Melissa Donati Whipping Up Breakfast At The Willow Rest

Pictures from David Cox

DSC_7165_0003, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

Melissa Donati Whipping Up Breakfast At The Willow Rest Pic From David Cox
Melissa Donati Whipping Up Breakfast At The Willow Rest Pic From David Cox

 

Jimmy T Gloucester Survivor Hopeful Asks For Your Vote

Remember to press pause to let the video load up along the bottom and then resume play when the video has loaded a bit for smoother playback.

click here to vote for Jimmy T-

http://www.cbs.com/primetime/survivor/casting_call//

May God Bless Jimmy T

Woot!

Bailing Out The Dorys After A Hard Rain- Jimmy T, Kyle Edmonds and Joey Ciolino

Here’s Jimmy Bailing out the dorys after a hard rain with Joey Ciolino and Kyle Edmonds.   Won’t you please help Jimmy out and vote for him to be one of ten finalists that will be selected by the number of votes cast for them?

From the Survivor website-
Vote On Your Favorite Finalist
The top 10 finalists are in. Think they have what it takes to win the game? Vote for your favorite now and one lucky winner will head to Los Angeles for an audition with the SURVIVOR casting team.

Heather At Menage Gallery Gives The Joint A Facelift

You look up the word worker bee in the dictionary and you see a picture of Heather Demarkis.  The broad just doesn’t stop.  Buzzing around sweping in front of the building, buzzing around dusting, buzzing around painting. 

She’s a good one that Heather Demarkis. 

A real asset to Gloucester’s Downtown. Buzzzzzzzzzzzz!

Heather At Menage Gallery Gives The Joint A Facelift, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

 

Things To Do- Fish ‘n’ Fiction Event Feb 23

Fish ‘n’ Fiction
A new series hosted by the Phyllis A. Marine Association
Sawyer Free Library, Friend Room
Tuesday, February 23, 2010
6:00-8:00pm
Suggested Donation of $5.00 per person
 
Captain Richard Arnold will lead an informal conversation on his personal experiences fishing on board the Phyllis A., out of Gloucester harbor from 1984-2000. Please come and join us with your own stories.
 This program benefits the Phyllis A. Marine Association who mission is, “to promote the history of gillnetting in Gloucester, Massachusetts through the display and preservation of the fishing vessel Phyllis A.” All conversations will be recorded for our oral history collection.
 Additional conversations will occur on the fourth Tuesday of each month.
We offloaded the Phyllis A back when we handled fish at our dock.  The Arnold Brothers were about as classy as you get not only on the waterfront but in humanity in general.  These men are role models believe me and to have the opportunity to hear the stories as told by Richard, well let’s just say it’s something that no one who loves the fishing industry should miss.

Docksiders’ Aloha show last push for Hawaii trip – Manny Simoes Photos

photo by Manny Simoes

The student musicians in the Docksiders, Gloucester High School’s stage band, made their last big fund-raising push for their trip to Hawaii.

The trip to Hawaii, April 16 to 23, is not the first trip the group has taken. In the nine years the band has been together, it is given concerts throughout the Cape Ann area, and tries to take a trip every two years. The Docksiders have traveled as far as California to play at Disney Land and to Florida, where the group twice played at Walt Disney World.

It was the Docksiders’ trip to Walt Disney World two years ago that led to this excursion for the band. See Times article here.

BankGloucester President Patrick Thorpe - Photo by Manny Simoes

David Cox At Main Street Art and Antiques Headquarters

When David isn’t out covering Gloucester Sports or events for GMG he is busy at his shop Main Street Art and Antiques in the heart of beautiful Downtown Gloucester. When I snapped this photo I wasn’t sure if he was making a deal for a priceless piece of furniture or talking up one of his many lady callers.  The women just love him don’t you know.

David Cox At Main Street Art and Antiques Headquarters, originally uploaded by captjoe06.

 

All of the Kids Represented At The Art Haven Buoy Auction Video

Manuel Simoes Captures All The Kids In This Video For GMG-

That’s right folks if there’s a community event- we cover it.  If you have something coming up that you think should be covered send us a comment and we will do everything in our power to bring the best of Gloucester to these here pages.

The Cutest Little Girl At The Buoy Auction

Manuel Simoes Caught this wonderful clip.  Must see Video right here

I was going to try to hold back the videos and space them out but I just couldnt help but post this one right away.  More to come but you gotta watch this one.

Tonight!-Art Haven Buoy Auction Preview Video With Dawn Gadow and David Brooks

Tonight’s The Night!
6-9PM

Food-Art-Fun- Cruiseport- Be There!

Sarah Hackett Is back from Haiti (forwarded from Kim Smith)

Our friend Sarah Hackett writes upon her return from Haiti to the U.S.:

 Dear Friends,

         From the safety of Miami I am sending you a message of appreciation to you who have shown such an outpouring of love and concern for my well being in Haiti.

         I hasten to tell you that I am well and have recovered, at least outwardly, from the anguish of leaving Haiti. I thought that, all things considered, it was prudent to grasp the offer to be evacuated quickly when I had the chance.

         I am glad to be back in the USA where we are privileged beyond measure. However, it is a powerful culture shock filled with sadness.

         We left Fond des Blancs early Monday morning driving very fast. I saw the sights of terrible devastation along the road and especially while entering Port au Prince. There were flattened buildings on every side and people huddled in tents. We went past the airport with no incident and turned into the UN headquarters complex where we saw the first of the huge medical tents set up. There must have been at last 200 people laying on cots, many with IVs running. Exhausted doctors and nurses walked among the cots tending to the sick and wounded. It reminded one of Civil War pictures of the acres of wounded lying on the ground suffering with no painkillers.

In an adjacent tent exhausted surgeons were operating- mostly amputations of crushed limbs. We were told that the morphine had just arrived.

         It was there across from these UN operations that we spent a total of 13 hours under some trees by the side of the road while Conor Shapiro, the new head of St Boniface Hospital, was trying to arrange transport. It was the site of plenty of action; search and rescue teams from all around the world were arriving, trucks from the World Food Program, from the FAO, CRS, Children First and many others passed continuously, hundreds of them. We saw back hoes and earth movers leaving the compound in the daylight to search the rubble. I was waiting for this guy Hank whom I somehow believed when he said to me  “I have a plane and it is returning from Miami with supplies about 8pm and you will be my first passenger on the return trip – about 10 o’clock.” Some were skeptical but somehow I believed him. After Hank collected three critical children headed for Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami there were a few seats left on his corporate jet. We were driven to the airport which is usually so deserted with only an occasional AA plane on the tarmac. Here we saw several thousand people gathered by the gates all looking for a way out of Port au Prince. We saw huge transport planes bringing supplies and personnel from all over the world. We ran to the small jet, were greeted in elegant fashion, the patients were made comfortable by their attendant doctors. I was offered a double scotch.

         On arrival in Miami we went by bus to the hospital where I served as interpreter for the hospital doctors receiving our children. When all was under control I thanked Hank for his kindness, took a taxi to a luxurious hotel in Key Biscayne, an offering from Conor’s uncle. I had come from the misery and suffering of Haiti with the clothes on my back and my computer in my shoulder bag to the most luxurious hotel in the US . It was 2:30 in the morning Tuesday when I called my family to say I was safe.

         I still struggle with this contrast as I write you. I am infinitely sad to have had to leave my work in the middle of things but at the same time I feel very grateful for the many blessings poured on me.

 With many thanks and kind regards to you all,

Sarah 

 To learn more about Haiti Projects go to haitiprojects.org

Action, Inc. Is Offering FREE English Classes!

Hi Joey,

 Action is offering English classes and wants to get the word out. Do you think you could post the ad below on your site?

Here you go Jessica-

FREE ESOL Classes! Action, Inc. is offering FREE English classes for speakers of other languages beginning February 2nd and running through June 15th. The classes will be held at Gloucester High School on Tuesdays and Thursdays from 6:00 pm to 8:30 pm, with beginner, intermediate, and advanced levels. If you or someone you know could benefit from these classes, call 978-879-8846 to reach an Action staff member able to communicate in English, Spanish, and Portuguese.

It’s A Beach Party! To Benefit The Relay For Life Of Cape Ann

It’s A Beach Party!
To Benefit The Relay For Life Of Cape Ann

&

Teams Friends For Friends & Banking For A Cure

 Saturday February 27, 2010

@

The Cruiseport

7:00pm-11:00pm

 Dancing To The Music Of Leo Francis

 Cash Bar, Raffles & 50/50

 $15.00

For Tickets Call :Debbie Aiello 978-283-0633

               Kate Andrewes 978-283-4337    Nancy Unis 978-281-3257

 

YMCA Rock-A-Thon First Twelve Hours Video From Manuel Simoes

Manuel Simoes writes in-

This video contains approximately the first twelve hours of rocking.

Twenty four hours with teenagers without sleep!