On Thursday the fog came rolling in, I actually like the fog.

My View of Life on the Dock
On Thursday the fog came rolling in, I actually like the fog.

It’s Spring! It’s Time for Fresh
Underwear and Socks !!!
STEPPING FRESH INTO SPRING BEGINS WITH THE BASICS –
FRESH NEW UNDERWEAR AND NEW SOCKS!
WHEN MONEY IS TIGHT IN PANDEMIC TIMES, THESE ESSENTIALS SADLY CAN FALL TO
THE BOTTOM OF THE LIST. YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE IN THE LIVES OF OTHERS.
JOIN WITH THE GLOUCESTER UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CHURCH TO HELP PATHWAYS
FOR CHILDREN AND THE GRACE CENTER MAKE SURE EVERYONE CAN FEEL FRESH!
WAYS TO GIVE
SHOP AT TWO LOCAL CLOTHING STORES—NELSON’S, 248 MAIN ST., GLOUCESTER, AND THE
JOHN TARR STORE, 49 MAIN ST., ROCKPORT. BOTH ARE OFFERING SPECIAL PRICES ON
UNDERWEAR AND SOCKS—BUY ONE ITEM, GET A SECOND FOR HALF PRICE! BOTH WILL HAVE
DROP BOXES FOR PACKAGED PURCHASES IN THEIR STORES.
A THIRD DROP BOX WILL BE AVAILABLE FOR OTHER PURCHASES, WEEKDAYS BETWEEN 9 AM
AND NOON, AT THE GLOUCESTER UU CHURCH OFFICE, 10 CHURCH ST., GLOUCESTER, NEAR
THE CORNER OF PINE AND CHURCH STREETS. (RING THE DOORBELL WHEN YOU VISIT)
MAIL A CHECK TO GUUC (GLOUCESTER UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CHURCH), 10 CHURCH ST.,
GLOUCESTER MA 01930. WRITE ‘UNDIES AND SOCKS” ON THE MEMO LINE. EVERY CENT WILL
GO TO PATHWAYS AND GRACE CENTER TO GIVE HELP AS NEEDS DEMAND.
OR GIVE BY CREDIT CARD, DIRECTLY TO PATHWAYS FOR CHILDREN AT HTTPS://PW4C.ORG,
OR TO THER GRACE CENTER AT HTTPS://LIFERBRIDGENORTHSHORE.ORG/GRACECENTER/.
Stillness….



Gloucester High School National Honor Society replay 3/25/21
Enjoy and please share!

GloucesterCast 486 With Annie Brobst, Joe Higgins,Chris McCarthy, Scottie Mac and Joey C 3/26/21
Press play to watch and listen (video)-
Press play to listen (audio)-
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Our Tipsy Seagull Ice Cream Is Back In Stock and We Will Be Announcing an Exciting Development On The Podcast Sunday! Reserve Your ice cream here: http://holycowicecreamcafe.com/
How Many Have Had Tonsils removed? How old were you and what do you remember about the experience (Chris)
Jukebox etiquette (Scottie)
Aisle-middle or window seat and why (Chris)
What restaurant did you love that is no longer around? Nichole says Captain Courageous, Blackburn Tavern and the pizza at La Lanterna
Joey’s pick Au Beaugolais
March is Peanut butter month- other than jelly what do you put on your peanut butter sandwich?
Flip flops, slides or sandals in summer for boating or beach?
Dog DNA test to determine who isn’t picking up after their dog
Pandemic Baby Bust: Baby bust: US birth rate falls during pandemic
Despite spending more time at home due to the pandemic, the US is in the midst of a baby bust, not a baby boom.
US births have been falling for nearly a decade and 2019 saw the fewest births in 35 years, but the final numbers for 2020 could slip even lower.
An estimated 300,000 fewer babies are expected in 2021, according to a study by Brookings Institution think tank.
Amid extensive school and day care closures, as well as limits on public gatherings, millions of women have been forced to balance supervising and teaching their children with work and other responsibilities.
Surveys revealed that many couples are delaying pregnancies, having sex less often and want fewer children because of the pandemic and its economic costs, according to the Guttmacher Institute.
Who else texts their friends when they are at Total Wine to see if they need anything and are you really a friend if you don’t?
Joey and Chris McCarthy $200 Carl Campbell: $250 Warren Waugh $2000 Lyon Waugh Auto Group $2000 Mike Codair $100 Nichole Wadsworth Schrafft $100 Rachel Refalo $100 Paul Gamber Jr. $500 Pat Dalpiaz and Jimmy Dalpiaz $200 Chris Doe and Kiley Davis $100 Alicia Cox $100 Zach Sears $100 Drew Hale $200 Kerry McKenna $100 Brenda Grimes Davis and John $100 Carla Benjamin $100 Karen Hanson $200 Lynne Scannell and Phil $100 Jane Gagliardi $001 Catherine Ryan $100 Charlene M Delaney $100 Tim Byrne and Laurianne Ellis Gelsomini Byrne $100 Paul Horovitz $100 Nina Testaverde Goodick $50 Dawn Restuccia Burnham $100 Andrea Butler
For those that are donating all or part of their donation to NAMI, please make out those checks to NAMI Cape Ann.
For those that are giving all or part to Alzheimers please make your checks to Alzheimer’s Association
My sons (ok, and I) are fans of frozen yogurt at Cafe Bischo and when we pick it up I often find myself looking at this doorway. I love the contrast of the wood and the brick and the stone.

When I first came up with the bright idea to share seasonal reopenings in Gloucester, I did not expect the list to blow up quite the way it did. It was not originally intended as a full guide to all restaurants but it is getting much closer to that than to its original purpose. I will mostly not be including sub/pizza/coffee/pickup spots UNLESS they are seasonal and expecting to reopen soon. With all those caveats, and with much thanks to FOB Bex Borden for her work on this here’s the updated list as of March 26 2021.
If you’d like to download your own copy, here you go.
| TOWN | NAME | PHONE | WEBSITE | OPEN? |
| Gloucester | 525MainSt | 978-525-3250 | www.525magnolia.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Atlantic Motel Breakfast | 978-283-0014 | atlantisoceanfrontinn.com/breakfast-in-gloucester-ma/ | MAY |
| Gloucester | Azorean | 978-283-5500 | www.azoreanrestaurant.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Beauport Hotel Dining | 978-491-5090 | 1606restaurant.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Blue Collar Lobster | 978-283-1812 | thegloucesterhouse.com | TBD |
| Gloucester | Capt Carlos | 978-283-6343 | www.captaincarlos.com | TBD |
| Gloucester | Causeway *temp closed* | 978-281-5256 | www.thecausewayrestaurant.com | OPEN* |
| Gloucester | Charlie’s Place | 978-281-5002 | www.facebook.com/Charlies-Place-111697215533360/ | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Crows Nest | 978–281–2965 | www.crowsnestgloucester.com/ | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Dining Rooms at the Castle/Seaglass Restaurant | 978-515-7386 | www.castlemanorinn.com/chef/seaglass-restaurant/ | |
| Gloucester | Drift Cafe | 978-314-4238 | driftgloucester.com | TBD |
| Gloucester | Duckworths | 978-282-4426 | www.duckworthsbistrot.com/ | TBD |
| Gloucester | The Franklin | 978-283-7888 | www.franklincapeann.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | George’s The Office | 978-281-1910 | www.GeorgesOfGloucester.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Gloucester House | 978-283-1812 | thegloucesterhouse.com | TBD |
| Gloucester | Goombadi’s | 978-879-4287 | www.facebook.com/Goombadis | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Horizon Chinese | 978-283-8815 | horizongloucester.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Jalapenos | 978-283-8228 | jalapenosgloucester.com | TBD |
| Gloucester | Laneside Pub and Brewery | 978-283-9753 | www.capeannlanes.com/food-beverage | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Little Red Rooster | 978-219-4004 | littleredroosterglo.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Lobsta Land | 978-281-0415 | www.lobstalandrestaurant.com/ | April 22 |
| Gloucester | Machaca | 978-865-3669 | themachaca.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Marias | 978-283-7373 | http://www.mariasgloucester.com/ | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Markouk Bread | 978-283-3500 | www.markoukbread.com/ | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Midori | 978-282-1888 | midorigloucester.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Mile Marker One | 978-283-2122 | www.capeannmarina.com/dining | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Minglewood Harborside | 978-281-0223 | minglewoodharborside.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Mom’s Kitchen | 978-282-4444 | www.facebook.com/JustLikeMomMade0 | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Oliver’s Harbor | 978-559-7638 | www.oliversharbor.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Passports | 978-281-3680 | passportsrestaurant.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Pilot House | 978-281-1150 | www.PilotHouseDragonLight.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Pratty’s CAV | 978-283-9700 | 10 Parker St, Gloucester, MA 01930CAV | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Rhumb Line | 978-283-9732 | 40 Railroad Ave, Gloucester, MA 01930 | TBD |
| Gloucester | Salt Water Grille | 978-879-4244 | www.SaltWaterGrille.com | TBD |
| Gloucester | Seaport Grille | 978-282-9799 | seaportgrillegloucester.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Short & Main | 978-281-0044 | www.shortandmain.com/ | TBD |
| Gloucester | Stones Pub | 978-515-7366 | www.facebook.com/StonesPubGloucester | TBD |
| Gloucester | Surfside Pizza | 978-281-1700 | www.surfsidesubsgloucester.com | APRIL |
| Gloucester | Taco Lupitas | 978-282-9600 | tacoslupitagloucester.wordpress.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Talise | 978-515-7814 | www.taliserestaurant.com | MAY |
| Gloucester | Thai Choice | 978-281-8118 | http://www.thaichoicerestaurant.com/ | OPEN |
| Gloucester | The Cupboard | 978-281-1908 | not recently updated | TBD |
| Gloucester | The Rudder | 978-283-7967 | facebook.com/TheRudderRestaurant | TBD |
| Gloucester | The Studio | 978-879-4896 | facebook.com/TheStudio51 | TBD |
| Gloucester | Tonno | 978-879-4795 | www.tonnorestaurant.com/ | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Topside Grill | 978-281-1399 | www.topsidegrill.com | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Two Sisters Coffee Shop | 978-281-3378 | www.facebook.com/TwoSistersCoffeeShop | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Willow Rest | 978-283-2417 | http://www.willowrest.com/ | OPEN |
| Gloucester | Yella on the Water | 978-491-5334 | www.yellagrille.com | TBD |
| Gloucester | Zeke’s Place | 978-283-7817 | zekesgloucester.com | OPEN |
| Rockport | 7th Wave | 978-564-5048 | www.7thwaverockport.com/ | OPEN |
| Rockport | Bean & Leaf Cafe | 978-546-7500 | www.rockporticecream.com/beanandleafhome | OPEN |
| Rockport | Bearskin Neck Bistro | 978-309-8263 | www.facebook.com/BearskinNeckBistro | TBD |
| Rockport | Blue Lobster Grille | 978-546-9990 | facebook.com/BlueLobsterGrille | OPEN |
| Rockport | BLUME | none listed | www.blumecoffee.com | TBD |
| Rockport | Brackett’s Oceanview | 978-546-2797 | www.bracketts.com | OPEN |
| Rockport | Brothers Brew | 978-546-3775 | 27 Main St, Rockport, MA 01966 | OPEN |
| Rockport | Emerson Inn Pigeon CoveTavern | 978-546-6321 | https://www.emersoninnbythesea.com/dining/ | May 1 2021 |
| Rockport | Feather & Wedge | 978-999-5917 | featherandwedge.com | OPEN |
| Rockport | Hong Kong Kitchen | 978-546-2626 | 13 Railroad Ave, Rockport, | OPEN |
| Rockport | Helmut’s Strudel | 978-546-2824 | www.facebook.com/StrudelHelmuts/ | TBD |
| Rockport | Hula Moon Cafe | 978-546-2572 | 27 Mt Pleasant St, Rockport, MA 01966 | TBD |
| Rockport | Lattoff Farmstand | 978-879-3940 | facebook.com/lattoffarmhousekitchen/ | OPEN |
| Rockport | My Place by the Sea | 978-546-9667 | http://myplacebythesea.com/ | OPEN |
| Rockport | Nates at Front Beach opening with new owners under a new name TBA | 18 Beach St, Rockport, MA 01966 | TBD | |
| Rockport | Red Skiff | 978-546-7647 | 15 Mt Pleasant St, Rockport, MA 01966 | TBD |
| Rockport | Rockport House of Pizza | 978-546-6066 | 19 Broadway, Rockport, | OPEN |
| Rockport | Roy Moore Fish Shack (Dock Square) | 978-546-6696 | Dock Square | TBD |
| Rockport | Roy Moore Lobster Co | 978-546-6696 | 39 Bearskin Neck | TBD |
| Rockport | Salty’s | 978-999-5947 | www.facebook.com/SaltysLobsterDogsandMore/ | April 2021 |
| Rockport | Top Dog | 978-546-0006 | topdogofrockport.com | TBD |
| Essex | Blue Marlin Grille | 978-768-7400 | www.bluemarlingrille.com | OPEN |
| Essex | Boat House Grille | 978-890-5113 | www.boathousegrilleessex.com | TBD |
| Essex | CK Pearl | 978-890-7378 | www.ckpearl.com | OPEN |
| Essex | Down River Ice Cream | 978-768-0102 | www.facebook.com/DownRiverIceCream | OPEN |
| Essex | Essex Seafood | 978-768-7233 | essexseafood.com | TBD |
| Essex | Farnhams | 978-768-6643 | http://www.jtfarnhams.com/ | OPEN |
| Essex | Great Marsh Brewing Company | 978-890-7827 | www.thegreatmarsh.com | OPEN |
| Essex | Sheas | 978-768-6931 | www.sheasrestaurant.com | April 8 |
| Essex | Village Restaurant | 978-768-6400 | wedigclams.com | OPEN |
| Essex | Windward Grille | 978-768-0050 | windwardgrille.com | OPEN |
| Essex | Woodmans | 978-768-6057 | www.woodmans.com | OPEN |
| ACTIVITIES | ||||
| Gloucester | Hammond Castle Museum | 978-283-2080 | www.hammondcastle.org | May 1 |
| Gloucester | 7 Seas Whale Watch | 978-283-1776 | www.7seaswhalewatch.com | April 17 |
| Gloucester | Cape Ann Whale Watch | 978-283-5110 | www.seethewhales.com | April 17 |
| Gloucester | YankeeFleet !CODFISHING! 4/1-4/15 | 978-283-0313 | www.yankeefleet.com | April 1 |
| Gloucester | Pauline’s Gifts | 978-281-5558 | www.paulinesgifts.com | May 2021 |
| Gloucester | Cape Ann Campsites | 978-283-8683. | www.capeanncampsite.com | May 15 |
| Gloucester | Vista Motel | 978-281-3410 | www.VistaMotel.com | April 1 |
Also joining us will be Country music star @anniebrobst @djscottiemac @gmgchrismc @fishprinter If you donated during our Tipsy Seagull ice cream fundraiser look for your number!




Join Us For The Live Stream Of GloucesterCast 483 At 9AM Sunday March 21, 2021 http://www.facebook.com/goodmorninggloucester www.facebook.com/goodmorninggloucester

If you subscribe to the GloucesterCast Podcast it will be emailed to you so if you miss it you can still access it through the free email! Link to subscribe here

I think it was $25 or $26 bucks. Just a stupid good deal.
110 Main St, Gloucester, MA 01930
Menu: passportsrestaurant.com

Judith Dobrzynski highlights WPA murals and a renewed online resource* for “Arts in Review” the Wall Street Journal.
“During the Great Depression, federal programs funded the creation of thousands of murals in post offices, hospitals and other locations across the country, many of which can now be viewed online.”
Judith H. Dobrzynski. The Staying Inside Guide: Big-Deal Art in Plain-Spoken Venues. Wall Street Journal. March 23, 2021. *A few of the WPA murals completed in Gloucester had been included in an earlier iteration of the website, in some cases misattributed. Gloucester is not mentioned in the article.
The reviewer highlights Coit Tower in San Francisco as one renowned example.
“The New Deal murals inside Coit Tower in San Francisco are also well-known. Painted by some two-dozen artists in 1934, they are social realist panels about life in California during the Depression, with titles like “Banking and Law” and “Meat Industry.” Their story, with a detailed layout, is available in a San Francisco Recreation and Park Department brochure.”
Judith H. Dobrzynski for WSJ
The reverse ratio is evident here: Gloucester selected four artists who completed scores of masterworks* for specific public buildings. Monumental stunning mural cycles were commissioned under the auspices of Federal Arts PWAP and WPA-era programs from 1935-42 for Sawyer Free Library, City Hall, the High School on Dale Ave (now Central Grammar apartments), Hovey, Maplewood, and Forbes elementary schools. As schools were closed, disposed, or repurposed, murals were rescued and resited within City Hall and later O’Maley.
The City of Gloucester artists were significant muralists and painters. In truth, venerated. They captured stories of Gloucester and became a celebrated part of our history and artistry. When considered as a whole, the Gloucester murals rival WPA era collections completed in big cities. The density of murals are as concentrated as any found in larger cities, like Coit Tower in San Francisco, though spread out among buildings rather than one tower, or one structure, as with Harlem Hospital.
Gloucester’s post office nearly landed a commission, but fate intervened. I’ll save that for the Part 2 post.
Gloucester and greater Cape Ann artists were commissioned for murals beyond Gloucester and Massachusetts and served key roles on selection panels and planning.
“Gloucester is not mentioned in this WSJ article or few major compilations. “Though painted by nationally known and successful artists at the top of their game, the works have suffered from a perfect storm of anonymity.”
Catherine Ryan, 2012
In recent years thanks to a CPA award, the Williamstown Art Conservation Center, established in 1978 to help museums with conservation, evaluated the condition of the city’s historic Depression era collection to help with important restoration. Gloucester’s impressive collection itself is the museum and the city a work of art that continues to inspire generations of artists.




*The quantity of murals is 68 if one includes the five O’Toole murals from the 1940s. Note: because the Gloucester murals are multi-piece or series, the sections tally up to a whopping 75-90 count.
Within Sawyer Free Library are the city’s only New Deal works painted directly on plaster walls. Frederick Stoddard’s designs throughout the Saunders house encompass the first floor entryway, two story stairwell, and 2nd story wrap around stairwell hall. He described this two-story “decoration” above wainscotting upstairs and down as “a conventionalized treatment of the Gloucester region”. Familiar scenes include Dogtown “Moors”.
Marine scenes wrap around the former children’s space on the top floor.
A Gloucester Daily Times article from 1934 mentions a trifecta opening honoring the architectural overhaul for the building, new murals, and Rachel Webber’s retirement:
“July 25, 1934- “The public reception at the Sawyer Free Library yesterday afternoon was for three purposes: to observe the 50th anniversary of the occupancy of the present building, to give a public showing to the mural decorations recently completed by Fredercik L. Stoddard and to the entirely restored and renovated building, and to recognize 44 years of service by Miss Rachel S. Webber, librarian who is to retire in the fall…The building has been completely repaired and largely restored. The three story tower which had been built on the front of the building has been removed*, as has the old porch which extended across the front of the house, leaving only an entrance porch. A bay window facing Dale avenue which the architects decided spoiled the character of the building has been sliced off. Everything has been painted and repaired and new lights have been installed.”
*all work near murals!
Howard Curtis assisted Stoddard with some repair work as a result (and was brought back again in 1953, 1974, and 1976-1980). In 1935, Curtis was busy completing his original “The Creation of Light” commission for the Methodist Episcopal Church on Prospect Street (now apartments).
Within O’Maley Innovation Middle School are a complete though out of order Frederick Mulhaupt series (originally at Maplewood); a partial and crucial section from a 2nd immersive series (originally at the High School); and “Our Daily Bread” by Frederick Stoddard, cropped. There are important works by Larry O’Toole commissioned by Ben Pine for the Gloucester Fishermen Institute and YMCA that were painted in the 1940s. Ron Gilson, Gloucester native, author and local historian, helped with the attribution and remembered the completed art being carried out the door. Gilson was great friends with Ben Pine, his first boss, and knew O’Toole.
above: sections from Mulhaupt’s fantastical “Landing of the Viking Thorwald in Vinland” 1935; and central panel “Gloucester harbor” 1936 | below: DPW inspecting the O’Toole 1940s murals (photo 2015)


Within City Hall, there are 10 monumental New Deal murals by four artists: Charles Allan Winter, Frederick Stoddard, Frederick Mulhaupt, and Oscar Anderson. Three are multi panels so the collection in this building seems much greater than 10 murals. The Winters in the lobby and Kyrouz were site-specific for City Hall.
One is a small Stoddard panel from a triptych spanning 65 feet for Eastern Avenue School!

I’ll follow up with posts detailing more biographical information about the artists.
The City of Gloucester murals have the potential to be listed among the nation’s most concentrated holdings of New Deal art from the 1930s and 40s on public view anywhere today. However, they are not all on view. Historic murals not on display await further conservation treatment.
Frederick Stoddard set up a studio in an unused room of the Point Primary School in East Gloucester to paint a variety of panels for the Forbes school. African animals by a waterhole, “the only liberty was animals all close to each other and peaceful,” accompany scenes of wild animals & birds and domestic animals. An underwater scene of local fish and vegetation is missing. I imagine every child and adult found it impossible to settle on just one favorite animal.
The largest composition stretched almost 20 feet. Joseph Nunes helped Stoddard with the installation.
This pair from the series were set over the doorways leading to classrooms. Each measures 5′ x 5′, so tall ceilings. Do they look familiar?
Did you attend or are you related to someone who was enrolled at the Forbes elementary school in 1935? Perhaps you visited one of the special viewing days set aside for the public. Fun fact: There have been seven Forbes school locations if we include the two modulars from the 1920s.
Oscar Anderson painted seven soft hued and dreamy murals for Hovey School including three panoramas. Four smaller works from this school are missing since ca.1972 or later. Does seeing a few of them together help you picture the Hovey school interior?




Beyond art, Gloucester benefited from multiple New Deal projects big and small. The Jodrey State Fish Pier was a Public Works Administration (PWA) biggie. Emergency funds allocated through the Treasury department paid for new public buildings like Gloucester’s post office.
The WPA helped Gloucester finally cap off the new track and field on Centennial. For years Gloucester residents were asked to dump their trash to build up landfill. The recreation space (now New Balance Field at Newell Stadium) was recognized nationally and dubbed, “Gloucester WPA Centennial Avenue Athletic Field”.
“The benefits of men working has changed unsightly, unhealthy Gloucester dumping ground into a modern fully equipped athletic and recreation field.”
1937 WPA bulletin

WPA Athletic Field 1937 – before GHS (Gloucester vista painted by Edward Hopper, now at the MFA)
Super complimentary letter from Colorado in response to the Gloucester story:
“I have just received your bulletin of October and I cannot refrain from writing to say that I think your inside spread showing the original dumping grounds, the football game, and a panorama of the athletic field at Centennial Avenue Gloucester, is one of the most remarkable photographic histories for public information that I have seen. How fortunate it was that your photographer saw it to get that first picture. It merits very widespread contemplation.”
Very respectfully yours,ERNEST W CORN
Assistant State Administrator Division of Information Service. Denver, Colorado
The field also gained coverage with other WPA football projects


WPA salvage work helped to build a new seawall at Stage Fort Park for flood and erosion control – “More than 3500 tons of stone set in cement were required in the construction of this 1100 foot WPA sea wall at Stage Fort Park, Cressey Beach, Gloucester. The wall preserves the beach area by preventing water and driven sand from flooding the park property.”

“At City Home, Gloucester, WPA razed a dilapidated wooden structure and built an all-stone garage and storage shed. These buildings will be used jointly by the City Home and the Welfare Department.”

Contributions in support of murals needing treatment can be sent to the “City of Gloucester”, note for mural conservation, City Hall, 9 Dale Avenue, Gloucester, MA 01930
If you’d like to put one on your business, let us know and we will come photograph you putting it up!



Egrets are back
