very much a tourist place with lots of Hotels and Inns. We ate lunch at La Brace. Pretty sure it was a family operation with the father as your host, daughter as your server and son in the kitchen (total guess but that was how the dynamic between them seemed). The food was very good. A little on the expensive side but friendly service from the father and very good food with a gorgeous view of Positano. I’d return.

One of the most entertaining things about Italy is watching the way Italians talk to each other. We all know Italians talk with their hands and wear their emotions on their sleeves but the very best is watching this whole dynamic play out on cell phones when the person on the receiving end of the phone call can’t even see the caller but the hands are flying around like an overworked aircraft signalman on crack and their facial expressions tell the entire story without understanding a lick of the language.

Driving the Amalfi is exhilarating and terrifying at the same time. Hairpin turns and the most dramatic vistas I’ve ever witnessed. The thing is if we are to live to talk about it the driver (me) has to keep their eyes on he road. Made for a nice ride for the Mrs though. By the time the driving is done for the day you are ready for a good stiff drink to take the edge off for sure.

After lunch and walking around Praiano we head for their south to Amalfi. Amalfi is where the large cruise ships pull in. Definitely geared toward tourists with a bustling center and piers. There is a large space for buses to pull in and walk across the street to the shops, cares and restaurants. The piers are beautiful. Everything all along the Amalfi is very clean, people are friendly and you feel very safe. We have a cappuccino bounce in and out of a few shops, take a walk down the pier and head back to the car for the 45 minute or so drive back to Positano.

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It’s On Baby!

Post Italy-

Last night: Planks, Pushups and Lunges.

Hamstrings are not happy with me.

Breakfast: Two Egg Whites, Greek Yogurt. Stretching.

This is it baby, I’m in it to win it!

Motivated.  I’ll be ready to wear the new grape smugglers I bought on vacation in no time. Smile

Filling in home workouts with time at The MAC

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Gloucester Webcam of The Day- Schooner Adventure

VISIT THE SCHOONER ADVENTURE WEBSITE

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This Webcam and more can be found at www.gloucesterwebcam.com

This www.gloucesterwebcam.com local webcam portal project was an idea I had last year to have as many webcams streaming from local businesses or organizations as possible which highlight the incredible vistas that we as people that live and work here get to enjoy each and every day.

The idea was to have the organization install the webcam, have them embed the webcam feed on their own websites as well and have a link to each business website on the Gloucester webcam portal website to showcase their business as well.

Tim Blakeley from Gloucester Bytes provided the initial installation at ridiculously cheap cost because he believed in the project.

Free Tickets To Friday Night’s Berklee College of Music Herb Pomeroy’s Big Band Performance “To Herb with love” (a $40 Value)

A random person will be selected Wednesday evening at 7:00PM.  To qualify for the contest all you need to do is to follow my twitter account- @Joey_C

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The Concert will be Friday night May 18th so you can pick up the tickets Friday morning down at the Dock

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Video- Castle Manor Inn Room Tour

click to play the video

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Check Out their website here for more info and visit the open house Grand Opening May 18th- 5/18 from 6-10pm  there will be food & wine tastings, musicians and tours.

Italy Day Four: Positano

Woke up late to a large breakfast served on the terrace off our room. Complimentary breakfast comes with the room which consisted of bread, butter, croissant, coffee and yogurt. For an additional 4 Euro you can get bacon and eggs. The bacon was THICK cut with no visible fat and the eggs seasoned and scrambled. The coffee black, strong and dark as the ace of spades.

Headed into the heart of Positano and had some pizza then hit he beach all day. I listened to music, the Mrs read. She may be into her fifth book for all I know as she’s totally engrossed from morning til dark in her nook.

Some observations-
The men here wear their pants tight as can be and use an incredible amount of hair gel. These dudes would make Justin Beiber blush the way they primp. Somewhere in the middle of the frumpiness of the way we dress in the states and the way the men in Italy coif themselves is probably where my happy medium exists.

There are also a few things that Italian men are quite comfortable doing in public (and when I say in public I mean right up in your grill while you are holding a conversation with them)-

Picking their noses and readjusting their nutsack and/or penis. It is amazing to me how you can be talking to someone and they go right into a knuckle deep nose pick like it ain’t no thing. All I can think of when this happens is “Really? You’re really just gonna dig right in there while we exchange pleasantries?”

The nutsack and/or penis readjustment thing is altogether different than the nosepick thing though. They aren’t pretending it isn’t happening while in your company.

It’s more of a “Yeah I know you’re right in front of me but I’m gonna push my junk around in my way too tight jeans. You see, it’s my penis down there. Yep I’ve got a penis and it’s right here in my way too tight jeans. Have you noticed I’ve got a penis in my way too tight jeans? Because, you know if you didn’t I can do some more readjusting of my nutsack and/or penis just to drive the point home.”

The beach here in Positano is made up of dark sand and bluish gray tumbled stone. The rounded stones make for an interesting place to rest, not nearly as uncomfortable as one might think. We rented two beach chairs from a guy $15 Euro and got in a much needed rest day from the go-go of Rome.

Dinner was at
La Tagliate

You take a bus up to the top of the mountain. A stunning outdoor room with an equally stunning view. You don’t order from a menu. They bring course after course, Sista Felicia style trying to take you down in a food coma because you simply can’t resist any of the culinary delights. It is owned by one family and they all work there. It gets Trip Advisors #1 rated restaurant in Positano and it lives up to the billing. They sent a car for us and dropped us off and it was a good thing. It took about a half hour to wind our way all the way to the tippity top of Positano and once there the view down was absolutely breathtaking.

First course- legumes and roasted eggplant, cheeses including the creamiest most delicious ricotta I’ve ever eaten (Felicia this made that Ricotta from Detroit taste like Dog Poop, or at least what I imagine Dog Poop tastes like) , then salads, breads, pastas, then plates of pork, steak, rabbit, and chicken. Locally made wine which was going down sooo smoothly, then lemoncello and grappa. Then dessert of profiteroles and “mama’s special cake”. Stuffed, I mean STUFFED. The brother and sister were always coming by the table to talk and laugh and make sure everything was to your liking. Every course was three to five different items.

The bill comes and it’s only $70 Euro. I asked if it was a mistake because honestly just what we had to drink I would have thought could have justified $70 Euro let alone the car service and the food.

Let me be clear- This was no semi-clean roadside dive, this was the nicest place we’ve eaten by far since we’ve been in Italy. Even though you read in travel guides that tipping is not expected we dropped an extra 20 Euro because I couldn’t consciously leave there without showing my gratitude.

This would be the absolute best place for a rehearsal dinner. The family is hilarious and gets the whole room jumping and in the party mood. They were pouring shots and doing them with us and more. Fun, beautiful, friendly, great service, great food, great room, great view- No Brainer must visit if you ever come to Positano.

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