
Gloucester’s Writers Center Present

My View of Life on the Dock



Big fun this Thursday with Brian Templeton, Billy Loosigian, and Dave Mattacks. Makes me feel like a rock star!
Dave


40 Railroad Avenue
Gloucester, MA 01930
(978) 283-9732
Stoneware, Pottery, Porcelain & Glass: 4 gallon antique stoneware jug w large vivid cobalt bird decoration by O.L. & AK Ballard of Burlington VT (excellent condition), 2 gallon crock w/ cobalt blue floral decoration signed L & P.G Chace Somerset, an assortment of other stoneware crocks & jugs incl: 10 gal w/ lid Geo. E. Wales, Newton Center MA & others, 26” antique copper fish weathervane topper,
Furniture: awesome modern lucite chair, early 19th century blanket chest w/ two drawers and lift-top, bow-front oak curio cabinet, chest on chest country highboy, Eastlake settee & matching side chair,
Americana: crazy cast iron flying pig doorstop, fragment of antique Cigar Store “Indian” on iron stand, victorian period iron sculpture’s pedestal w/ adjustable bronze platform, Civil War era pistol grip amputation bone saw mfgd by Goodman & Shurtleff Boston MA, giant clamps 31” from Essex MA Ship Building Yard, 14kt gold penknife, Sterling & Silverplate Flatware, antique Washer Woman whirlygig, very old concrete duck family
Clocks & Watches: Tall-case w/ split pediment 19th century grandfather clock in cherry wood (amazing grain) & painted wooden face, victorian period grandmother clock in gorgeous tiger oak case,
18kt gold Zenith working pocket watch, collection of watches including gold filled Waltham pocket watch & others. Antique Hat-pin collection.



Walt Kolenda

These fabulous activities are so rich and important….and are such an asset to families and residents in this area. There is a full calendar of 10 FREE Days of Events
Get your calendars out and start marking the ones that you would like to squeeze in! There truly is fun for the whole family.
Discover special places in your backyard! Be guided through unique landscapes on land and sea, explore historic properties, and take in cultural experiences of all kinds. Find what makes Essex County like nowhere else during Trails & Sails!
GMG’s own Pat D. did a great post about Trails and Sails earlier today as well. Please read hers HERE
You can find the TRAILS AND SAILS WEBSITE HERE

So this may be kind of a hike, but it sounds worth it. Plus, you can stop at the AWESOME Wachusett Brewing Company on the way home.
LEARN ALL ABOUT WACHUSETT MOUNTAIN’S KIDFEST HERE
This one’s all about kids and families! Two days filled with entertainment, shows, giveaways, vendors, activities and more! No shortage of fun for everyone!

As always, for a comprehensive list of family activities, please visit our friends at North Shore Kid
Trials and Sails is a 10 day event held across Essex County and includes a wide range of activities designed to highlight the variety of indoor and outdoor experiences available to the public. This year’s event runs from Friday Sept 20 to Sunday Sept 29 but you can get a headstart tonight in Ipswich at the Ipswich Visitor Center Gallery at the Hall Haskell House 36 South Main Street. A reception will be held there 6-8 PM to “Meet the Woman Business Owners” along the Essex Coastal Scenic Byway (our own Pauline Bresnahan of Pauline’s Gifts is among these women). Art and artisan pieces from these businesses will be shown and offered for sale in the Gallery at the Ipswich Visitor Center until Sunday Sept 22 from 10 AM to 5 PM. It’s a great take. I stopped by yesterday and visited with Anne from Lost Treasures in Rowley. Additional Trails and Sails info available here.
You’ll be hearing more about these events in the upcoming days. My calendar is pretty full of plans to attend a number of them.

No Bueno Beau. No Bueno.

He just can’t help himself-



Join Darren Burke, Certified Nutritionist, for an educational lecture series that will highlight simple and effective ways to clean up your eating habits. You’ll learn about what foods are in season and recipes that incorporate those foods!
September 26th – 6:30 PM: 7 tips for Getting Your Diet Back on Track
October 24th – 6:30 PM: Craft Beer and “Healthy” Candy Pairing
November 21st – 6:30 PM: Stress-Free Thanksgiving
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Did you know that in season Brown’s Yacht Yard has 25 people working there? That’s serious business. rob Bent talks about some of the things they do and what boat owners should be thinking about as boating season starts to wind down.
When I leave the house and have major anxiety about pit temps when doing a long cook I figured out this workaround to keep an eye out for temp spikes-
I place the Thermoworks Smoke remote display directly in front of the Alexa Show. Using the Alexa App I drop in on the Alexa Show which displays the temp. In this way I can ask the Mrs to adjust the vents if they need adjusting while I’m off picking up the kids or running an errand.



Monarch Butterfly and Tithonia rotundifolia
You may have noticed that the late summer of 2019 has so far been a banner year for migrating Monarchs, as well as other species of butterflies. Not only are reports of good numbers of butterflies being shared all around Boston’s North Shore, but numbers are high across states east of the Rocky Mountains and the southern Canadian provinces. Let’s keep our hopes up that these current high counts will translate to strong numbers at the Monarch’s overwintering sites in Mexico.
Painted Lady (Vanessa cardui) and Seaside Goldenrod
I am very often asked, “what is that small Monarch?” Actually, it’s not a small Monarch but a butterfly of an entirely different species, the Painted Lady Butterfly (Vanessa cardui). Every year we see Painted Ladies migrating at the seam time of year as do the Monarchs. Additionally, we are currently in the midst of a Painted Lady irruption. An irruption is a word used to describe a burst in the population numbers of a species.
Keep your eyes open for the beautiful floaty Sulphurs, also on the wing during the Monarch and Painted Lady migrations.
Mourning Cloak, underside of wings
Here is a butterfly I don’t always see during the late summer migration, a Mourning Cloak. The generation that emerges at the end of the summer spends the winter not as a chrysalis or a caterpillar, but as an adult. They hibernate in the cracks and crevices of trees and buildings.
Mourning Cloaks are one of the first butterflies on the wing in earliest of spring and are a true harbinger of warmer days to come.
Mourning Cloak, upper, or dorsal side of wings showing
In the British Isles, the name for the Mourning Cloak is Camberwell Beauty. I much prefer that name, don’t you 🙂
Notice how when the Mourning Cloak’s wings are folded, the butterfly will be well camouflaged when hibernating in the cracks of tree bark.

Please share to help spread the word.
Now that the meteorological season has turned to fall, its not only the weather that is changing, it’s also the economy. With tropical storms and hurricanes forming in the Caribbean, it seems our interest rate market is forming their own cyclones.
At the beginning of last week, I was able to offer the lowest rates I have given on a 30 year fixed rate since 2013…..3.5%. I contacted as many clients as I could to take advantage of rates plummeting like a rock. It was also a good time to refinance because kids are back to school and I can get peoples attention. That’s no easy feat from July 4th through Labor Day because people have vacations and kids prepare to go back to school. That’s along with everything else we deal with on a daily basis. So the timing was perfect for a period of extended low interest rates…
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Dinner Specials Each Week!
Wednesday, September 18… 7pm start
Your Guest Host: JOHN ROCKWELL!

Well… it’s Nashville, then Chicago for me this week. Luckily, the talented John Rockwell is able to step in as guest host, bringing all his wonderful entertainment skills (and guest Robert Brown) along with him. Thank you, John! I’m sure it’ll be a blast for everyone as I look forward to seeing you all next week. ~ 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…
Tony Frontiero
10/2 John Rockwell
10/9 Lynne Taylor
Visit: http://www.therhumbline.com/
Looking forward…..to seeing you there 🙂

https://www.berklee.edu/people/jamie-lynn-hart
https://www.bigtakeoverband.com/
This year’s music festival is in loving memory of Brian Tarr
Please join us for the September artists and writers Cape Ann Reads reception 6-8pm September 19th, 2019 on the main floor at Sawyer Free Library. The event will feature Claire Wyzenbeek, the Invited Artist for the Gloucester venue. Wyzenbeek will kick off the opening with a brief overview of her work, especially the beautiful and enigmatic Water and Lunar series on view for this exhibition.


CLAIRE WYZENBEEK
Cape Ann Reads Invited Artist
Selections from Lunar and Water series
New paintings 2018-19
“Water is the wellspring of life. Living near the sea in Gloucester, where the moon calls the tides to rise and fall, where my garden is parched or flooded by the rain, I feel the water is everywhere around and within me.
Our bodies and feelings are fluid. The elation of floating in a calm bay, the release of tears flowing in grief, the vaporous clouds pregnant with rain all appear in my work as symbols of multiple experiences. Rising Tides and Beneath are about climate change, but also about emotions and relationships. The Rain paintings were responses to the sorrows of loss. My figures and landscapes reflect life’s juxtapositions of love and suffering, awe and anguish, that flow through our internal and external worlds.”- Claire Wyzenbeek
Claire Wyzenbeek is the invited artist for the Gloucester venue of the “Once Upon a Contest” travel exhibition presented by the four libraries of Cape Ann. Wyzenbeek wrote and illustrated an original children’s picture book, Henrietta’s Moon Egg, a distinguished Cape Ann Reads Gulliver book. Wyzenbeek works in a variety of media with a current focus on building up layers of acrylic wash. She maintains two studios; one at her residence in Gloucester and a second in Beverly where she teaches art classes.
Next week at the library, Wyznebeek will bring her award-winning children’s book Henrietta’s Moon Egg to a special Story time with Christy, Director of Children’s Services, September 25, 2019.
