These turkeys are so funny when they strut their stuff.

My View of Life on the Dock
These turkeys are so funny when they strut their stuff.

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Items could be dropped off at Pauline’s Gifts, PM or wherever you see the specially marked boxes in town.

Scenes from Manchester last week © Beth Welin, Director of Manchester Historical Museum
Librarian, Carol Bender, Head of Youth Services, Manchester Public Library, reading Where in the World is Catherine Abigail by Michael LaPenna and illustrated by Leslie Galacar. The children from Magic Years were visiting Once Upon a Contest at Manchester Historical Museum.

They met special guest artist Leslie Galacar.

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Gloucester, Massachusetts. Atelier Cape Ann, a new bridal wear and alterations shop located at 57 Eastern Avenue, opened winter 2019. The changing window display beckons dreams and brightens this stretch along Rt. 127 with alluring bridal gowns and flower girl dresses showcased on the ground floor of this charming New England building. At the traffic lights, turn on to Eastern Avenue heading in the direction of Good Harbor Beach and Rockport. (If you’ve reached Jeff’s Variety you’ve gone too far.) There’s ample parking out back. Alterations by appointment only. http://www.ateliercapeann.com

photos Jan-April
Gloucester High School wins 1-0 in Extra Innings, a thrilling victory.
Thatch and I stopped by Plum Cove Beach for some quiet time after a long day of school, work, homework, baseball, lacrosse, etc. It was nice to sit still for a minute and enjoy the view.



Thanks to Catherine Ryan’s recent post, my attention was drawn to the Elizabeth Gordon Smith Garden project at Stage Fort Park. I am quite enamored of the Triton statute. Sculptor Walter Hancock portrays him as majestic and mighty. Thanks once again to the Generous Gardeners for their work on this hidden gem of a memorial. I look forward to the flowering trees and additional flowers. It’s worth stopping by for a little rest and meditation.






Mass Audubon’s Ipswich River Wildlife Sanctuary is offering a free bird walk at Eastern Point Wildlife Sanctuary in Gloucester on Wednesday, May 8 from 9:00-11:00 a.m. Join Ipswich River Wildlife Sanctuary Director Amy Weidensaul for a walk that will traverse beautiful coastline and wetlands as well as forested habitat. We’ll search for migrating birds such as wood-warblers and flycatchers in the woodland edges, and for nesting birds such as Eastern Bluebirds, Bobolinks, and Field Sparrows in the grassland. We’ll also pay close attention to birdsong as we spend a slow-paced morning enjoying the nature of Massachusetts. Bring binoculars if you have them, or let us know when you register if you need to borrow a pair.
This program is supported in part by a grant from the Gloucester Cultural Council, a local agency which is supported by the Massachusetts Cultural Council, a state agency. Space is limited, and advance registration is required. To reserve your spot and get directions, call 978-887-9264 or register online at massaudubon.org/ipswichriver.
Adult
HEALTHCARE Corner
Cape Ann Health & Wellness Committee Monthly Update
Building a community network of wellness through education and shared
resources for body, mind and spirit.
MAY IS NATIONAL BETTER HEARING MONTH!
Beauport Hearing Care Collects Unused Hearing Aids for Charity
Raises Awareness of Better Hearing Month through ‘Orphan Hearing Aid’ Drive
Beauport Hearing Care of Magnolia is celebrating Better Hearing Month this
May by collecting “Orphan Hearing Aids” that are no longer needed and
donating them to the Starkey Hearing Foundation.
Judi Hodge Bergeron, board certified hearing specialist and owner at
Beauport Hearing Care, said, “We are excited to join with community
partners to collect ‘Orphan Hearing Aids’ all around Cape Ann. Donated
hearing aids will bring the precious gift of hearing to people that cannot
afford them.”
Beginning May 1st, look for the blue Orphan Hearing Aid collection boxes at
Aberdeen Home Care, Cape Ann Chamber of Commerce, Rose Baker Senior
Center, Cape Ann Veterans Services, Cape Ann YMCA, St. John’s Episcopal
Church, SeniorCare, Salem Council on Aging, Manchester Council on Aging, Rockport Senior
Center, Senator Bruce Tarr’s Office, Second Glance, and more locations with addresses listed at
beauporthearing.com.
Hearing aid donations help people locally and around the world. Beauport Hearing Care
established a partnership with the Starkey Hearing Foundation a few years ago by providing free
hearing aids to impacted survivors of the Boston Marathon bombing. More recently Beauport
Hearing Care helped Gloucester’s Holy Family Mission obtain free hearing aids through a Starkey
Hearing Foundation partner in Santiago, Dominican Republic.
Numerous studies have shown that our hearing is very important to our overall health, and
especially to brain wellness and function. David Bergeron, brain fitness specialist and owner at
Beauport Hearing Care, said, “Hearing loss symptoms are often mistaken as dementia, but research
suggests that ignoring hearing loss is associated with accelerated loss of brain cognitive functioning.
Everyone should schedule an annual hearing test.”
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Rae Francoeur shares portraits of the authors and writes:
This Sunday event Bestseller to Big Screen is an actual extravaganza!
Sunday is the day that authors Andre Dubus III, Stephen McCauley and Rodman Philbrick will be here on Cape Ann — together!! Talking about books many of us have read and loved. And that were made into movies. Please join us. It’s free of charge. El Cinco de Mayo! 1 p.m. Cape Ann Cinema & Stage. This will be a rare treat. Getting even one of these esteemed and favorite authors to come would be considered really special. All three awesome storytellers in one place at one time is going to be amazing. We will show old trailers of their movies and there will be books for sale and a chance to meet the authors and get your books signed. Really. You shouldn’t miss this!! Presented by Literary Cape Ann.
On Tuesday evening at the Beauport Hotel Art Show, went on the deck around sunset and took some photos. Since the weather has not been what I would call, sunny and warm, the clouds still give us a show.



photo caption : Annisquam lighthouse, Gloucester, Ma. photo copyright © C. Ryan, May 2, 2019
Question
“I’ve been living in Gloucester now since 2013 (and love it of course!). When we first moved to the city, we could hear the foghorns during inclement weather. However, about a year ago, I noticed that I no longer hear them. I loved this soothing sound on a gray day and am wondering what happened? Have the foghorns been turned off? Thanks!” –Patricia
Answer
Sort of. The foghorn sound has not changed but their frequency has dropped significantly because the systems are no longer automated in situ on light house grounds. Instead, foghorns are on demand now, manually kicked in by vessel operators. They are VHF automated to frequency 83 Alpha. Five or more consecutive clicks sets the foghorn off for 30, 45 and 60 minutes depending upon the lighthouse.
The USCG in Gloucester explained that the USCGNortheast out of Boston tends the Cape Ann Lighthouses, albeit Thacher Island North Light which is private. The USCG division responsible for all technology elements is called the “Aids to Navigation Team”, aka the USCGNortheast ANT unit.
Since 2010, slowly but surely the USCG has been replacing the automated VM-100 fog detector systems with “Marine Radio Activated Sound Signal” or MRASS systems. VM-100 were problematic as parts were no longer fabricated and the systems were deemed less reliable and obsolete. Boaters rely on common knowledge. Many access USCG light list, GPS on their cellphones, chartplotters, and radar. When the weather hedges to the odds of even one boater being confused by fog, evidence suggests crowdsourcing engages the signal. Expect frequency to increase in summer when more boats are on the water.
The change was not without controversy. See the history of transition in Maine. Locally, a 2013 Gloucester Daily Times editorial expressed support of the Rockport Harbormasters’ opposition. Because of broad push back, the roll out was slowed down for better outreach and acceptance. The “drop date” requiring all foghorns nationwide to be in compliance was May 1, 2019.
“The upkeep of the MRASS foghorns is so much easier,” explains Petty Officer ONeal of the USCG ANT in Boston. “All the foghorns from Plymouth to Newburyport have been converted. Eastern Point was switched over yesterday.”
I sympathize with this lament for the foghorn. And I appreciate the challenge of maintenance and adaptation. Understandably safety, navigation, cost and care were essential topics of discussion, less so audible texture, mood, sense of place & culture. (Never mind the challenge of mastering dead reckoning when vision fails.) The allure of the sound from shores, often traveling great distance, is in the ear of the listener. Beguiling. Haunting. Soothing. Despondent. Scary. Annoying [see bestselling author Elizabeth Stuart Phelps LTE complaints ca.1880 about the whistling buoy off Mother Ann and that’s no foghorn] What do you think, GMG readers, and vessel experts?
Like train engineers blowing the whistle obliging ogling toddlers, maybe a few boaters will queue the sound in dreary weather for pining landlubbers. Technology changes that’s certain. Perhaps the poetic qualities will be baked into future foghorn design despite obsolescence.
The MRASS system is robust and here now. Thanks to USCG Gloucester and Petty Officer ONeal USCGNortheast ANT unit Boston for confirming details and to GMG reader Patricia for a great inquiry!