Category: Uncategorized
Flying With the Ducks From John Wheeler
Z I G G Y
BASE Gloucester Open House
On Wednesday, December 7, 2011, the seafood display auctions in New Bedford and Boston, and their existing seafood off loading facility in Gloucester will re-launch as BASE New England, a group of seafood display locations that will allow buyers worldwide to purchase New England fish electronically via the daily BASE online auction. This will help ensure that buyers, most typically seafood distributors, have access to a steady supply of seafood. The organization integrates operations of the existing display auction facilities in New Bedford and Boston and adds a display facility in Gloucester merging the seafood marketplaces in New England’s three largest ports, New Bedford, Boston, and Gloucester, into one auction.
The first auction at BASE Gloucester will take place on Thursday, December 8 at 6 a.m.
Please join us for an open house where customers, journalists, government officials, and friends can view the operations of the new display auction will be held on Wednesday, December 7 from noon to 5 p.m in Gloucester.
Gloucester Mayor Carolyn Kirk will cut the ceremonial ribbon at 1 p.m.
The facility is located at 37 Rogers Street along the planned Harbor Walk. Refreshments will be served.
Dominic Nesta steams by Ten Pound Island Photo Bill O’Connor
Hi Joey,
I sent you a photo of Dominic Nesta working on his boat in October, and happened to see him steaming around the harbor in it the other day. I think he did a great job! The lines of the new boat look really familiar – can you tell he was trying to achieve a visual metaphor in his design?
Enjoy!
~Bill O’Connor
North Shore Kid
Good Pups at Good Harbor
Gloucester House Featured On Gizmodo
Wednesday’s At The Rhumb Line
Anita Coullard Dziedzic and her Husband Greg Dedicate a Bouy for their Son David.
Lobster Trap Christmas Tree
From Anita:
On December 10th, in Gloucester, Ma.
Is the lighting of their Lobster Trap Christmas Tree.
Greg and I will be placing a buoy in David’s honor. I feel that this is a true honor. David is a True GLOUCESTERMAN! He gave his life for other’s! what more could he do!
My Mother was born in this town. David has been coming to Gloucester for all his life.
Origami rubber ducky represents in paperfolded Bethlehem
The nativity scene is folded from tissue foil using models of my own design. Each model is folded from one rectangle. The duck was folded my me, but designed by Gay Merrill Gross (diagrams in issue #5 of Creased magazine).
Are there any other Cape Ann origami artists out there who’d like to get together to fold? I’ve been thinking about starting a local origami group. I don’t know how much interest there would be, nor how often we could meet. My parish schedule is pretty full, but a monthly meeting might be feasible.
Man’s Best Friend
Tyler (of Cape Ann Stand Up Paddleboarding) enjoys a beautiful morning off Rocky Neck.
Photo © Kathy Chapman 2011
Henry Ferrini Puts Some Stuff Under Our Nose
Henry Writes-
Joey,
Here is some flotsam tuned into a photograph from this afternoon. Cripple Cove is my son isaac’s stomping ground. Lot of treasures to find down there.
I’ve included some URL’s of a few things you may be interested in posting. If people had David Wise as a teacher at GHS they will be interested in this posting of his play the the Gloucester Writers Center presented last week. I posted the first 12 minutes and the readers are mainly from Gloucester.
If viewers interested in jazz, the North Shore Jazz Project presented this show at Shalin Lui. I started the NSJP a couple years ago. Like the GWC we have a educational mission.
Sunrises, Sunsets From Elinor Teele
Squam Creative Services
Freelance Copywriting, Fiction and Photography
The Doll’s Head: A Mystery for Girls
Discover the story and read a free sample
I’M OUTRAGED!!!!!!! HOLY INJUSTICE BATMAN!
Kid makes what should be game winning touchdown with 6 minutes left in a Mass High School Superbowl game.
As he is heading for the end zone he lifts his arm in the air.
Gets flagged for excessive celebration- for lifting his arm in the air- on his birthday, costs all of those kids on that team what was rightfully fought for in all of those practices all year long because some over zealous ref screwed them.
If you watch the play what becomes 100 percent apparent is that there is nothing at all offensive about the players action. He was not taunting, he was not in the opponent’s face spiking the ball, he merely raised his arm over his head as he went into the end zone.
Are you fucking kidding me????? If the overzealous ref doesn’t call the penalty I guarantee the coach on the other team or their parents or anyone else in that stadium would have never even raised any objection over the play.
Way to suck the fun out of life. What’s next? You gonna flag them for fucking smiling if they catch the game winning touchdown in the goddamn Superbowl????
How in the world this ref can ever sleep at night after robbing this team and all of it’s players of a lifetime of memories as a Superbowl winning team I have no idea.
and to any of you people that can’t grasp how much this would mean to these young adults I feel sorry for you.
If the idea is about sportsmanship, the player that raised his arm in no way shape or form did ANYTHING UNSPORTSMANLIKE. So if the other coach had any balls he would hold a team meeting and explain to his players how they really lost the game because the other player made the play fair and square and they should go together on a bus with the trophy and deliver it to the team who was robbed of this victory.
That would teach the kids more about life and more about justice than any stupid rule which says that harmlessly celebrating by raising your arm as you make the game winning touchdown is somehow unsportsmanlike and worthy of stealing a game for.
It amounts to stealing really.
Watch the play and then tell me how crazy our society is becoming.
I’m completely disgusted. seriously- watch the play.
From The Boston Herald-
It should have been Matthew Owens’ proudest day — his 18th birthday, scoring the winning touchdown for his high school in the state’s Super Bowl.
But instead of taking home lifelong memories of triumph, the young man, his family and his team have been left heartbroken, struggling to understand how it all was snatched away from them Saturday by one ref with a flag.
Owens, the Cathedral High School quarterback whose controversial raised hand cost his team what would have been its first Super Bowl championship ever, wasn’t showboating and just had a “normal human reaction that all football players do” as he sprinted towards the end zone, his crestfallen father insisted yesterday. NFL players may routinely celebrate as they score, but in high school and college it is banned. The referee acted on a new Massachusetts Interscholastic Athletic Association sportsmanship rule that bans any celebratory or taunting behavior by someone scoring a touchdown.
“He raised his hand because he knew was going to the pinnacle,” Kenneth Owens told the Herald, his voice seared with emotion and anger at times.
“There was nothing dishonorable about the play. There was no doubt it was a touchdown. He gets 20 yards in — and he’s not thinking about the rule — and he just raised his hand.”
Owens, a high school senior, lifted his left arm for two strides as he raced across the 20-yard line during the final minutes of the Division 4A game at Bentley University, in the final minutes of what had been an undefeated season. A jubilant Owens turned around in the end zone and saw the flag.
“He handed the ball to the referee. He didn’t spike it,” the elder Owens said.
But the play was nullified. Rival Blue Hills Regional Technical School ended up taking home the trophy with a 16-14 win.
Owens said his son has been playing football since he was 7, has never seen the inside of a police station and has a mother and father who have been in his life “since the very first day.”
Ziggy You Ziplining Fool!
Tony Hilliard Gets Adopted
Sky Painting
Rockport Christmas Tree Lights Up
4 Good Reasons to take the Riverdale-Lanesville Stagecoach Route
Although the stagecoach doesn’t run any more so you will have to drive, these 4 galleries situated along the stretch of Washington Street between Riverdale and Lanesville are having Holiday Open Houses and Sales that will give you a good reason to follow the old stagecoach route and do some exploring. Please note, all the galleries and studios are not keeping the exact same hours and days, so doublecheck the flyers for open hours and days.
Also, there will be a Mug Up at Khan Studio in Annisquam on Sunday, 12/11 at 10:00. Hope to see you.
E.J. Lefavour
Ginger Bread House Contest At The Middle Street Walk
Thank for you interest in the Gingerbread House Contest, presented in conjunction with the community’s annual Middle Street Walk. This year the Walk will be on December 10th.
1. The contest is open to everyone
2. Contestants may submit entries either individually, or as a group. More than one entry may be submitted.
3. All entries must be made entirely of gingerbread and decorated with candy or other edible embellishments. Anything that appears in the house must be edible. Contestants may decorate their entry with non-edible figures, material, etc. However, these embellishments may not be connected to the house in any way. Everything that appears on, or is connected to the house must be edible.
4. The gingerbread house submitted may take any shape, form, or size. Creativity is encouraged and contestants should model their houses on places real or imaginary, basic or elaborate.
5. Each entry must be submitted on a cardboard, wooden, or plastic base. There is no standard size or shape for the bases although it must be larger than the house.
6. Entries must be dropped off at Kyrouz Auditorium in Gloucester’s City Hall either Thursday, December 8th between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. or on Friday, December 9th between the hours of 8:30 a.m. and 12:00 p.m. There is an elevator in case you need it as the Auditorium is on the second floor. Judging will occur prior to the start of the Middle Street Walk which begins at 10:00 a.m. on Saturday, December 10th and ends at 3:00 p.m. Entries will be on display to the public that day at City Hall until it closes at 3:00 p.m. Contestants can pick up their houses that time or can pick them up the next week during regular City Hall hours.
7. Prize ribbons will be awarded in numerous categories as stated on the entry from.
8. Please let us know if you are planning to submit a gingerbread house by registering over the phone to either of the following contacts: Barbara Catalini of Cakes by Barbara at 978-281-0639, or Jan Bell at 978-283-1107, or Gloria Parsons at 978-283-9292
Judging Criteria
Points will be given:
For the degree of difficulty and creativity
Neatness
Originality
Uses of edible confections and decorations
Workmanship
Points will be taken away:
For us of plastics, however you may use a limited amount
* Display should be picked up by 3:00 or can be left to donate to a Silent Auction at the Holiday Ball that evening to benefit the City Hall Restoration Fund. Thank you











