Pause of thanks for youth sports coaches

Kids play sports thanks to generous folks stepping up.

This wonderful dad and soccer coach has three more practices still to go this Saturday Easter weekend.

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Thank you coach Jason Rutkauskas, Kyle, Jim, and all the rest!

Everything Old is New Again

I never noticed this “Ye Olde Towne Landing” signage at the Frenchmen’s Pier parking area. We stop by there regularly and yet I still find something new. It’s so pretty there anyhow and a great bird watching spot.

The Life and Poetry of Mary Oliver presented by the Sawyer Free Library on April 8th

Sawyer Free Library's avatarCape Ann Community

Join the Sawyer Free Library in celebrating National Poetry Month for explore the Life, Natural World & Poetry of Mary Oliver, presented by Andrea Brandeis on Thursday, April 8 from  7 – 8:30pm.

Mary Oliver was one of America’s most treasured poets, whose honors include the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award. Her poetry explores the interconnectedness of spirituality and the natural world. This virtual program is intended for anyone– from beginner explorers of poetry to experts. This program will be held via Zoom.  

Register here for the event. The Zoom link will be sent out 15 minutes before the presentation begins. If you register after that, there may be a small delay.

For more information on all the the programs being offered at the Library, visit sawyerfreelibrary.org

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Gorgeous Good Harbor Beach Friday! #GloucesterMA

Signs of Spring- No dog rule commences April 1 on Good Harbor Beach. Piping Plovers are on the beach. Two enclosures help the wildlife and dunes. Sand felt warm underneath despite the frosty spring morning.

Signs of Spring- Long Beach Dairy Maid is Open #GloucesterMA

Slow down- 2021 season’s begun! Some outdoor seating added on Rockport Road side Surfside Subs/Long Beach Dairy Maid.

Long Beach Dairy Maid website 978-281-1348

Surfside Subs website 978-281-1700

@ChiefEdConley: Proud to participate in the@GloucesterPD 2021 Polar Plunge to raise $ for@SpOlympicsMA

Thanks to Ofc Heidi Fialho for putting this all together. Thanks to our sponsors we raised $2,280. @ChiefDiGi23@STheken@MAPOLICECHIEFS#lanescove#polarplunge

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TED REED PRODUCTIONS ANNOUNCES “THE BLUES TRAIL REVISITED” FILM IS NOW AVAILABLE TO RENT

DOCUMENTARIAN REED, CULMINATES 50 YEAR JOURNEY ENCOMPASSING THE EVOLUTION OF AMERICAN MUSIC, THE UPHEAVALS OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS MOVEMENT, AND REFLECTING ON TREASURES OF PERSONAL EXPERIENCES, LOST AND FOUND

BOSTON, MA– When Grammy- and Emmy-award winning documentary filmmaker Ted Reed was moving his office, he uncovered his 16mm black and white film “Thinking Out Loud”, shot in 1971. Filmed with his friend Tim Treadway, the two traveled fro

m Boston through Memphis and Clarksdale to find and record some of the last living blues legends. “Thinking Out Loud” was seen at festivals, and then stored away. Fast forward fifty years has led to the compilation of then and now in his new film, “The Blues Trail Revisited.”

Ted is beyond excited to share that his film is now available to rent via www.thebluestrailrevisited.com.

“The film puts you in the passenger seat right next to the filmmaker rounding the bend on a 50 year old odyssey: to excavate the last living blues legends and his own youthful filmmaking past.
Reed once again rattles back through time and the deep south, brushing the dust off the towns, tunes, and sweat-soaked juke joints where the blues bloomed– and still do. The movie is a sweet sad song of praise for those unsung, who wove their troubles and dreams into the original fabric of American music.”

-Joyce Kulhawik, Arts & Entertainment Critic

“A story of blues friends, fans and follow through, Ted Reed’s remarkable BLUES TRAIL REVISITED spans 50 years—tying together past Southern blues traditions with those of the present day and perhaps even the future.”

– Roger Stolle, Cat Head Promotions

“The memories that this film brought back were outstanding and made me want to go back and discover some of the places that I missedThis movie will also make anyone that is not into the Blues or Mississippi change their mind.”

– Paul Benjamin, North Atlantic Blues Festival

“The Blues Trail Revisited” showcases the new respect for the cultural value of a musical form that had been all but ignored in the south a half-century ago. Now, rock fans, mostly white, from all the world, raised on music adopted from rural black communities, are flocking to that well-spring in record numbers. Museums and historic markers have sprung up to guide a growing caravan of international tourists. Venues from roadside Juke Joints to new concert halls offer musicians, both veterans and young performers, places to perform almost every night of the week.

Revealing interviews with authors, historians and hospitality entrepreneurs, musicians, state officials, and more, detail significant changes from the 1970s to present day.

Last year, Reed released the award-winning documentary film “Juke Joint Festival Revisited” during the virtual Juke Joint Festival event in Clarksdale, MS, with his primary goal to help drive donations to the Blues Foundation COVID-19 fund (https://j.mp/2wupAYe), and the Mississippi Blues Benevolent Fund (http://www.msbluestrail.org//mississippi-blues-trail-donations) that supports Blues musicians.

About Ted Reed

Ted has been producing, directing, writing, and shooting films and television since the 1970s. Creating documentaries, commercials, animated features, and broadcast and streaming series. His storytelling expertise has led to award-winning shows about gender equality, the future of communications technology, immigration, national parks, West Indian music, space tourism, assisted suicide, Jewish innovators, and handgun violence. He is the recipient of multiple awards. 

During his career he partnered with the MIT team who pioneered internet streaming video technology, produced New England’s first local all-digital TV broadcast and pioneered the use of interactive video for large business meetings.

Ted has taught and lectured at Harvard University, Tufts University, Boston University, Endicott College and the Boston Film and Video Foundation. He has brought filmmaking courses to elementary schools, community groups and retirement homes, and continues to run film, photography and music workshops at his office in Gloucester, MA.

The Blues Trail Revisited is now available to rent at: Bit.Ly/bluestrail

Exhibit in the Matz Gallery at Sawyer Free Library

Good Evening Joey,
Writing Mothers’ Workshop has an exhibit on display in the Matz Gallery at the Sawyer Free Library for the month of April (which also happens to be poetry month) entitled, Through the Looking Glass.  Attached are some examples featured in the exhibit.

Through the Looking Glass is a mixed medium brain child of North Shore mother writers (L-R): Nancy Carolyn Kwant, Kristin Proctor, Meg Grant, and Lyn Towne-Smith (not pictured). Together they form a group called the Writing Mothers’ Workshop.  
This exhibit is based on found poetry which is a type of poetry created by taking words, phrases, and sometimes whole passages from other sources and reframing them (a literary equivalent of a collage) by making changes in spacing and lines, or by adding or deleting text, thus imparting new meaning. The windows for this exhibit came from the rectory of the former Sacred Heart Church in Lanesville and along the roads of Gloucester.
Former works of WMW include Love and the Fall-Out at the Eastern Point Lit House, Parts: A Maternal Dichotomy, at the formerFlatrocks Gallery, and Maternal Garments: What Mothers Wear at the Lanesville Community Center. 
Contact us at: writingmothersworkshop@gmail.com

Upcoming Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce Events

Coffee & ConnectionsThursday, April 1 9 AM
Start the month off right and join us for a morning of coffee and connections! Meet new people, expand your business connections and stay in touch with friends and colleagues. The beginning of the event will feature an update from our Next Gen Young Professionals Group Learn More
Next Gen Virtual MeetUpMonday, April 5 | 6 – 7 PM Cape Ann Young Professionals are invited to join the Next Gen Committee as they check in, catch up, and connect with young professionals from all industries! Register NowFollow on Facebook
The Basics of Investing SeminarTuesday, April 6 | 9 – 10 AM Are you your own worst enemy when it comes to investing? Many of the instincts which serve us well in most endeavors are counterproductive in investing. It can be easy to be a successful long-term investor, learn the basics for success from founder of Cape Ann Capital, Dave Umstead, PhD, CFA.  RegisterLearn More
SAVE THE DATEBusiness After HoursWednesday, April 28 | 4:30 PM Mix your favorite drink or pour yourself a refreshing seltzer and join us as we network and relax in an informal setting, virtually. This after-hours event is a fun way to catch up with business colleagues and expand your connections.   Learn More
SAVE THE DATEBusiness Education and ScholarshipGolf TournamentMonday, May 24, 2021
The net proceeds of this event help fund five $1,000 scholarships awarded annually by the Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce to Cape Ann residents graduating from Essex Tech, Gloucester High School, Manchester-Essex Regional High School and Rockport High School.
Learn More