
Create your list and tag me on Facebook and we will discuss on the next podcast.
Carl’s list has me drooling.
My View of Life on the Dock

Create your list and tag me on Facebook and we will discuss on the next podcast.
Carl’s list has me drooling.

Local people doing amazing things – DCL is a Boston based leading fabricator of architectural specialties. DCL President Mark Andreasson and his wife Karen Gorczyca reside on Cape Ann. DCL is now producing and delivering Personal Protective Equipment to area hospitals, police, and fire departments. Thank you Mark and Karen and DCL staff for all you are doing to help first responders.
DCL is a leading fabricator of architectural specialties – including custom signage, rebranding, wayfinding, and themed entertainment. We partner with architects and designers to custom-engineer the right solutions for each project. Our experience and expertise spans globally, and we provide custom solutions for the Academic, Athletic, Healthcare, Hospitality, Retail, and Transportation industries.
Casting a pellet is a totally normal thing that Snowy Owls, and all owls do. You may even have dissected a pellet in biology class. I just had no idea until seeing Snowy do this that they could be so enormous!
You can view the first three episodes here: Snowy Owl Film Project. All five will eventually be found on this page. Almost finished with Part Four: Snowy Owl Takes a Bath 🙂
A Snowy Owl Comes to Cape Ann
Part Three: Snowy Owl Casts a Pellet
Once or twice a day an owl casts, or regurgitates, a pellet, which is a mass of undigested parts of the bird’s food. Pellets form after an owl has fed. The owl often casts a pellet, and goes poop, shortly before heading out to hunt.
Pellets contain sharp-edged bones and teeth that could damage the bird’s lower digestive tract. Its presence prevents the owl from swallowing fresh prey.
I love this staircase, right down to the ocean.

Some Beauty In The Yard And Signs Of Things To Come-






Tired of not getting your order from insta cart? Don’t want to go to the grocery store ?
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Castaways Vintage Cafe is now offering delivery of fresh fruit & veggies. We want to provide our customers with safe and healthy options during these hard times. We will have a fruit bag that will include
•quart of strawberries, pint of blueberries, bunch of bananas, 1/2 dozen apples, 1/2 dozen oranges
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We will also have a veggie bag that will include
•Head of Broccoli, 6 oz Spinach, 1/2 doz Carrots, 1 Zucchini, 1 Cucumber, 2 red peppers
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Each bag will be $28 with free contactless delivery or contactless pick up at the cafe
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We are also able to deliver your favorite Castaways coffee, açaí bowl or power juice with your order.
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Please message or call us with your order! Delivering everyday
@ Castaways Vintage Cafe


Live GloucesterCast 395 With Bryan Lafata, Jim Dalpiaz and Joey Ciaramitaro 4/9/20
Press play to listen-
When you subscribe you need to verify your email address so they know we’re not sending you spam and that you want to receive the podcast or GMG in your email. So once you subscribe check your email for that verification. If you don’t see it, check your spam folder in your email acct so you can verify that you’d like to get them via email subscription.
Thank you to the people on the font lines of the crisis that are sacrificing being away from their families- First Responders, Health Care Workers, Grocery Store People, Truckers and anyone else sacrificing to keep things moving.
and
also social media links for
Great news! The Trustees will be reopening 76 properties for resident use starting today Thursday April 9. They ask that you visit those closest to your residence and (of course) maintain distance and any other active restrictions in place at the time. Further, they are asking you to change your plans if the parking lot is full as you approach.
This is a list of the newly opened properties. Halibut Point, Greenwood Farm, Hamlin Reservation, and Stavros Reservation are among the nearby properties included. ENJOY!


Only way to improve upon it would be to fill it with Ryan and Wood hand sanitizer.

We will have GHS Athletic Director Bryan Lafata On The GloucesterCast Live Stream Thursday Morning At 10:30AM
Join us and participate by asking questions as we go live. Here and at http://www.facebook.com/joeygmg


Savour To Curbside!
Ordering Curbside Pickup: efficient, easy… further maintaining safety.
In concert with the latest healthcare mandates, we are temporarily suspending in-store shopping, transitioning immediately and exclusively to Curbside Pickup. With our curbside pickup program, everything is left to us to fulfill your order.
Free delivery on Cape Ann requires a minimum order of $50., focused first to customers unable to pickup / should not venture from home. Delivery is Tuesday – Saturday, same or next day.
Here’s what you need to know.
>Curbside pickup takes place in our ample private parking space directly behind Savour.
>Begin by emailing your order to: kathleen@savourwineandcheese.com, you can mention a spending level…consider red, white, rose, sparkling selections from our $9.99 bins for the “taste” quality, & the $14.99 & 19.99 bins “expressing complexity”… ask for a callback, or call us to order @ 978.282.1455 during business hours, Tuesday – Saturday, 11am – 6pm.
>For most all customers we have your wine & cheese purchase history in our database for review, & welcome making recommendations, including wine pairings.
>With your order assembled and ready, we will call to arrange a convenient time for your pickup. During all order confirmation calls we will ask for your credit card information.
>Arriving at Savour, just pop the trunk & we’ll place your order inside!
>What to order? everything Savour … wine, beer, cheese, charcuterie, breads, our own fortified chicken bone broth, chocolate & more. Our website homepage will feature a rotating selection of current and new in-stock wines to consider – savourwineandcheese.com
We trust this service provides further assurances of a safer shopping experience, further minimizing risk, enhancing “our” collective well-being. We welcome your vote for Northshore magazine’s BONS award, for “Best Wine Selection”. Enter http://bit.ly/Savour-BONS20 From the Drink category page scroll to Wine Selection, scroll to Savour & click to vote. Thank You!
be well, be safe, be thoughtful…
-Kathleen Morgan & the Savour team
savour wine and cheese l 76 prospect street l gloucester, ma l 978. 282. 1455
Prior to dawn Monday morning, two Eastern Coyotes were spotted perusing Saratoga Creek and Good Harbor Beach. They appeared to be a pair; the huskier of the two was definitely the ‘alpha’ Coyote, with the smaller trotting after the larger. Before crossing the Creek, they both stopped to go pooh and pee in a pile of seaweed.
The larger (am assuming a male, but not entirely sure) has a more mottled snout with a black tail tip, while the smaller of the two has a very black snout and no black on its tail tip.
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Kathleen Adams, Music Director
Annisquam Village Church

Wear your “Easter best” or florals
Place flowers where they can be seen by others on screen
Meeting ID: 870 167 6165
Password: 171731
Note: There will be no Spiritual Connection Circle
By Jude Seminara
Freedom of worship was not commonplace in the early history of Massachusetts. While the first colonists at Plymouth and Massachusetts Bay left England because their right to worship was restricted by the Church of England, they created what was in essence a theocracy in the New World. The government of the colony was wed to the church. Religious dissenters such as Roger Williams and Anne Hutchinson were disarmed and banished from the colony. Quakers were whipped and banished, or in the case of the so-called Boston Martyrs Mary Dyer, Marmaduke Stephenson, Willam Robinson, and William Leddra, publicly hanged for their adherence to their faith.
Gloucester is the home of the first established Universalist Church in America. Adherents of Universalism, led by Reverend John Murray, adopted on New Years Day 1779 a covenant declaring themselves independent of the established Congregational Church in Gloucester’s First Parish. On Christmas Day 1780, the first Universalist public worship was conducted in their recently built meeting house on the corner of Spring and Water Streets (about where Walgreens and the Veterans Administration clinic is today).
Universalist doctrine was at odds with the established Congregationalist church, in that Universalists believed in the universal salvation of mankind through Jesus’ death. The established church was concerned that if people believed that God would not judge sinners then morality would decay, and morality was the underpinning of a civil and orderly society. The church’s responsibility was to maintain “the good order of civil government” and to that end, ministers should “thunder out the doctrine of everlasting punishment.” Universalists countered that this was not the role of religion; only when the church was “illegally wedded to state-policy, that men in power dared to hurl the Thunders of the Most High at offenders against government” did Christianity’s role become to keep the populace in good order.
In a twist of irony, as American men were dying in the fight against unfair British taxation and the Second Continental Congress was debating independence from the Crown, followers of Reverend Murray stopped worshiping at the First Parish Church. Discord brewed in the community, and Murray’s followers were subject to insults and abuse. In 1777, the selectmen voted that Murray should leave town, but he refused. In 1778, Winthrop Sargent, Judith Stevens, Epes Sargent, David Pearce, and eleven others were suspended from the First Parish. The following year, they organized themselves into the Independent Church of Christ and erected the Water Street meeting house.
Taxation in Gloucester at the time included providing for the established church, in this case the First Parish Church. As the Universalists did not attend this church, believing themselves an independent and established sect, they refused to pay taxes that supported a church that was not their own. They believed that they were protected under the bill of rights appended to the Massachusetts Constitution that was adopted in 1779. The town of Gloucester was not of the same opinion, believing that the Universalists were not a legitimate sect, were led by an unordained minister, and thus outside of the protections of the bill of rights. The town’s argument was undoubtedly bolstered by the discord between the First Parish and Universalist churches.
Because the Universalist congregants did not pay the taxes levied upon them to support the First Parish Church, the town seized their property. This seized property, including silver plate belonging to Epes Sargent, linens from Winthrop Sargent, and the anchor from a vessel owned by David Pearce, was sold at auction, a move that resulted in the Universalists filing a suit in the name of Mr. Murray to recover the property. William Pearce, a prominent member of Gloucester’s elite merchant class and formerly an opponent of Reverend Murray before converting to Universalism, was jailed for his refusal to pay the tax.
The Massachusetts Constitution expressly stated that all taxes paid for the support of public worship could be paid to support one’s “own religious sect or denomination.” This was fundamental to the Universalists’ case. The dispute lasted for three years, through a series of litigious trials and appeals. Trial after trial ended in favor of the First Parish, but the Universalists were dogged in their opposition.
In June 1786, the Supreme Judicial Court heard the case. Despite the judge’s instructions to the jurors to rule on the basis of the constitutional question, the jury returned in disagreement. The judge sent them back to continue deliberations. Historian Babson states that the foreman of the jury made an impassioned plea in favor of the Universalists and their right to worship as they saw fit, and exhorted his fellow jurors to decide with compassion and tolerance and an adherence to the natural right of all individuals to worship as they chose. He then went to bed with instructions to wake him when they had agreed. Agree they did, and the following morning they presented their verdict to the court.
This case did not signal an easy road ahead for Universalism in Gloucester; Reverend Murray had his detractors and even the Supreme Judicial Court did not view his as an ordained minister. His struggles continued in Gloucester until he was induced in 1793 to become the minister for the Universalist Church in Boston. The case did however affirm the fundamental precedent of the separation of church and state and the right to the free exercise of the religion of one’s choosing.
Sources
Babson, History of Gloucester
Eddy, Universalism in Gloucester
McKanan, Documentary History of Universalism
Copeland & Rogers. Saga of Cape Ann
Pringle, History of Gloucester
Took a ride over to the State Pier on a beautiful Tuesday.

Thanks for forwarding Scottie Mac