Since I get very nervous on game day, went over to Parker River and saw this beautiful eagle. Thought about last year’s Superbowl game and there was this eagle, another omen that our PATS were going to win.

Pats logo at sunset

My View of Life on the Dock
Since I get very nervous on game day, went over to Parker River and saw this beautiful eagle. Thought about last year’s Superbowl game and there was this eagle, another omen that our PATS were going to win.

Pats logo at sunset

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As the Patriots get set to return home as Super Bowl champs, the Red Sox are getting set to start their World Series defense. Monday is “Truck Day” in Boston.
The Red Sox equipment truck will start loading up at Fenway Park around 7 a.m. and depart for the team’s Spring Training facilities in Fort Myers, Florida around noon.
The truck will depart from Fenway Park on Van Ness Street, led by a flat-bed truck carrying Wally the Green Monster, his sister Tessie, and Fenway Ambassadors who will be handing out JetBlue collectible baseball card schedules filled with prizes and tossing soft Red Sox baseballs to fans.
For the 21st straight year, Milford native Al Hartz will be behind the wheel for the 1,480-mile trip. He’ll be hauling the following baseball equipment and supplies down to Fort Myers:
“Truck Day” has been a tradition in Boston since 2003, signaling the unofficial start of Spring Training.
Red Sox Spring Training will officially begin on February 14, in Fort Myers, Florida
Twitter excerpt from #MuseumBowl 2019 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston vs. J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles


(alas Museum Bowl 2019 appears to be bragging rights only, but maybe the Getty will consider shipping the Hare to the MFA, pretty please…)
With such inviting modern and warm design, there are plenty of light drenched and inspiring options to set up shop and get to work at GATHR, the coworking business launched at 42 Market Street in downtown Ipswich, Massachusetts. Here are a few impressions from my recent visit.

https://gathr.work/enVarious day pass and membership options are available.
Access to the work space during the calendar day (subject to occupancy).
$24.00 Get it now
Access to space as early as you like. Valid until 12pm (subject to occupancy).
$14.00 Get it now
Access to the work space after 2PM (subject to occupancy). The pass will lock out after midnight, but you can stay as long as you’d like.
$14.00 Get it now

The four faces of Tom in the final four seconds of the game.

An update on the travels of my crystal photo ball (I call her CB)! Where in the world on Cape Ann has CB been?
The first one is a little difficult, so I’ll share an additional image as a hint.


These next two are much much easier!

This view available for a limited time:

Pat writes:
Joey:
We read with interest Kim Smith’s posting of the visiting Harp Seal on Good Morning Gloucester, Saturday evening. Anne-Lise and I had the good fortune of visiting the southernmost breeding area on her map, the pack ice in the outer Gulf of St. Lawrence. The birthing to weaning period is just 3 weeks annually at the end of February and beginning of March. We flew out by helicopter from Les Iles de la Madeleine, and – yes – we followed the strict instructions of our naturalist. We topped off the experience with some dogsledding to wind down.
Best, Pat Morss

Town Begins to shore up Long Beach seawall, by Michael Cronin, Gloucester Daily Times

Plenty of prior GMG posts (search “Long Beach seawall”); here are a few:
REPAIRING LONG BEACH ROCKPORT MASS AFTER STORM DAMAGE|BUSY NEW ENGLAND DPW CREWS April 2018
Seawall damage coverage GMG post May 25, 2018
FILL RAKE AND ROLL- NEXT STEPS IN THE LONG BEACH SEAWALL STORM REPAIR June 2018
Sunday, February 10, 2019 at 11 AM

Join us for our annual Winter Market. A great chance to grab some local valentines gifts and shop small to beat the winter blues! Come on down to Magnolia Library from 11-3 and sample some local flavor from Agape Brew community while you browse the gifts and crafts and soaps and knitwear from local Artisans and creators.
The Magnolia Library is currently raising funds to remodel our bathroom and front entry way to become more handicap accessible to our guests. Proceeds from table fees and any donations collected at the event will directly benefit construction.
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Magnolia Library and Community Center 1 Lexington Ave, Gloucester, Massachusetts 01930
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What goes up must come down!
My 100 year and 3 month old mother in law, Edna, is thrilled to be staying with us for a few days so she can watch this dedicated team do their precision disassembly. She was here for the assembly and lighting in December.
What a team! We are so lucky to have this dedicated group. So much joy for so many.
And don’t forget the Lobster Trap Christmas Tree fund raiser at the Cape Ann Brewery on March 14!!! As that date is the Thursday before St Patrick’s Day, we are going to have a little St Patty’s Day warm up bash along with some very interesting programming about the history of our beloved LOBSTER TRAP CHRISTMAS TREE, the best one on earth and getting better every year!
This was the 19th year and that means next year is the big 20!
Many thanks to everyone who contributes in so many ways to this grand tradition!
I am very lucky that my in-laws are truly gifted as well as a gift to me. Jim’s sister and her husband came for a visit last fall. They are each artists in their own right and were quite taken with the beauty of Gloucester and Cape Ann. Lucky for me!
Linda Hartman recently shared her first mixed media work of 2019 and Gloucester comes shining through!

And here’s Gloucester Lookout next to the photo that inspired it:

I love it! I’d also like to add a Happy Birthday shoutout to both Linda and Scott who are both celebrating a landmark birthday today! Looking forward to more Gloucester inspired artwork at their studio Hartman Studio 44
Very late in the afternoon, just as the sun was setting, the juvenile Harp Seal attempted to head back to sea. He began to scooch and wriggle toward the creek, pausing often to scratch and roll around in the sand. At one point he reversed direction and started back toward the dunes.
Just like Harbor Seals, Harp Seals have a tail, too.
After a few more false starts he made his way to the water. Before sliding in, he paused at the water’s edge to drink.
Nearly dead low tide, the water was not deep enough to swim. It was painful to watch him splash and undulate along on his belly in the shallows. He seemed to tire quickly and was very undecided about what to do next. We watched as the young seal made his way slowly around a sharp bend in the creek, then held our breaths as he made it all the way to the foot bridge.
But then he suddenly stopped, turned around, and swam back down the creek, nearly the whole length of the creek from where he had come. The young seal seemed confused and it was heartbreaking to see. When I left at sundown he was on the flats in the creek.
Good Harbor Beach resident and Piping Plover monitor Sue W. reports that he is still there at 7:15. We’re hoping he makes it out at low tide, which is at 10:11 tonight.
The young Harp Seal appeared very tired when I left the beach at around 5:30.
Many, many thanks to Jane Goodwin, neighbor and Good Morning Gloucester reader, for alerting us to the Harp Seal.
For turtle, seal, and all mammal strandings, please call NOAA at 866.755.6622. Thank you!
Update to the Update
I checked on the little guy at 5:30 this morning on my way out of town to photograph and didn’t see any sign of him, but it was pitch black. I checked again on my way home, around 11am, still no sign, and there did not appear to be any signs of a skirmish with a coyote. The tide was high and the water was up to the top of the creek bed. It would have been much easier for him to slip into the water last night and head back out to sea.
In response to Facebook comments that the location of the seal should not have been posted publicly: The initial post was shared in the evening, after dark, and would not have been posted if people had not been behaving thoughtfully and kindly toward the seal. I believe it is important for adults and children to share the shore with wildlife, to love and respect a wild creature’s boundaries, not hide the whereabouts of the animal. There are exceptions in the case of at risk endangered and threatened species. ❤
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A beautiful young Harp Seal spent the better part of the day hauled out between the bank of the Good Harbor Beach creek and the dunes. The seal appeared in good health and was seen resting, stretching, scooching, and sunning. Beach walkers and dog walkers were respectful and kept a safe distance.
Ainsley Smith from NOAA was on the job letting folks know that the seal was okay and that this is perfectly normal seal behavior. Thanks so much to Ainsley and to all the beachgoers today who kept their distance from the Harp Seal. For turtle, seal, and all mammal strandings, please call NOAA at 866.755.6622. Thank you!
I’ve been checking on him periodically throughout the afternoon and will let you know when he makes it back to the water. I hope soon because we know coyotes scavenge the beach at night.
Harp Seals are born during the late winter months in the Arctic. They are born with a lanugo, an extra thick fluffy white coat that keeps them warm on the Arctic ice. During each stage of development, the Harp Seal’s coat has a different appearance. Juveniles have a white coat with widely spaced spots. Every year, the spots move closer together during molting. By the time the Harp Seal reaches adulthood, the coat is silvery gray with a black saddle mark on the back and a black face. See the photo below of a baby and Mom Harp Seal.
Photo Courtesy National Geographic Kids
Harp Seal Breeding Grounds