PLEASE JOIN USย –ย Monday, February 10, 6:30 – 8:30 pm at the East Gloucester School auditorium, Davis St. Ext., for a WARD 1 Community Meeting.
This is an opportunity for residents to express their concerns – about any issues impacting you and our neighborhoods – including schools, traffic, private road Betterment paving, development and open space…
City Councilors, the School Committee & Administration will be invited to attend & listen.
Please note: Ward 1 includes precincts of Ward 1-1 and Ward 1-2…ย from Eastern Point to the Main Street Domino’s Pizza area and all surrounding streets, including Webster Street, Eastern Avenue, Harrison Avenue, extending to the Rockport boundary on Thatcher’s Road.
All registered voters who vote at either East Gloucester Elementary School OR Veterans’ Memorial School are a part of Ward 1.
If you would like to submit questions in advance, or have concerns you would like raised but cannot attend that evening, please email me:ย smemhard@gloucester-ma.gov
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Reading about frequent coyote sightings at the beginning of mating season. No exception here, as we listen to their howling and see them nearly every day. These photos are from Niles Pond Road and the Audubon sanctuary rocks on Eastern Point.
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The $1,000 Singer-Songwriter Challenge returns to Machaca Gloucester for an 8-week run this winter starting on January 15, 2020. For 7 weeks, up to 8 performers play up to 3 songs or 15 minutes before a panel of live judges. At the end of the first 7 weeks, one performer is chosen to move on to the week 8 finals and a chance to perform in the finals for a piece of the $1,000 prize. Interested in performing? Reach out through our Facebook page or email Chris at clangathianos@me.com with your name, desired week, and a sample of your music. There is never a fee to participate, and due to high demand, performance slots are limited!
14 Rogers Street
Gloucester, MA
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Dinner Specials Each Week!
Wednesday, January 29… 7pm start
My Musical Guest: LIZ FRAME!
When it comes to singing, songwriting and overall live performance,
this gifted artist delivers a knock-out punch every single time. The
one and only Liz Frame returns for this week’s Rhumb Line Wednesday
show. She and I have become fast friends over the years since brother
J.B. urged me to bring her into our little fold. Through that period of time,
I was able to join on one of her fundraisers and she, along with her band
The Kickers, was able to open for one of my Orleans shows. To put it
simple, we just “get” each other. Time to start taking advantage of this
unusually warm January by coming out for the really GOOD stuff. Who
knows what cold, cold spring may yet again be in store? ~ Fly
Dinner with great music!
*Each week features a special, invited musical guest
The Rhumb Line Kitchen……features Morgan Forsythe! Dishes are better than ever before!
Plus a fine, affordable wine menu!
Upcoming…
A beautiful shot of dawn rising over Mill Pond in Gloucester from Paul Horovitz.ย I love what the light does behind the upper branches of the winter trees.
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Last Sunday, the Elks hosted a snowball party for the children of the area. It was well attended and it seemed the children had a great time. Special thanks to Paula and Shawna for their efforts in putting it together.
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Please join us and Andrew โThe Wine Bearโย Ehrlich as we tasteย a selection of four fine French wines, each thoughtfully paired with a course prepared by our chef, Justin Plumadore!
Always engaging, Andrew will educate us about the regions, the wineries, the wines and pairing qualities. We hope that you can join us for what will be an enjoyable, interesting and sumptuous evening!ย Menu can be viewed here.
We are thrilled to officially announce our plans to move our offices and visitor center to a new location! The Chamber team is excited to share this new and engaging space with our members and the Cape Ann Community. More details on the space belowโฆ
Move Reflects Chamberโs Growth and Increasing Prominence
The Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce today announced that they have reached an agreement to move into new and larger office space in one of the most traveled areas of Gloucester and Cape Ann, a milestone for the organization that reflects its growth and prosperity and its prominence in the community.
The Chamberโs new headquarters will be located at the intersection of Harbor Loop and Rogers Street, steps from the Gloucesterโs historic waterfront and the businesses along Main Street. The new location will also be more accessible to the other Cape Ann communities and is adjacent to aโฆ
Feel free to look down the list for yourself.ย I’ve quickly checked it out and there are some that left me thinking I really gotta add that to my wish list and some state’s best small towns according to this list left me saying to myself that if that was the best they had to offer that’s pretty sad.
That being said what some people are looking for may not excite me at all and vice verse.
Here’s my curation from the author Lissa with two s’s ๐ย list and the number next to it where she ranked them.
Places I’d definitely like to visit
Sedonaย 3
Carmel Californiaย 5
Mystic Ctย 7
Florida Sanibel Island 9
Dahlonega Ga 10
Hanelei HI 11
Bar Harbor 19
Rhode Island: Bristol 39
North Carolina: Ocracoke Island 33
Oregon: Cannon Beach 37
South Carolina: Beaufort 40
The Jury is outย (I need to know more)
Kentucky- Grand rivers 17
Edgartown Massachusetts 21 Kinda surprised out of all the cool towns they picked Edgartown.ย Not Newburyport, Salem or Gloucester?
New Jersey Cape May 30ย looks pretty but need to see more
New Mexico Taos 31 different need to see more
Vermont: Stowe 45
Washington: Friday Harbor 47
Wyoming: Jackson 50
Yeah That’s Gonna Be a Hard Pass-
Either based on the descriptions or photos I have zero interest in visiting these joints.
Sitka her rank 2
Iowa Winterset 15
kansas abeline 16
Louisiana St Francisville 18
Maryland- Ocean City (looks like a carnival from the picture) 20
Michigan Traverse City 22
Minnesota Grand Marais 23
Missiisppi New Albany 24
Missouri Weston 25
Montana Whitefish 26
Nebraska City Nebraska 27
Nevada Genoa 28
New Hampshire Merideth 29ย meh
New York Cooperstown 32
North Dakota: Garrison 34
Ohio: Marietta 35
Oklahoma: Davis 36
Pennsylvania: Jim Thorpe 38
South Dakota: Spearfish 41
Tennessee: Gatlinburg 42
Texas: Marfa 43
Utah: Moab 44
Virginia: Williamsburg 46
West Virginia: Berkeley Springs 48
Wisconsin: Mineral Point 49
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image: ยฉ Catherine Ryan. Concord, Mass. Points of Interest: Concord Museum. Home of Ralph Waldo Emerson. Lousia May Alcott home of Little Women Orchard House. Thoreau Walden Pond. Gropius House. Marcel Breuer House 1. Moon Hill Road. Decordova. Drumlin Farm.
From Gloucester visit Concord
Heading from Gloucester & Cape Ann to Concord makes for easy nature hikes and must see visits year round. Winter walks on mild days offer unobstructed views. It’s remarkable how many points of interest and preservation are within walking distance — or brief drives– from each other in Concord and that share connections with Gloucester.
Concord Art Museum expansion 2020
The Concord Museum’s expansion, the impact of Little Women film release, and Carol Thistle are featured in the Massachusetts Office of Travel & Tourism Industry Update from January 2020 (MOTT). Read the full January 2020 news and stats here for inspiration. Nice to see North Shore highlighted.
Plan ahead because there’s so much in close proximity you’d be sorry to miss any. It’s easy to park at these Concord sites and walk to the others. A few require a drive.
Home of Ralph Waldo Emerson
Concord, Mass. Emerson’s home of 50 years is situated across from the Concord Museum and a two minute walk from Alcott’s family home. The house belonged to his wife, Ellen Tucker who died of TB at twenty in 1831, just two years into their young marriage. Emerson supported Thoreau, Alcott’s father (Bronson Alcott) and Hawthorne because of spousal inheritance. He married Lydian in 1835 in Plymouth, Mass. They raised a family in the Concord home.
“Emerson itemized “Gloucester” in his pocket journal entries because he came here for work and pleasure: as a Gloucester Lyceum invited speaker; with friends, most notably a famous walk here with Thoreau; visited Rockport in August 1855 and Pigeon Cove with family in 1856 (where he is remembered as the Inn in Rockport Mass most famous guest). Art fans aside: his ancestor, Thomas Emerson, built Arthur Wesley Dow’s house in Ipswich.”
Catherine Ryan
Lousia May Alcott home of Little Women Orchard House
Founded in 1912 (!), the museum is the long time family home where Alcott wrote and set Little Women website Ralph Waldo Emerson backed her father’s work. Thoreau was her schoolteacher.
“When she was about seven her father enrolled her in a school taught by Thoreau, then 23. Thoreau often took his students out of the classroom into the woods. He taught them about birds and flowers, gathering lichens, showing them a fox den and deer tracks, feeding a chipmunk from his hand.
Sometimes he took the children on his boat, the Musketaquid, and gave them lessons as they floated down the Sudbury and Assabet rivers. As they passed the battlefield where the American Revolution started, he explained how the farmers had defended themselves against the redcoats. Louisa recorded her vivid memories of those field trips in Moods.”
excerpt New England Historical Society
Gloucester – Concord connections:Alcott stayed in a few neighborhoods when she visited Gloucester whether traveling alone, with family, or friends including Rocky Neck, Magnolia and West Gloucester. Extended stays at Braewood, 531 Essex Avenue, the home of Maria H. Bray in West Gloucester, were effectively a writer’s retreat and inspired Jack and Jill (published in 1880) set in โHarmony Villageโ which looks like Gloucester in the book’s illustrations. Louisa May Alcott was one of the notable repeat summer guests at Braewood (and perhaps at the ones Bray managed before in Magnolia including Willow Cottage).
Walden Pond
Concord, Mass. Don’t forget that Walden Pond is right here, too! Hike to the site of the Henry David Thoreau cabin which he built on Emerson’s land and stayed 2-2-2 (as in two years, two months, two days) over 1845-47.
“When I wrote the following pages, or rather the bulk of them, I lived alone, in the woods, a mile from any neighbor, in a house which I had built myself, on the shore of Walden Pond, in Concord, Massachusetts, and earned my living by the labor of my hands only.” Henry David Thoreau, Walden Pond, published 1854.
Combining this stop with downtown Concord underscores the scalability of his solitude and deep nature study, and how it was made possible with support from cherished family and friends. (Since it’s pretty much his back yard, no wonder he could walk home!)
Thoreau lived at 255 Main Street in downtown Concord from 1850 until his death in 1862. His former student, Louisa May Alcott, bought the historic house for her sister. She and her father lived there, too.
Gloucester – Concord connections: Walden Pond NPS Visitor Center designed by architect MaryAnn Thompson, same firm that built Temple Ahavat Achim in Gloucester, Mass. Thoreau came to Gloucester at least twice that we know of- in 1848 as an invited speaker by Gloucester Lyceum hosted in the town hall; and in 1854 as the penultimate stop of his north shore trek. Dogtown.
Temple Ahavat Achim Gloucester Ma designed by MaryAnn Thompson 2012 (photo July 2017)
Gropius House
Lincoln, Mass. (Walden Pond/Concord line). A Historic New England property, Gropius House is a landmark Bauhaus residence now museum built in 1938, the same year as MoMa’s legendary Bauhaus exhibition. Marcel Breuer’s house 1 is down the hill.
Gloucester – Concord connections: Mass Modern trail and great buildings. Don Monell and other modern inspiration can be found on Cape Ann. The Graduate school at Harvard designed by Gropius was a TAC (The Architects Collaborative) build in 1950. TAC was founded in 1945 with the clout addition of Gropius who continued with the firm until his death in 1969. Original 7 founders were Norman Fletcher, Louis McMillen, Robert McMillan, Benjamin C. Thompson*, Jean Fletcher, Sarah Harkness and John Harkness. Twenty years later, Monellโs Plum Cove elementary school design in 1967 in Glocuester Mass was leveraged by partnering with The Architects Collaborative. Gloucesterโs Plum Cove school is a TAC build. (Wikipedia lists several commissions. The school could be added.) This early 20th century history in Concord and Gloucester could inspire other movies.
*Jane (Fiske McCullough) Thompson and Deb Allen were co-founding editors of Industrial Design; Thomson had worked at MoMa for Philip Johnson. She married Ben Thompson in 1969. To my knowledge, there is no relation to architect MaryAnn Thompson who designed the Walden Pond visitor center.
The Marcel Breuer House 1 (1939) at 5 Woods End Road is essentially nestled into the Gropius hill property. Floor plans and interior photo published here are from the Marcel Breuer papers in the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution collection. It was added to the National Historic Register in 1988. Minutes away conservation land was set aside thanks to 20th Century modernist architect, Quincy Adams. He served on the town’s conservation committee and donated hundreds of acres of his family’s land for green space.
Lexington, Mass. One could drive to Six Moon Hill after stops mentioned above, on the way back to Gloucester. It’s about 15 minutes from the Gropius House. Six Moon Hill is the nick name for an enclave of neighborhood homes in Lexington, Massachusetts, designed by the modernist architects of The Architects’ Collaborative (TAC) between 1948 and 1950.
The Gropius home was already optimally sited within the Walden Pond/Thoreau orbit. I’d wager intentionally so, a poetic and multidimensional nod to the natural and built environment and how to live. This dialogue among masters across centuries is another reason I believe Maryann Thompson’s visitor center is ideal.
Art historian Simon Schama resided on Moon Hill between 1981 and 1993.
“Six Moon Hill is a community of twenty-nine Mid-Century Modern houses designed by members of The Architects Collaborative (TAC), beginning in 1948… The property was purchased by the TAC architects in 1947 so they could build inexpensive homes for themselves, their growing families and their friends, and express Modernist socially progressive ideals. A corporation was formed, creating by-laws affecting future development, maintenance and communal responsibilities. The parcel was originally part of a farm, and while the land was initially used for grazing, the steeper areas had reverted to forest at the time of the purchase. Most of Moon Hill is on a ridge with rocky outcrops, wooded with oak and conifers. The impact of construction has been minimized, leaving the site as natural and undisturbed as possible” read more from the historical surveyhere
Don’t miss what’s nearby!
Mass Audubon’s Drumlin Farm is a five minute or so drive from the Gropius house. Moon Hill Road is more like 15-20 minutes. Minute Man National Park and Decordova are here, too. There are ample and varied scenic treks to mix it up for repeat visits
“On behalf of the Massachusetts Office of Travel & Tourism, Happy New Year to our tourism colleagues around the world, as we embark on an exciting new year and a new decade here in Massachusetts. We are looking forward to a busy and productive year. In-state initiatives on our horizon include Plymouth 400, the Restaurant Promotion Commission, a new Historic Women Trailblazers of Massachusetts initiative in honor of the 100th anniversary of the right to vote for women, and a major exhibit on King Tut coming to Boston in June. On MOTTโs international front, we have trade opportunities in Germany, Japan and South Korea in the coming months, as well as two of our most important tourism conferences, DNE and IPW. In this monthโs MA Spotlight, we profile Concord Museumโs Marketing & PR Director Carol Thistle, who shares details about exciting new exhibits coming up in 2020 here.”
“…we are so excited about the Little Women film and we have already seen an increase in visitation to Concord because of it. Louisa May Alcottโs copper tea kettle that she used as a nurse during the Civil War is showcased in the Museum. Louisa almost died during the endeavor and was inspired to write her first published work, Hospital Sketches, which helped launch her remarkable and prolific career as one of Americaโs favorite writers.” – excerpt from Carol Thistle interview for MOTT spotlight Jan 2020
“The $13 million capital campaign supported construction of the new Anna and Neil Rasmussen Education Center, which opened in fall 2018. What are some of the educationalfeatures? With this state-of-the-art Center, we host Forums on womenโs suffrage, the abolition movement, revolutionary history, decorative arts and other topics connected to our collection. Since the opening of the Rasmussen Education Center, the Museum has served 14,000+ students through a variety of curriculum-based educational programs. Kids can explore the world of Henry David Thoreau, cook over an open hearth, and learn about Native culture through archaeology and so much more. In 2019, the Paul Revereโs Fund provided free bus transportation to the Museum and underwrote all program fees for nearly 4,000 students from Lowell, Lawrence, and Everett.”
“One of the greatest joys in my marketing and public relations career has been promoting so many incredible destinations in our state. Massachusetts has so much to offer local, national and international visitors with its natural beauty, seacoast and of course its history. In the past 25 years, through branding campaigns and strategic marketing, I have promoted some of Bostonโs key icons, including Faneuil Hall Marketplace, the Boston Harbor Islands and the Museum of Science โ as well as the cities of Gloucester and Salem. For the past 3 ยฝ years, I have been the Marketing Director for the Concord Museum as it has undergone an exciting $13 million dollar capital campaign, expansion and renovation. Iโm also currently serving on the Board of the Concordโs Chamber of Commerce as well as the Advisory Board for both Discover Concord and the Town of Concordโs new Tourism initiative.”
Hockey for my boys, may indeed gonowhere…but, it has already gone everywhere.ย Everywhere important that is.
This season alone, with two full months of hockey left to be played, between my two boys (who, mind you, are only 12 and 10) we already have 92 games in the books. We have spent 14 nights in hotel rooms…in six different states. When I got an oil change on November 7th the new sticker on my windshield told me that I should be due for the next one on April 7th. My hockey mobile made it, instead, to the end of December. If that doesnโt sum up how my weekends roll, I donโt know what does.
Lots of miles, lots of practices, lots of games, lots of scheduling, lots of dividing and conquering, lots of travel, lots of eating in the car, lots of gear, lots of moneyโฆ.did I mention lots of moneyโฆbut, more importantly, lots of smiles, lots of lessons, growth, memories, laughs, and friendships.
I was asked the other day if I wished that my boys had never caught โthe hockey bug.โ Iโd be lying if I tried to convince you that Iโve never complained. I have complained. Lots. The rinks are cold, the gear isnโt always as fragrant as I might like, the gas tank is always empty, sleep is often scarceโฆand, regrettably, I have to say โnoโ to a lot of life that unfolds outside of all things hockey. But, no, I donโt wish to change or cure any of it. And, dare I say, I have the bug too.
We do all of this because, obviously, we expect our boys to play at some super high level of hockeyโฆif not the pros, right? (Insert eye roll) Ummmโฆno. No we donโt. That is not at all why we do this. In fact, Iโm already feeling the sense of loss that will undoubtedly come crashing down when high school ends and thereโs no longer a hockey schedule to adhere to or cold bleachers to sit onโฆ.because, I very much expect that there wonโt be.
So, why spend this much money and such a significant part of the boysโ childhoods for something that we suspect will simply end one day? And end with very little fanfare at that. Something that may, indeed, go nowhere? Well, because, it has already gone, truly, everywhere.
Sure, my boys have a pretty impressive little collection of medals, and trophies, and awards, and titles, and championships. They also have plenty of losses and stretches when it felt like they might seriously never win again. But, you know what else they have? They have confidence, resilience, courage, strength, grit, compassion, independence, determination, drive, commitmentโฆ.and much thicker skin than they would have without hockey. And thenโฆ.thenโฆ.there are the memories. The laughs. The stories. The good times. The silly one-liners that no one else in the world understands because they werenโt there. The friends.
There are lessons to be learned each and every time my boys take the iceโฆ.and something to hold on to from each and every game. The lessons often have to do with sportsmanship and fair play….the old “there’s no “I” in team”, “you need to work just as hard at being a good teammate as being a good player” etc. Sometimes what they learn, however, has absolutely nothing to do with hockey. Sometimes it has to do with being a friendโฆbeing strongโฆbeing forgivingโฆbeing imperfect. Sometimes it is as simple as remembering to hug their grandparents and thank them for coming to watch them skate…no matter what the scoreboard says or how drained they feel. Sometimes the lessons are out of the rink as well.ย The dance of packing, unpacking, navigating hotel check-ins, tipping, and traveling as a team.ย Lessons in respect to hotel and restaurant staff…lessons in communicating with teammates’ families who come to cheer, and support, and be an important part of the bigger picture.ย ย Sometimes they fail at all of it, but…then, they learn.
Sometimes my boys play with the confidence of knowing that theyโre goodโฆ knowing that they contribute each and every shiftโฆknowing that their team is better for having them on it. Sometimes my boys play and feel defeatedโฆ.even after a big win. Sometimes they leave the rink and just canโt wait to get in the car because they feel like they didnโt play wellโฆ.or, maybe, they were told they could have played better. Fair enough. Sometimes they score, they give assists, they feel on top of the world. Sometimes, during a power play, theyโre the ones to get called offโฆ.and sometimes, at the end of a close game, theyโre the ones to sit out a shift. Sometimes they feel appreciatedโฆsometimes they feel, well, not. Sometimes their feelings are validated, sometimesโฆwell, theyโre not. It is by no means always happyโฆ.itโs hard, and itโs awesome, and itโs painful, and itโs amazing. It builds them up โฆ.and it knocks them down just as quickly. But, they love itโฆand they know it comes with both highs and lowsโฆand they never, ever want to quit.
They have, indeed, made friendsโฆand, do you know what? So have I. They have learned to trust, to cheer, to support, and to truly love their teammates. And, do you what? So have I.
If youโre lucky enough to land on teams such as those that we have, you soon have a community unlike any other. It may start with casual conversation at the rink, slowly getting to know each other, soonโฆmaybe โfriendingโ each other on social media. Much like being a new student at a new schoolโฆor a new employee at a new job…you start to meet others. You start to ebb and flow in a more consistent rhythmโฆ.coming together soon in a circle that gets closerโฆ.and tighter. Soon you start recognizing siblings, and grandparents, and aunts + uncles. Soon, most likely, you learn what people do for work, how they take their coffee, and what they drink on a Saturday night. When the blanket is left on the bleachersโฆ.you find that you know who it belongs to and maybe even how long theyโve had it. Soon youโre not just getting to know the other familiesโฆyou actually know the other familiesโฆand, honestly, it feels like youโve known them forever.
The kids become closerโฆthey start seeing each other outside of the rinkโฆ.and so, happily, do the grown-ups. If youโre lucky enough to land on teams such as those that we have, youโre in for quite a ride. Tournament weekends feel like college all over again and you laugh so much that you cry. You might soon discover that you drink things you never thought youโd drink, you stay up later than you have in years, and each and every game your kids play feels like the Stanley Cup. Hysterical group texts are often the closest thing to a book youโve read all season and inside jokes make you spontaneously laugh mid-weekโฆat the most inconvenient times.
You complain about the traveling and the hotel bills, but you feel a sense of loss when the foreseen schedule doesnโt involve nights away. Youโre a hockey parent. The kids love each otherโฆbut, they sometimes get on each otherโs nerves. You love the coaches, but sometimes you feel like things arenโt fair. The coaches love coachingโฆ.but sometimes theyโre frustrated and expect more. Youโre a hockey team.
Hockey, for my boys, has already gone, truly, everywhere. Yes, sure, geographically, we have gone lots of placesโฆ but, thatโs not what I mean. More importantly, it has seeped into their little beings and has been the backbone for who they have becomeโฆand are certainly still becoming. It has, without a doubt, shaped them and defined their childhoods and our family dynamic. It has built family bonds and routine and, of course, memories. It has filled the basement with equipment, baskets with precious team shirts, bookshelves with souvenirs, albums with photos, and our lives with something we all love.ย Hockey, years from now, will be something that my boys hopefully play in an over-thirty league with some good buddies late on Sunday nights. It may indeed go nowhere other than that but, I assure you, it has already given everything and gone everywhereโฆeverywhere important that is.
Thank you to all who have brought this joy, this camaraderie, this craziness, and this sport into our lives.ย Thank you to the coaches, volunteers, teammates, friends, and families.ย Thank you to Cape Ann Youth Hockey and the North Shore Coyotes Hockey Club! We’re so thankful for you all.
Enter a caption
North Shore Coyotes Hockey Club: U14 Bantams
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We had a great dinner at the Hale St. Tavern last weekend. It was very busy with college hockey fans and parents. Several families were having dinner as well so it’s family friendly. Danielle from Gloucester was our server (wonderful job). My burger was excellent and Jim enjoyed his fish sandwich. The Tavern will be closing as of Feb 3 for renovations that are expected to take 2weeks. I am looking forward to a return trip, perhaps with friends.
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Fill out this form and a representative from Cazeault Solar will get back to you to arrange a free No-Obligation Solar, Roofing or Windows assesment.
Weโll measure your roof (several different ways) and run the numbers for your exact situation. That way you can make an educated decision.
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Itโs Cazeault Solar & Home!ย โBest Of The North Shore Magazineโ The Readers of โBONSโ magazine awarded us Number #1 for Solar and Home. We are thrilled that you voted for us and we wanted to say a sincere Thank You to you. We also wanted to tell our dedicated staff that, โYouโฆ