On Monday about 2 hours before high tide, went by the Magnolia Pier. You can see how sturdy the pier is built and being 2 feet higher will make a huge difference when we have storms.

My View of Life on the Dock
On Monday about 2 hours before high tide, went by the Magnolia Pier. You can see how sturdy the pier is built and being 2 feet higher will make a huge difference when we have storms.

Gloucester MA Dentistry Practice.
When was the last time you had fun at your dentist office?
No MUZAK up in this mother. They’re playing classic hits, the dentist chairs have use controlled heated and massage elements, you don’t have to put that nasty mold in your mouth with the gooey stuff making you want to gag when they take x-rays or making molds, they do their stuff with the latest digital imaging.
The staff is young, hip and friendly. The décor is straight out of Restoration Hardware. The place is straight buttah. Check them out unless you prefer old school dentistry and directly correlate how much pain you have to endure with the level of dental care you receive.
I can’t say enough about Dr Leif and his staff.
Check Them Out On Facebook-
It’s time to start thinking about making a Gingerbread House for the Middle Street Walk Gingerbread House Contest!!
What a fun thing to do with the family after Thanksgiving Dinner! Or during that weekend!

All Gloucester and Rockport residents are welcome to attend Gloucester 400’s first Signature event on November 24, 3pm, at the Gloucester Unitarian Universalist Church when we’ll honor, in gratitude, our community’s first century and its settlers,1623 through 1722.

It only makes sense that before the big day….the Macy’s Day Annual Thanksgiving Day Parade that is…that they test those awesome, massive balloons. This year they are premiering four new balloons and bringing back many fan favorites.
READ BELOW FROM Featured Image also from https://www.northjersey.com/
New Jersey landed a sneak peek on Saturday at the giant balloons Macy’s will debut later this month for its 93rd Thanksgiving Day parade.
There were clear skies and no wind outside MetLife Stadium, perfect weather to test whether the massive, helium-filled characters will be able to make it down the 2.7-mile parade route in Manhattan.
“It’s nothing but fun,” said Dawn Weidow, one of the hundreds of balloon handlers. “Pure fun. Adrenaline rush.”
Four balloons will make their first appearance this year: Snoopy in an astronaut suit; two characters from the Netflix adaptation of Dr. Seuss’ “Green Eggs & Ham;” SpongeBob SquarePants and his pet sea snail, Gary; and a creation designed by artist Yayoi Kusama. Smokey Bear is also returning in celebration of the 75th anniversary of the character’s creation.
The Macy’s parade debuted in 1924 with Central Park Zoo animals coming down the parade route and no balloons. Those premiered in 1927, with Felix the Cat.
The SpongeBob balloon is the character’s third iteration for the parade and Snoopy’s eighth, a record. Charles M. Schulz’s iconic beagle has floated above parade-goers 39 times, as an aviator, an astronaut once before, on ice skates, with Woodstock twice, as a “flying ace” and wearing a jester’s hat. This year Snoopy is 49-feet tall and 29-feet wide.
John Piper, a senior director of the Macy’s Parade Studio, said Macy’s returns to Snoopy because the world does.
“He is a classic and a perennial favorite,” Piper said. “There’s been a couple of years where we had other Peanuts characters, like Charlie Brown specifically, and I had some people ask me, well Snoopy’s in too, right?”
The annual balloon test in East Rutherford is not just a promotional event intended to kick off the holiday season. It’s also a required step for Macy’s to receive permits from New York City. Lt. Sean Patterson said the city has to make sure the new balloons fly safely.
The city implemented new rules after the 1997 parade, when a gust of wind caused a six-story-tall Cat in the Hat balloon to strike a light pole, showering debris on people below and injuring one woman so severely she almost died.
Each balloon has a police sergeant assigned to it to make sure it is flying correctly, and there are “wind sergeants” along the route who monitor wind speeds, according to Patterson, a safety officer for the parade who works for the New York Police Department’s emergency service unit.
Please note. I did not say who makes the best meatballs I can order at a dine in restaurant. Who makes the best meatballs-to-go?

Perhaps this is not technically a barn, but if this was on my property I would be calling it “the barn”. I find it quite charming each time I drive by. I think there must be some interesting stories in those walls!

Shopping for books this season for friends and family? The Friends of the Sawyer Free Library have gently used books for sale. Middle Street Walk is December 14, 2019.

If you’re curious about what your Gloucester or Rockport home may be worth, this is an easy way to find out what properties like yours are selling for in today’s market.
Click the link to get your free copy of the Gloucester Luxury Report or the Rockport Luxury Report. In the report, you’ll find up-to-date statistics on homes for sale now as well as those that have sold over the past 3 months.
Plus: receive an up-to-the-minute comparison, year to year, of the on-market activity in both communities.
Depending on where your home is located, click GloucesterLuxuryReport.com or RockportLuxuryReport.com and we’ll email the report to you immediately.
Kenny MacCarthy I Bob and Sue McDermott I Gibson Sotheby’s International Realty
Did you enjoy the graveyard tour in Essex? Come and learn more about gravestones with the Essex Shipbuilding Museum President, Dr. David Driscoll. He is sure to have you on the edge of your grave, clinging on for dear life in the next installment of the “Frame Up to Fit Out Speaker Series”

November 20th, 7 pm at the Shipbuilding Museum. To purchase tickets and learn more follow the link : https://www.essexshipbuilding.org/calendar-of-events
The sweet Lark Sparrow has been spotted daily at Eastern Point now for over two weeks. I’ve been able to take a longer look on a sunny day and think he is an immature Lark Sparrow because he lacks the rich chestnut color of an adult.
On one fine chilly, chilly morning, he even let me spend more than a few moments watching as he dozed in the sun while puffing his feathers for warmth.
The Lark Sparrow spends a good deal of time foraging on the ground for tiny seeds. When disturbed, he flies up into the trees and at that moment you can catch a glimpse of the white outlined feathers of the bird’s long rounded tail.Unlike Song Sparrows that dart and zoom horizontally across the landscape, when heading to the next location, the Lark Sparrow flies upward in more of a whirring helicopter movement. I love this little bird and if he stays all winter I hope he will find plenty of seeds to eat.
Lark Sparrow foraging for seeds
Compare and contrast the Song Sparrow to the Lark Sparrow. Both species are currently at Eastern Point/Niles Pond area. Both species forage on the ground for tiny seeds. The breast of the Song Sparrow is streaky while the breast of the Lark Sparrow is solid white with a dot of black feathers centered at the upper chest.
Song Sparrow Eastern Point
Don’t you find it fascinating, these avian visitors that are so far off course that find themselves on our shores? Here’s an account from 1905 —
The Lark Sparrow in Massachusetts.– On August 12, 1905, at Ipswich, Massachusetts, I observed at close range a Lark Sparrow (Chondesres grammacus). This makes the sixth record of this species for the State, and the fourth for Essex County. Nearly a year before this, on August 21, 1904, I took at Ipswich an adult male Lark Sparrow (Birds [Auk 104 General Notes. I. Jan. of Essex County, p. 268). It has occurred to me that stragglers in the migrations along our Eastern Coast may not be so very rare, but that they are overlooked, being mistaken for Vesper Sparrows, owing to the ‘white outer tail feathers. In both of the above instances, however, the slightly fan-shaped tail, and the fact that the white was not confined to the two outer feathers, as in the Vesper Sparrow, attracted my eye. The characteristic marking on the side of the head in the Lark Sparrow, seen with a glass within thirty feet, made the diagnosis in the second ca. From the Supplement to the Birds of Essex County by Charles Wendell Townsend.



Shop local and today starts the $1500 Holiday Spree
