So I get back from my time off and sitting on my desk is this box. Zip Code 01581
If anyone has any information on how this wayward duck made it to the dock let me know and you will be rewarded with a shout out on these here pages!
My View of Life on the Dock
Hosted on www.GloucesterWebcam.com
Dear Joey,
I love what you do. I’m writing you because you seem to be a more important source of news in Gloucester than any other blog or publication around. Many people have come in to the shop since Kathy posted Isabel Natti’s Sailor’s Valentine telling me that they came because they saw the shop mentioned on "Good Morning Gloucester". There are a lot of people who are inspired by what you do and by your enthusiasm and I want to thank you for sharing it online.
I wanted to let you know that Isabel’s son and her partner Italo asked me to carry on printing her work and my own on the Acorn Press at 5 Whistlestop Mall in Rockport. I am a decorative painter, printmaker and fabric designer and have been using her press to do my work off and on for 12 years. I grew up with her nephew Matt Natti in Lanesville and had been a friend of hers since about 2000. Right now, I’m working on restructuring the business in a way that honors the traditions of her work but also brings it to a contemporary audience. Because I have another career as a set painter for film and television, this is something I do when I’m not busy working. I plan on keeping weekend hours but directing the majority of the business to the web. Her cards and other work are being carried by The Cape Ann Historical Museum Gift Shop, Alexandra’s Bread, Toad Hall Books and Turtle Alley in addition to the Sarah Elizabeth Shop in Rockport and the website http://sarah-elizabeth-shop.com
Isabel’s work continues to be made and block printing in this area has not died with her. The press and shop are an important mainstay of the area that I am determined to keep open one way or another. So please visit the shop again and see what I am trying to do there. I’d appreciate it if people knew the continuation of her story and continued to support this very special, native craft.
This is a photo of me taken by Kathy Chapman 3 weeks ago, about a week after the family gave me the keys. I’m very happy and honored to be given the opportunity to print a very talented woman’s art as well as my own. Thank you to the Natti family for their dedication to the art and to her.
Thanks for all your good work for the community.
Regards,
Julia Garrison
Glad your back, looking forward to coming down to the dock for some morning coffee…
Cape Ann sunrises just rock with explosive color this time of season; Loblolly Cove
Skip
North Coast Angler www.northcoastangler.com
Skip Montello Photos www.skipmontellophotos.com
Cape Ann Theatre Collaborative
Gloucester, Massachusetts
VISIT US AT –
http://www.catcollaborative.org/
ROCKPORT ROTARY’S SENIOR VALENTINE’S LUNCHEON IS A SUCCESS
The Rockport Rotary Club held their Valentine’s Luncheon on February 14th at Brackett’s Oceanview Restaurant for Rockport’s local Senior Citizens. This event was sponsored by the Rockport Rotary Club. Brackett’s Oceanview Restaurant graciously allowed their restaurant to be opened for this event. Den-Mar Rehabilitation provided chocolates, and many of their residents were in attendance. The Early Act club in Rockport made valentines and heart-shaped pins for all the attendee. Flowers from SeaCoast Nursing Home were handed out to every guest, and lunch was served along with a beautiful Red Velvet Cake for dessert. The event generated many smiling faces and a wonderful time full of camaraderie and fellowship amongst Rotarians and the Seniors alike.
Jimmy writes-
Dear Joey,
I feel like I owe you a favor for all the coverage you’ve given the International Dory Race Committee, so I’m offering you the chance to save your soul. You’ve always claimed to love Gloucester so much, how can you use your blog as a tool to further your own financial interests, knowing it will destroy the Working Waterfront that your father helped build??? Have you no conscience???
Please take a step back and re-evaluate your position before it’s too late. Your invited to the “Annie” next Monday night for a Public Forum. Will you stand with Jim Davis, Sheree DeLorenzo, Mac Bell and Sam Parisi or will you stand for the working people of Gloucester and help save our waterfront!
Still your friend!
Jimmy T.
P.S: Feel free to post this, I am in my documentation of this very important time in Gloucester history.
I will first state that I respect Jimmy T just as I respect Damon Cummings and consider them both quality individuals, great family men and great Gloucester citizens.
However I can not disagree more with them on their stance on Gloucester Harbor.
My response.
My interest in seeing Birdseye prosper is the same as it is for I4-C2, the Paint Factory and the way it was when I supported Gloucester Crossing which had nothing to do with the waterfront but so many of the same people opposed.
I am for jobs for our City. I am for economic development and more taxes being paid to our City to support strong schools, better roads and better sewer systems along with all the benefits all Gloucester residents will receive when there is money to support our public financial responsibilities.
I am not one of these people who would like to erect a gate at the bridge and only allow people that were born here the right to come here and buy a piece of property and raise a family. I do not equate people that make money as being the devil. Are there rich people that are true jerks? Absolutely, but there are plenty of rich people who are some of the nicest people you would meet just as there are some poor jerks and poor sweethearts.
It isn’t a class war for me 24/7.
If we kept to the way of thinking that we don’t want any other people coming to Gloucester we wouldn’t have these people-
Carolyn Kirk –Mayor That Balanced our Budget and Raised Our Bond Rating
Dawn Gadow- Director of Art Haven
Ken and Nicole Duckworth- Proprietors of the #1 Zagat Rated Restaurant in The Northeast
Donna Ardizzoni- Founder of The One Hour at a Time Gang
Maggie Rosa- Gloucester Education Foundation and Save City Hall
Marty Luster- GMG Contributor and Photog Extraordinaire
Vickie and Peter Van Ness- Creators of Celebrate Gloucester Music Festival and people who organized The Joe Garland Tribute
Ed Collard- Major Builder of The Lobster Trap Tree and One Hour at A Time gang Member and anywhere there is a community need you see Ed helping out.
Melissa Cox- Ward Councillor and One Hour at a Time Gang Member
John McElhenny- A member of Gloucester’s Open Space and Recreation Committee, board of directors of the Sawyer Free Librar and PR for Gloucester
Frieda Grotjahn- owner Again and Again Sailbags in East Gloucester Square.
and so many more people that came here because they loved it.
You won’t stop these types of people from coming here and quite frankly I hope they don’t stop coming. Communities change and not all change is bad.
Speaking about Sheree deLorenzo and Jim Davis as if they were the devil is absurd to me. It baffles me how you could poo poo the generous donation of $500,000 to rebuild Newell Stadium by Jim Davis saying that he should somehow give more??? That sure isn’t chump change to anyone. Really? Sheree DeLorenzo at Cruiseport took a derelict property, turned it into hundreds of jobs and supports hundreds of vendors all while maintaining the waterfront at her and Jim Davis’ property for Marine Industrial use. Not one fishing boat was ever asked to leave. But the rhetoric from the anti folks would have you believe that she is displacing fishing boats or marine industrial activity. Lies and slander.
Instead of demonizing her I’d think that she and Cruiseport should be celebrated as a model of how marine industrial can coexist alongside and even on the same property. Cruiseport is living proof.
Want more proof? Look at the Giacalone’s Fisherman’s Wharf which is directly next to Latitude 43’s outdoor restaurant deck and the Gloucester House. By your way of thinking you would be reading about police reports on a daily basis because they can’t coexist. But THEY DO AND HAVE!
More? Brown’s Yacht Yard next to International Lobster. OMG how do they do it? I’m surprised they don’t have daily riots over there because they simply can’t coexist! Guess what? They have. For decades.
The people that would have nothing happen here would have told Sam Park to screw and every family of Gloucester would be paying at least $2500 a year more in grocery bills because we were at the mercy of Stop and Shop and Shaws who were RAPING US.
I4-C2 did not have a single bidder for that property after it went out for bid from the City. Not one. That speaks volumes. As they say, put up…
I’d like to see one example where Sheree or Mac Bell twisted someone’s arm to sell their property. I hear people use the words “Forced to sell” When??? Show me when.
Talking about selling my soul?
I’d say you have a chance Jimmy to not sell your soul because change is going to happen and we can have a say in it instead of blocking it and blocking it and blocking it and coming up with places like I4-C2 vacant instead of providing jobs and taxes. Every year that goes by is a year that taxes could have been collected to pay for better schools or to keep our Fire Stations Open. The Paint Factory, still vacant unless a magical 10 million drops into the laps of Ocean Alliance.
I’m not sure how people could not want money to pay for better schools and take care of the City Infrastructure and how the disconnect between responsible economic development with the increase in taxes and jobs pays for these needs to support our City.
I’d say selling your soul would be to not embrace change by recognizing that you don’t have to displace fishing boats to allow uses that create jobs on the upland parts of these properties. Selling your soul would be to accept anything less.
I think that as long as we don’t displace fishing boats from their berths that there is plenty of waterfront to offload the incredibly consolidated fishing fleet and to not recognize that the fleet has been radically consolidated is to misrepresent the situation.
If you don’t want these people from out of town to come here any more you should rail against The Downtown Block Parties, Rail Against our Beautiful Beaches, Rail against all of the Awesome Community Events we have, Rail against the Art Scene, Rail against the Farmer’s Market. These are the fantastic things that are bringing people here. People love it here and aren’t going to stop coming. Communities change, communities evolve.
The biggest crime against our community IMO is not supporting initiatives for jobs and to better our schools and public safety through an increased tax base. That my friend would be selling out by not wanting opportunities for the best schools and public safety for our community.
So saying I’m a sell out and don’t want what is best for our community is not the way I see it at all. I say that the people that are living with the best views in the city on the Fort and not paying what normal waterfront residential taxpayers pay makes it harder to support our school system. It makes it harder to fill in the potholes and it makes it more difficult to pay to keep the outlaying fire stations open. So you’re calling me selfish? Allowing for responsible development would provide the jobs and provide the tax base so that the tax burden on residents around the entire city wouldn’t have to bear the brunt of it. Yeah, I won’t be at the witch hunt at The Annie. I can only imagine what kind of shit show that’s going to be. You know how I feel as I’ve never waivered.
Jim I know you are passionate about your feelings and I know you are a quality person through and through, I just completely disagree with you just like most of the fishermen that I speak to on a daily basis tell me. That they don’t see a problem with it as long as their boats are not being displaced.
Jim, Gloucester isn’t just filled with Tarantinos, Ciaramitaros, Favazzas, Palazolas, Frontieros, Aeillos and Novellos any more.
It’s Filled with Tarantinos, Kirks, Favazzas, Duckworths, Frontieros, Cox’, Aiellos, Rosas, Novellos, Van Ness’, Ciaramitaros, Collards, Interrantes, Gadows, Palazolas, Grotjahns and more and to be honest I like the new Gloucester and all of it’s diversity and energy.
Oh and BTW Clarence Birdseye- Born In Brooklyn NY. God bless yet another out of towner.
Hey Joey,
We are celebrating Mardi Gras @ the Brewery all weekend and wanted to put the shout out to all your followers. Friday night, Henri Smith is an phenomenal jazz vocalist who grew up in New Orleans and is a true all around entertainer. On Saturday night, The Runaround will be rocking the house. For all those who like Cajun style food, we have crawfish and jambalaya all weekend. Hope to see you there!
Cheers
Walter Bunten
Cape Ann Brewing Co.
She just informed me that it took her about 30 tries to perfect it and it is going in her cookbook.
Our friend Steve Borichevsky from www.shootingmyuniverse.com took home the honors with his photo being used on the new packaging for Fisherman’s Brew.
On Tuesday, February 28th at 6 p.m., Cape Ann Brewing Company(CABC) will host an award ceremony in honor of Gloucester resident and photography enthusiast, Steve Borichevsky.
CABC invited the general public to submit photos of local scenes that would best reflects the spirit and courage of the North Atlantic fishing fleet. The winning photo replaces the original image on the Fisherman’s Brew six pack. Borichevsky submitted the winning photo of a fishing vessel returning to it’s home port of Gloucester Harbor, which was selected from over 40 images.
Cape Ann Brewing Company
Founded in 2004, Cape Ann Brewing Company is an award-winning, family-owned, micro-brewery in the heart of the historic seaport of Gloucester in Cape Ann. Brewing beer whose bold flavor and character reflects the spirit and courage of the sailors of the North Atlantic fishing fleet, and is the same passion that drives what we do. The Fisherman’s line of beer is a tribute to hard work, and a salute to friendships that endure. Cape Ann Brewing continues it’s support of the Northeast Seafood Coalition, a non-profit organization dedicated to preserving fishing communities, protecting fishery resources and feeding the world, and urges people to get involved in aiding our local fishermen.
Cape Ann Brewing Will Be Fielding a Squad “Nacho Libre” for Our Bikini and Speedo Dodgeball Tournament March 4th. For more Details click here
I’ve gone to Vegas for years but rarely leave the Strip. My usual Vegas trip is not what people envision when they think of Vegas. I hardly gamble but spend most of the time at the spa chilling out in the spa lounge or wet facilities Jacuzzi saunas or by the pool and eating my way through town.
This trip my boy had a photo shoot out in Red Rock Canyon for some crazy singer. While I’m also not the type to hike I had a blast. Maybe because the Rabbit let me mess around with his full frame Canon’s but also because Red Rock Canyon is so unlike anything we have out here that I found it fascinating.
It’s only about 15 minutes off the strip and I highly recommend making a day of it if you head out there.
Here are some of the shots out of my Sony HX9V (Two Albums- One With The Panoramas)-
Gloucester Marine Railways
Photo © Kathy Chapman.com
http://www.kathychapman.com
The inaugural exhibit, Reverie at Lille, is curated to allow escapism and contemplation among paintings of landscape, seascape, still life, and architecture. The works of eight notable Cape Ann impressionist, luminist, and colorist painters: John Caggiano, Rudi Colao, Suzanne Crocker, Jonathan MacAdam, Eugene Quinn, Lauri Fielding, and Jill Demeri are featured. Four nudes by Camilla McRoberts, painted at the Art Students League of NewYork from 1951-1953, are also on exhibit to introduce the second Lille event coming in May 2012: Nude at Lille.
Lille Fine Art Salon, located at One Lawson Lane, Suite 15 in the lakeside city of Burlington, VT, will be the site of Reverie at Lille, an exhibition which runs from February 10, 2012 to April 6, 2012. Reverie at Lille showcases a collection of more than 70 works by notable impressionist, luminist, and colorist painters from the island of Cape Ann situated on the north shore of Boston, MA.
The opening receptions will be held on two evenings, Friday, February 17 and Saturday, February 18, 2012, 5:00 to 9:00 p.m. at Lille Fine Art Salon, One Lawson Lane, Suite 15, Burlington, VT. Lille will also host weekly “Salon Evenings.” Every Thursday night, from 5:00 to 9:00 p.m., the public is invited to the salon to meet exhibiting artists and art experts and enjoy refreshments. The first “Salon Evening” is February 23, 2012.