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Half Off Entire Menu For The Rest Of The Season At The Studio On Rocky Neck October 26-28th, 2017
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My View of Life on the Dock
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Katie Schroeder is the owner and main yoga instructor at North Shore Restorative Yoga. She has taught yoga for over a decade at many of the wonderful studios on the North Shore and holds masters degrees in conflict resolution and psychology. Her dream and passion is to create a space where the community can find health and well-being through traditional flow yoga, restorative yoga, mindfulness, meditation and other healing arts that connect us deeper to self-love, balance and true connection to everyone in our life.
Katie considers herself a gypsy soul after a childhood of moving every couple years all over the US and abroad due to her Dad’s corporate job. Her easy going personality and love for life were the perfect mix for meeting new people and exploring new places with ease. Katie is happy to now call the beautiful North Shore home and is grateful to live in…
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Local historian Jude Seminara has authored this reminiscence of two fallen GPD officers. Thanks Jude for your scholarship and your time.

Officer John Blake
In both 1876 and 1918, the Gloucester Police Department lost officers in the line of duty. Officer John Blake died of a heart attack while making his way to a disturbance in East Gloucester in 1876 and Officer George Garland died of pneumonia after contracting the flu while stationed at a hospital during the 1918 influenza pandemic. While researching unrelated Gloucester history, I came across news articles referencing both men and submitted them to the Officer Down Memorial Page, an online database of police officers from around the nation who died in the line of duty.
John Blake was born in Maine in 1816. He moved to Gloucester sometime before 1865 where he worked at Dennis’ Wharf as a master carpenter. He was also a police officer with his beat in East Gloucester. In the evening of August 24, 1876, about 8 o’clock, while walking his beat in East Gloucester Square, he was alerted to a disturbance in “Happy Valley,” somewhat of a “red light district” in East Gloucester in the vicinity of Bass Ave. “Happy Valley,” often reported in the papers of the time as the setting for drunkenness and disorder in that part of the city, was half a mile from his post. Officer Blake made his way on foot at a quick pace to the scene of the disturbance — a fight between two women. He remarked to two girls whom he encountered on his way that he wasn’t feeling well and presumably tried to make his way to his nearby home on Hammond St. through Sayward’s pasture where he collapsed and died in a grove of trees known as Sayward’s Oaks. The girls had set out for help and two East Gloucester residents, Fred Hillier and William Merchant, found Officer Blake’s body about an hour later. Doctor A.S. Garland determined that Officer Blake died of a heart attack. He was 60 years old, and a well respected member of the police force and of the community.
Officer George A. Garland of West Gloucester began his career with the Gloucester Police as a summer constable. In 1915, at age 33, he became a reserve officer and was made a full time patrolman in 1917. He was assigned to mounted duty in the Bass Rocks and Eastern Point area.
In 1918, with the First World War coming to a close, America was ravaged by the Spanish Influenza epidemic caused by a strain of the H1N1 virus. This flu was unusual however in that, unlike many diseases which disproportionately kill children and elderly and infirm people, it was particularly deadly to adults with healthy immune systems. Some scientists believe that the virus’ rapid onset caused a storm of an immune response which was fatal to individuals with strong immune systems. Because of the deadliness of this particular strain of virus, cities across the nation took precautions to minimize the spread. Gloucester had established an emergency hospital at the old armory on Duncan Street, near the present day police station, to supplement the Addison Gilbert Hospital. Officer Garland was assigned to the hospital detail in 1918. During his time at the hospital, he inevitably contracted the virus around the spring of 1919. While he recovered sufficiently to return to duty, due to his compromised state, he contracted pneumonia — commonly associated with this particular flu — from which he was unable to recover. On May 15, 1919, Officer Garland died of pneumonia. He was a widower, and he left behind his mother, two brothers, a sister, and four children.
The Gloucester Times of May 16, 1919 remembered Officer Garland as a quiet, kind, and friendly man who was well liked by his fellow officers and the citizens he served. He was laid to rest at Beechbrook Cemetery in West Gloucester.
Below are links to both officers’ memorial pages on the Officer Down Memorial Page. One can also find biographical vignettes in Mark Foote and Larry Ingersoll’s “Behind The Badge,” the definitive history of the Gloucester Police Department, as well as in historical Gloucester newspapers.
https://www.odmp.org/officer/22548-police-officer-john-m-blake
https://www.odmp.org/officer/23422-police-officer-george-a-garland
Are there any descendants of either Officer Blake or Officer Garland now in the Gloucester area? Let us know.
Marty
Saw this beautiful gull watching over Magnolia Harbor from the pier.

fYI Oct 27 half day at O’Maley. Two (nervous) JV2 boys trying to sell raffle tickets for GHS boys soccer.
Tickets are $10
1st prize $500 2nd prize $400 3rd prize $300 4th prize $200 and so on. The drawing will be held at the soccer senior event in November.
UPDATE- they sold out their coupon books, plus some extra donations. Raffle tickets are available from the players and the coaches. How nice that local establishments like Stop&Shop offer their space for community outreach, and that so many residents and neighbors help the school teams!


My new favorite thing ever!
Picked this up at Applecrest Farm in Hampton Falls, New Hampshire over the weekend. Our favorite farm, by the way.
This on some whole grain toast and a Hot and Dirty Martini would be kind of perfect.

How nice! Announcing MUSIC, DANCE & SONG with Renee Dupuis at Sound Harbor, 47R Pleasant Street, Gloucester, MA on November 2nd at 10AM.
Infants and toddlers $10 per family

It was a little bit dreary and wet so we mostly stayed indoors today to watch the day develop. There’s something cozy about the laundromat on a rainy day. Great for reading and catching up.

Cafe Bischo for lunch! It’s a busy place with a relaxed atmosphere.

Afternoon view. Even though it’s grey, it’s still beautiful.

Thank you City of Gloucester, MA and Mayor Sefatia Romeo Theken for this wonderful proclamation declaring October Ayurvedic Awareness Month in the City of Gloucester!
Together we can all make a difference ![]()
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“Blockage is disease/Flow is health”
info@ayurvedawellnesshealing.com
http://www.ayurvedawellnesshealing.com


After departing the shores of Cape Ann in autumn, where is the Monarch’s next destination on their several thousand mile journey to Mexico? Cape Ann Monarchs join the stream of Monarchs that are migrating southward along the Atlantic Coast. They hug the coastline, crossing bays and ponds, and pausing at beaches to nectar and rest when caught in a headwind or during a storm. When weather and habitat variables combine to create a favorable year for the Monarchs, there may be tens of thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, of butterflies traveling along the Atlantic Coast beaches.
The Gooseberry Island old lookout tower is surrounded by dunes and fields of Seaside Goldenrod.
The next major stopover is Westport in Massachusetts, at Gooseberry Island and Allen’s Pond Wildlife Sancturary. Here they find dunes and fields of nectar-rich wildflowers such as Frost Asters, Purple-stemmed Asters, Seaside Goldenrod, Knapweed, Red Clover, and more.
Monarchs drinking nectar from Red Clover at Allen’s Pond Middle Meadow
The sanctuary at Allen’s Pond is host to many species of butterflies during the Monarch’s fall migration, including Clouded Sulphurs, Orange Sulphurs, and Painted Ladies. They, too, drink nectar from the Knapweed, Red Clover, asters, goldenrod, and Black Mustard in the sanctuary fields.
The Atlantic Monarchs next head to New York, traveling along the coast of Long Island, from the eastern tip of Montauk, southwest to Fire Island, and continuing to Coney Island. On the day of October 9th, because of a storm passing through, a batch of migrating Monarchs was “stuck” on Plumb Island in Brooklyn. After the storm passed the following morning, tens of thousand of Monarchs were observed flying over the dunes and along the beach, resuming their journey south.
Monarchs in the gardens at Battery Park with ferry to the Statue of Liberty in the background. Liv photo and video (below).
Our daughter Liv reports that over the weekend of October 21-22, New York City was teeming with Monarchs. She observed hundreds at Coney Island on Saturday, and even more at the gardens at Battery Park on Sunday. Liv has even seen them in the NYC underground subway stations!
After departing the shores of Long Island and NYC, the next great stopover and roosting area is Cape May, New Jersey. The Monarchs pause along the way, stopping to drink nectar and rest on the barrier beaches of the Jersey Shore. Latest field reports suggest that the dunes and fields of Cape May are rife with Seaside Goldenrod that is still in bloom. I am on my way there today and will report all that I see.
From Cape May Point the Monarchs travel ten miles across the Delaware Bay, then journey along the eastern shores of Delaware, Maryland, and Virginia. Some years the Monarchs converge by the millions at the Virginia National Wildlife Refuge waiting for the right winds to carry them across the Chesapeake Bay.
Some Monarch Butterflies travel to Florida, but most are funneled in through the Appalachian and Rocky Mountains, on into Texas and central Mexico.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BaIN9gcFtxOrWP27M6OactjFI6UB_VYRPCaaU00/
If you would like to help towards the completion of my documentary film Beauty on the Wing: Life Story of the Monarch Butterfly, filmed in the wilds of Cape Ann and Angangueo, Mexico, please consider making a tax deductible donation here:
Donors contributing over $5,000. will be listed in the credits as a film producer.
For more information, visit the film’s website here: Monarch Butterfly Film
For an overview of the film’s budget, please go here: Budget
Thank you so very much for your help.
With gratitude,
Kim Smith
Please join The Open Door for our annual AutumnBreakfast on Thursday, October 26, from 7:30 a.m. to 9 a.m. at Cruiseport Gloucester. This celebration of community spirit kicks off the 2017 Thanksgiving Meal Basket and Food Drive season.
Breakfast is free. Donations requested. Reservations required by 10/23. Call 978-283-6776 ext. 205 or emailing breakfast@foodpantry.org.
Can’t make it? Want to help? Donate online or find out more at www.FOODPANTRY.org.


To our One Hour at a Time Gang.
Clean up at Goose Cove
Val Gilman has asked me to spread the word for clean up at Goose Cove Reservoir. Unfortunately I will not be able to attend due to another commitment.
Thanks all.
Please note day and time change
Please join members of the Clean Gloucester, One Hour at a Time Gang, Mutt Mitt Volunteers, Dogtown Advisory Committee, Friends of Dogtown, and Cape Ann Trail Stewards for a neighborhood fall clean up! All welcome.
Date: Sunday, October 29th
Place: Goose Cove Reservoir parking lot off Gee Avenue
Time: 8:30 to 9:30 a.m.
Bring: Gloves and Pick Up tool
We will provide bags and Cider and Donuts!
Questions call Ward 4 City Councilor Val Gilman 978-621-4682 or email her at
vgilman@gloucester-ma.gov
The Cape Ann YMCA’s 9th Annual “Taste of Cape Ann” returns to Cruiseport Gloucester on Thursday, November 9, 2017 6-9 PM.
The event features the best of Cape Ann eateries offering food, wine and spirits for one $25 ticket price with 100% of proceeds of ticket sales going tosupport Cape Ann YMCA Teen Service Trips and Initiatives.
Taste of Cape Ann is:
A great place to showcase your business in front of people who’ll be dining local all winter
A great PR opportunity – your business in the spotlight helping your community and those beyond
A great place for locals to sample food and drink from their Cape Ann food choices
A great reason to get out and support kids doing good
We will heavily promote the event and announce event contributors as they come in on Facebook. We will also provide colorful event flyers to hang in your shop window announcing your participation in the 9thAnnual Taste of Cape Ann. Free press and food blogger tickets mean even more local food-focused coverage of the event. Fun event, local audience, free press and a good cause for some really great kids.
Tickets and info available at: www.northshoreymca.org/TOCA
Platinum Sponsors: Institution for Savings & Cruiseport Gloucester
Presenting Sponsors: Beauport Financial Services, Robert Stewart P.C., & Tom Davis CPA
RESTAURANT INFO:
Restaurants wishing to participate should contact Jennifer Amero at JameroMarketingSuite@gmail.com. There is no vendor fee. We ask only that you read and sign the logistics/registration form, plan to bring enough food for 250 guests to have a small sampling of your best buzz-worthy offering and that you come prepared to hand out menus and advertising information and anything you want to get in front of local diners. To that end, restaurateurs should plan on staying through the event or sending a sociable representative from their venue to help in a great PR opportunity for a great cause. (Detailed logistics will be sent upon signing on).
TICKET INFO:
Thursday, November 9, 2017 at 6:00pm
Taste of Cape Ann
Cruiseport Gloucester, MA
For information on Teen Programming at the Cape Ann YMCA contact Rick Doucette at doucetter@northshoreymca.org




With the HIVE move back to the main Cape Ann Art Haven location at 180 Main Street, Sound Harbor needed to relocate, too. Sound Harbor has moved to the former Falcon’s Nest gallery of the HIVE; enter via the door next to Pleasant Tea or through Browns mall. Musical experiences for little ones: Sound Harbor is starting a hands on baby/toddler music class, too!
45R Pleasant Street


