
Teresa Marie III Taking on Ice at Cape Pond Ice January, 2014

My View of Life on the Dock


Ah, nice to see sunshine and teams practicing.


If you can not make it to this even and want to help go here > https://www.gofundme.com/frankhawksfund and thank you!
Just hanging around grabbing a few clips while the real film guys shoot an ad for Foster’s Grill Store. The Ted Reed TV with Craig Kimberley shooting production will be about a bazillion times more professional than my behind the scenes clip I threw together in 20 minutes.
Awfully gray for the first days of Spring.




Feather & Wedge announces the return of NYC jazz guitarist, Steve Lacey this Sunday, March 25 from 10:30 to 2:30 PM. Steve will be playing songs from the American Songbook along with some originals. If you missed Steve’s first performance at Feather & Wedge, make sure you catch him this time around.
10:30 AM to 2:30 PM
Reservations suggested. 978.999.5917
Feather & Wedge, 5 Main Street, Rockport, MA 01966


In the first major exhibition to bring together historical and archival material from nine Cape Ann institutions, Unfolding Histories: Cape Ann Before 1900 illuminates the area’s wide-ranging stories from Native American life to the first European settlers in the 1640s, the temperance movement, African American history and civil rights, women’s history, the advent of railroad and mass transportation as well as work, literary, and cultural life during Cape Ann’s early years.
As the region prepares for the 400th anniversary of the first English settlement on Cape Ann in 2023, the Cape Ann Museum seeks to highlight significant historical materials from its own collection as well as…
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Well hello there little mouse! My husband Tom was releasing a mouse that was caught in his have-a-heart trap. He first opened opened the front door of the trap, with no sign of movement within, and then the back door. After a few minutes passed, out ran the little mouse, but then he froze in his tracks, only several feet from where I was standing. As I was motionless taking his photo, I think he must have thought I was a tree. He suddenly ran up my leg, up under my dress, and poked his head out from beneath my coat. It’s too bad I was holding the camera and not my husband!
Thinking about hantavirus, and just to be on the safe side, I changed my clothes and washed immediately.
Studies show how the increasing Eastern Coyote population has impacted White-footed Mice, Red Fox, and the explosion of Lyme disease. In areas where the Eastern Coyote has outcompeted the Red Fox for habitat, Lyme disease has increased. Coyotes not only kill Red Fox, they simply aren’t as interested in eating mice as are the fox.
Answer: Both the White-footed and Deer Mouse carry hantavirus, not the House Mouse. To be on the safe side, if you find rodent droppings in your home or office, do not vacuum because that will disperse the virus throughout the air. Instead, wipe up with a dampened paper towel and discard.
Read more about the White-footed Mouse and Lyme disease here: The Mighty White-footed Mouse
The head occupies almost one-third and the snout about one-fourth of the body length. The mouth is small, situated somewhat obliquely at the tip of the snout, and the lower jaw projects a little beyond the upper.
There are only two records of the trumpetfish from the Gulf of Maine: a specimen taken at Rockport, Mass. (north side of Cape Ann) in September 1865, preserved in the collection of the Essex Institute, where it was examined and identified by Goode and Bean[90] and a second taken on the northern edge of Georges Bank by the trawler Flying Cloud on October 6, 1947, in a haul at 70 fathoms.[91] Like other tropical fishes, however, it is not so rare west of Cape Cod, and a few small ones are taken at Woods Hole almost every year.
From fishes of the Gulf of Maine by Bigelow and Schroeder (1953) online courtesy of MBL/WHOI http://www.gma.org/fogm/Fistularia_tabacaria.htm

Boston Globe article: A Plan to keep Dogtown wild and Free by Sarah Shemkus

Thursday afternoon as the waves were inviting for the local surfers.

The fifth grade students at East Gloucester Elementary School will be preforming Disney’s The Jungle Bookkids!
Tickets are still available for all three performances:
Friday 3/23 6:30 PM
Saturday 3/24 2:00 PM
Monday 3/26 6:30 PM
The play will be presented at the East Gloucester Elementary School Auditorium 8 Davis St. Extension. Tickets are $8 at the door.
After yesterday’s “non” four’easter we ended the day with a glimpse of a sunset! My quick view from the window of the Beauport Hotel.
I think today’s picture looks like a humpback whale beginning its breach

