Category: gloucester
PHOTOS FROM THE GREG BOVER CAPE ANN CHAMBER SMALL BUSINESSPERSON OF THE YEAR AWARD RECEPTION
CONGRATULATIONS TO GREG BOVER, GLOUCESTER’S 2017 RECIPIENT OF THE CAPE ANN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE SMALL BUSINESSPERSON OF THE YEAR AWARD!
Sara Young, Greg Bover, and Ken Riel
Last night the Studio Restaurant was crowded with colleagues, friends, and well-wishers in honor of Greg Bover, vice president of the organ building company C.B. Fisk, and the latest is a long line of super community minded, dedicated men and women representing Cape Ann’s business community.
Greg has lent his formidable leadership skills and hands on mentoring to many organizations in our community–to name just a few of his contributions–building the captain’s quarters of the Schooner Adventure, past Sawyer Free Library president, clerk for the Fish Box Derby, and trustee of Awesome Gloucester.
The award could not have been given to a kinder person. Thank you Greg for all that you give to our beautiful community.
Greg and Mayor Sefatia
Jamison, Greg, and fiancé Maureen
Sara Young and Sinikka Nogelo
HELP WITH THE HARBORWALK AND THANK YOU MAGGIE ROSA!!!
Would you like to help us spruce up the pollinator gardens at the HarborWalk? The wonderful Maggie Rosa called last week expressing interest in helping care for the garden. We had a nice walk through the HarborWalk and talked about weed versus wildflower. Maggie has already made a tremendous improvement. If you would like to volunteer, I’ll be at the HarborWalk on Sunday morning from 7am to 8:30, before the podcast, and happy to show anyone interested how to identify the wildflowers. Please feel free to comment in the comment section or email me at kimsmithdesigns@hotmail.com if you have any questions. Thank you.
Thursday night blues party with Danielle Miraglia 8:30pm @ The Rhumb Line 6.8.2017


Thursday at the Rummie sees the return of the magnificent Danielle Miraglia. The divine Miss D always gets everyone cranked up, flapping and working up a big appetite. You’ll see.

Tagging along is the Bobster,i.e. Bob Enik on guitar and the formidable Edd Scheer, on drums and vocals. Be there!!

40 Railroad Avenue
Gloucester, MA 01930
(978) 283-9732
Novello Bench – Tribute to the Family
ALPACA SHEARING DAY AT THE MARSHALL’S FARM
Just like sheep, alpacas need to be shorn at least once a year. Their beautiful fleece is so thick by the time spring comes along, the animals would suffer tremendously in warmer weather if not shorn.
Family and friends lend a hand for alpaca shearing day.
Malcolm Cooper arrived Sunday morning with his assistant Krystian Hoszkiewicz.
Expert shearing, with a firm but kind touch.
Andrew Spinney from Paynter Saltwater Farm in Essex brought three of his alpacas for shearing, along with Maggie the sheep. Maggie likes getting shorn, so much so that she turned into an acquiescing blob of jello.
Angela administers a monthly shot to prevent parasites.
Here’s Nikki helping with the Paynter alpacas. Next is an after-shearing photo, with the Marshall’s daughter Jennifer. What a difference!
Alpaca lower teeth and upper dental pad.
Alpacas only have bottom teeth. On the top they have a hard dental pad. Alpacas eat by trapping grass between their teeth and the dental pad, and then nipping it off. Some alpacas are genetically pre-disposed to misaligned teeth and need to have their teeth trimmed. If the teeth were not trimmed, it could lead to eating disorders and starvation. A protective guard is placed in the mouth and the teeth are quickly ground with an electric grinder. It takes all of about 30 second for an alpaca’s dental treatment!
Pippi Longstocking’s first dental check up.
One-year-old alpacas Maisy, Rascal, and Pippi Longstocking had their first shearing. The yarn made from the first shearing is referred to as baby alpaca, and it is silky soft, luxurious, and super warm.
Maggie’s wool is more course and contains lanolin. After she was shorn, you could feel the sticky lanolin on her skin. Because alpaca fleece bears no lanolin, the yarn is hypoallergenic.
Pippi Longstocking’s first buzz cut.
Phew, I was exhausted just filming the Marshall Family corral twenty plus alpacas and one tubby little Maggie. The Marshall’s alpacas are beloved family members, each named, and each with a unique personality to go with their name–Pokey, Magnolia, and Rascal, to mention just a few. Animal farming is super hard, non-stop work, especially when the animals are as well taken care of as are the Marshalls.
The public is welcome to come stop by and visit the alpacas. Yarn from the Marshall’s alpacas is available to purchase. At the present time, Angie’s Alpacas is open by appointment. Call 978-729-7180 or email Angela at Angiez65@hotmail.com. Marshall’s Farm is located just next to Marshall’s Farm Stand at 148 Concord Street in West Gloucester.
GHS and St Ann’s Class of 1967 50th Reunion August 5th 2017
Gloucester High School and St Ann’s class of ‘67 will be having their 50th class reunion at the Gloucester House on Saturday, August 5th, 2017 at 7:00 PM.
Cocktail hour, including hors d’oeuvres, begins at 6:00 PM aboard the Privateer, which has been rented from 6:00-7: PM (boarding behind the Gloucester House at 5:45 PM). Hors d’oeuvres will also be served at the Gloucester House starting at 6:00 PM.
Dancing, reminiscing, and comradery encouraged. The DJ has been instructed “no rap.”
For more information and reservations, please email 1967GHS@gmail.com
CAPE ANN VERNAL POND TEAM UPDATE
Greetings from the Pond Team…
Here are three upcoming activities this week. Join us if you can make it!
Perley Elementary School
51 North St.
Georgetown, MA 01833
Wednesday, June 7th, 2017
9:30 am with set up at 8:30 am.
We will be presenting Intro to Vernal Ponds for three classes of young students – showing our Vernal Ponds DVD and showing them some cool critters.
We could use a volunteer or two.
Ribbon Cutting Ceremony
Get Outside Center
186 Main Street
Gloucester, MA 01930
Friday, June 9th, 2017
4:30 to 6:30 pm.
Ribbon Cutting at 5:00 or 5:30.
Now that our sister organization, Kestrel Educational Adventures, is a member of the Chamber of Commerce, there will be a ribbon-cutting ceremony at the Get Outside Center. Show up and watch me make a fool out of myself saying a few words about CAVPT.
Strawberry Festival
Mile marker One Restaurant
75 Essex Ave.
Gloucester, MA 01930
Saturday, June 10, 2017
11:00 am to 4:00 pm
We will have some sort of live animal display and we need lots of volunteers.
This family friendly festival will have 50+ local vendors, farm fresh food, adoptable puppies, Kids Zone with pony rides, dunk tank, alpacas, face painting, bouncy houses, live music, live broadcast, and tons of fun. Plus the most exciting festival activity will be our very own Cape Ann Vernal Pond Team Display! Come one, come all!
Recaps…
Remember that Visiting Scientist Day at O’Maley School on Friday? Well,,, it got cancelled due to lack of interest. Not due to student’s lack of interest (anything to get out of class). Not enough scientists wanted to do it.
Yesterday I was at the Ipswich River Wildlife Sanctuary with a bunch of our native snakes for their Nature Festival. I was helping out one of my favorite nature educators Richard Wolniewicz. Huge crowd. We were busy all day.
Hope to see you out there… if you can volunteer email cavpt@yahoo.com
Rick
we only have one earth, save it
We keep adding to our website so check out our Activities Photographs…
https://www.capeannvernalpondteam.org/Activity-Photographs
DON’T MISS DAVID ROBINSON’S PHOTO SHOW AT THE BEAUTIFUL NEW HUDSON GALLERY
Cynthia Belchou and David Robinson
There’s an elegant new gallery on Main Street, the Hudson Gallery, and while David Robinson’s beautiful photo exhibit is on display is the perfect time to check it out. The gallery’s lighting is simply gorgeous and the space has a lovely flow. On our way out to dinner, Tom and I only stayed for a few moments, but naturally, we ran into Heidi Dallin and friends 🙂
Heidi Dallin, Larry Dalton, and Terry Byrne (Larry and David went to high school together)
More about David’s photos here.
For more information about the Hudson Gallery, contact:
Cynthia Belchou
thehudsongallery@gmail.com
617.755.6672
Music Around Town ~ June 5-11, 2017
TREMENDOUSLY EXCITING NEWS: SNOTBOT GOES TO THE UN!!!
SnotBot (and the Kerr family) are heading to the UN as part World Ocean’s Day celebration. Amy writes, “Iain will be speaking to the UN General Assembly on Thursday about SnotBot for World Oceans Day, along with Sir Richard Branson, Leonardo DiCaprio, Sylvia Earle and James Cameron, with music by Daft Punk! We’re making a family trip of it, so Dylan and I will be going along. We’ll try to remember to bring a GMG sticker. “
SnotBot goes to the UN!
Gloucester’s own Ocean Alliance will be part of the World Oceans Day celebration on June 8 at the Great Hall of the United Nations in New York City. Ocean Alliance CEO Dr. Iain Kerr will speak about the role of innovation and technology in ocean conservation and will introduce delegates to Ocean Alliance’s innovative research drone, SnotBot. Dr. Kerr will be one of many ocean advocates, including philanthropist Richard Branson, director James Cameron, actor Leonardo DiCaprio, and oceanographer Sylvia Earle, who will be making presentations during the celebration along with a live feed from the International Space Station.
SnotBot is a customized drone that allows Ocean Alliance to collect behavioural and biological data (whale blow or snot) from whales noninvasively, without harming or disturbing the animals. Modified consumer drones have immense potential in marine mammal science and conservation, and Ocean Alliance’s SnotBot program has been at the very forefront of this new research paradigm, not only attaching petri dishes and sponges to drones to collect whale blow, but also attaching cameras and microphones to collect a broad spectrum of other valuable data.
The whale blow that SnotBot collects contains DNA, microbiomes, pregnancy hormones, stress hormones, and ketones. SnotBot’s video camera collects behavioural data and also provides stunning imagery.
For more information about the World Oceans Day program, Christina Caputo <christina@parley.tv
For more information about SnotBot and Ocean Alliance’s Drones for Whale Research program, visit http://www.whale.or/research/drones/ or call Dr Iain Kerr at 978-281-2814 x15 or email ikerr@whale.org.
Images courtesy Ocean Alliance website.
SREAMIN’ PEACOCK
Today was alpaca shearing day at the Marshall’s farm. We have lots of photos to share and I’ll have time to post them tomorrow. All the while alpaca shearing was taking place, Perry, the Marshall’s peacock, was struttin’ his stuff. There was no peahen in sight, but a certain chicken seemed to have caught Perry’s attention. The peacock mating call sounds more like a piercing scream, very startling the first time heard. Have a listen!
https://www.instagram.com/p/BU7mTlHFlbB/
Baby alpacas Pippi Longstocking, Maisy, and Rascal had their first shearing today.
@CaptMarciano GOOD LUCK TONIGHT ON WICKED TUNA SEASON FINALE!
“Bank Job” at Gloucester Stage Features High-Energy Comic Performances
In its New England Premiere through June 10 at the Gloucester Stage Company, Bank Job delivers superb comic performances by a quintet of actors who literally throw themselves into their roles. The setup is simple: After pulling off their heist, two bumbling bank robbers (Paul Melendy and Nael Nacer) flee to the bank’s executive washroom, where they intend to escape out the window to freedom. Their plan is complicated by a woman who happens to be using one of the stalls (Shuyi Jia, a GSC newcomer), an investigating cop (Johnny Lee Davenport), and finally a bystander (Richard McElvain).
It’s a ninety-minute cavalcade of broad-brush comic acting, with the ensemble wringing every outlandish emotion and possibility for disaster from the script by playwright John Kolvenbach. There are a few introspective moments; a welcome respite from the nonstop wackiness is ably delivered by Johnny Lee Davenport as he soberly reflects on his failed marriages and lost dreams.
Directed by Robert Walsh, Bank Job features an evocative set design by Jon Savage. The upscale wood paneling and muted lighting are enhanced by real washroom fixtures provided by Frank Webb’s Bath Center. Within this cloistered arena these five outstanding actors are able to cut loose and flex their comic skills. For tickets, call 978-281-4433, or visit http://www.gloucesterstage.com.
From left: Johnny Lee Davenport, Nael Nacer, Paul Melendy, and Shuyi Jia
Photo: Gary Ng
DAVID ROBINSON PHOTOGRAPHS AT THE HUSON GALLERY OPENING TONIGHT!
Very much looking forward to attending our friend David Robinson’s photo opening tonight at the Hudson Gallery!
Polarized: Technology and Aesthetics of Polaroid Art
June 3 – June 15, 2017, Reception June 3rd from 7-10pm
120 Main Street, Gloucester, MA 01930
An exhibit showcasing abstractionist David Robinson and work by students of Monica Allon at The Perkins School for the Blind. Polarized: Technology and Aesthetics of Polaroid Art is a combination of original experimental Polaroid instant film prints, 20×24 large format and tactile diagrams. The photographs by David Robinson and students from Perkins reveal both decisive and pure, unfiltered and inherently conceptual, moments in time. June 3 – June 15, with a reception on Saturday, June 3rd from 7pm-10pm.
Monica Allon initiated a Polaroid project for the Lower School Extended Day Program at the Perkins School for the Blind in Watertown, Massachusetts. The artists are students ages 10-15. “I would bring in very tangible and functional objects from the past for our students to examine, including a typewriter, a record player, a rotary phone and a Polaroid camera. The students gravitated toward the camera because of its shape, which fit perfectly into their hands, the buttons to push and the sounds produced as a picture is taken and the film print comes out of the camera,” Monica Allon stated. The students were aware that they were creating instant objects of art which became more apparent when the tactile diagrams were created from their pictures. Using Polaroid film cameras over the course of a year, this group of students, with the aid of Teaching Assistants, learned about and documented their environment. In viewing this collection of photographs, one will appreciate a different perspective of objects and structures, causing each of us to take another look at what we see.
A selection of original Polaroid snapshots will be exhibited along with tactile diagram enlargements. Each Polaroid snapshot has been enlarged and, with the use of technology, tactile diagrams were created. The method used to produce the tactile diagrams of the Polaroids is through Microcapsule or Thermal Imaging. The images were edited with the use of graphic image software. Betsey Sennott at the Perkins oversees this technology. Large print and braille identify each piece of artwork.
In 1972, Polaroid introduced the SX-70, a fully automatic, motorized unit that ejected a square print from the front. The high technology removed the barriers of speed and distribution between the photographer and the photo. Polaroid SX-70 film produced a fully developed print in about one minute. Instant gratification and simplicity were key for David Robinson who purchased the camera. The simplicity of the SX-70 system belied its technical complexity. Within the 2 millimeter thick film unit was a sandwich of thin polymer sheets, a positive image-receiving sheet, reagent, timing and light reflecting layers, and the tri-color negative -17 layers. When mechanically pushed through a roller system, the reagent housed in the iconic white frame spread evenly across the 17 separate layers of emulsion. He experimented with both SX-70 film and SX-70 Time zero film which had a strong following with artists who used it for image manipulation.
READ MORE HERE: HUDSON GALLERY
JONES RIVER SUNRISE AND YO MAMA, WHAT’S FOR BREAKFAST?
I have been hoping to take a photo of a female Eastern Towhee, and here she is, with a mouthful of breakfast for the nestlings! She hopped from tree limb to tree limb with her treasure, ta-weeting all the while; no small accomplishment while tightly clamping down on that big bug.
Look at the beautiful white-tipped underside of her tail feathers
Pretty sunrise over Jones River Marsh
Snapshot of a male Eastern Towhee taken several weeks ago in the same location. I wonder if they are a pair? It’s unlikely we’ll get to see the nest. Female towhees build their nests on the ground and they are well-camouflaged, being made of bark, twigs, and dried leaves. There is a dense tangle of undergrowth where I am filming and it’s probably fraught with ticks, so on the path I stay.
A few more from this morning sunrise over the river
SUPER EXCITING NEWS MONDAY NIGHT’S SCHOONER CHALLENGE NOW INCLUDES THE LEWIS H. STORY!
THE SCHOONER CHALLENGE NOW INCLUDES THE LEWIS H. STORY!
Don’t miss the 5th Annual Schooner Challenge! Proceeds to benefit the Evelina M. Goulart, the Essex-built, Gloucester fishing schooner. Tickets may be ordered online at www.essexshipbuildingmuseum.org or call 978-375-3337.
FANCY MEETING YOU
I had a lovely encounter early this morning with a pretty doe. Isn’t she beautiful? It was around 5:30 am and still a bit dark under the trees. We checked each other out for at least five minutes, me filming away and she nibbling on greens, before she somewhat nonchalantly headed into the woods. The deer appeared on the young side, with her knobby knees and keen curiosity. Please, any deer experts reading this post, do you think she is an adult deer or a teenager? How can you tell? Thank you!
Cape Ann Vernal Pond Team Yard Sale Recap
We had a great Yard Sale on Saturday – plus a Snakes and Vernal Pond Exhibit. The weather was perfect. We were set up earlier than ever. Breakdown happened faster than ever. We brought in over $1400.00, which is the second most ever.
I wish I could thank everyone by name, but its really not possible with all the Vernal Pond Team members, the Kestrels and everyone who donated items or volunteered some time before, during and after the sale. All I can say is Thank You to everyone for a great fundraising event!
I’ll be at O’Maley School in Gloucester on Friday, June 2, for Visiting Scientist Day meeting with four or five different classes to talk about field biology and a few other things. Not sure what time yet. I could use a volunteer or two to help out. Email cavpt@yahoo.com if you can assist.
TREE SWALLOW TANGO
Tree Swallows here, there and everywhere! Nesting has begun and these graceful aerialists can be seen at every Cape Ann beach, dune, and meadow–twisting, turning, dip, diving, and dashing while catching insects mid-air.
Tree Swallows dip-dive bathing at Henry’s Pond
More About Tree Swallows:
M is For Migration Through Massachusetts
Responding to Reader’s Questions About Tree Swallows
New Short Film: Tree Swallows Massing












































