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Only way to get fresher is to climb into the trap and eat them.
My View of Life on the Dock
Two extraordinary chamber music concerts are scheduled at the historic Annisquam Village Church this summer. Audiences will hear exceptional instruments in the hands of world class musicians: a baroque Venetian cello and five of the Jeremy Adams keyboards featured in the recent “Voicing the Woods” exhibit at the Cape Ann Museum.
Music of Vivaldi, Bach, and Scarlatti opens this double-header Sunday, July 23 at 8 p.m. Viva! Viva la Musica! features cellist Jonathan Miller and renowned harpsichordist Frances Conover Fitch. Mr. Miller, a 43-year veteran of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, is Artistic Director of the Boston Artists Ensemble and a favorite with area concert-goers. His cello was made in Venice by Mattheus Gofriller, ca.1700 and Miller is eager to bring it to the Village Church’s intimate, resonant space. Ms. Conover Fitch plays the French double-manual harpsichord made by Jeremy Adams in 2016. Her concerts and demonstrations on Adams’s harpsichords during the Cape Ann Museum’s exhibit were over-subscribed. “This is another chance to hear instruments of master craftsmen played by master performers,” says AVC Music Director, Kathleen Adams.
The summer series continues Sunday, August 20 at 8 p.m. when the Wood, Wire, and Wind of the harpsichord and organs strike new balances between the instruments. Andrew and Beverly Sollwill perform duos and solo works on each, stretching the repertoire to celebrate the remarkable flexibility of these instruments in the ideal acoustics of the historic 1820’s building. Violin and viola will join them on one of the pieces, extending the range of sounds for an unusual ensemble offering.
A reception follows each concert, culminating in the declamation of an “Ode” from Annisquam’s beloved bard, Duncan Nelson.
Tickets: $20 per event (Students and seniors, $15.) available at the door or in advance at The Bookstore or Diamond Cove Music in Gloucester and at Toad Hall Bookstore in Rockport. The Annisquam Village Church is located at 820 Washington Street in Gloucester (01930) and is handicap accessible.

JULY 19, 2017
Thanks for sharing your story with us Kathleen. So, let’s start at the beginning and we can move on from there.
Like many, I came to the hospitality business as support for my academic pursuits, putting myself first through Wheaton College, then through graduate school at the University of Chicago. While working on my PhD in History of Christianity, I started my catering and coffee shop business, aptly named “Ambrosia,” the “Food of the Gods.” While I was a student at the University, Rick Bayless, who ironically was a PhD candidate in linguistics at the University of Michigan, opened his first endeavor, Frontera Grill, with the adjacent soon-to-be-recognized 4-star restaurant, Topolobampo. In fact, Topolobampo won the James Beard award for outstanding restaurant in 2017. Our paths soon crossed when I took a position at Topolobampo and began working on the complex food and wine pairings of gourmet regional Mexican cuisine. I decided I needed to know more, so I completed a course of study with the Court of Master Sommeliers in Aspen, Colorado, with Richard Betts (then the sommelier at the Little Nell) leading the charge. After completing my certification as a sommelier, I went to work for a small, but influential, boutique distributor in Chicago, called Maverick Wines, where exposure to wine-makers, chefs, restaurateurs, and wine retailers, vastly expanded my knowledge of wine and the wine business. While working in Chicago, I met a savvy retailer, who had been in the business many years. One day, he observed, “We both sell wine, but I like my job much better. You have to go out and find the customer. My customers come to me and they want to buy wine. I just have to steer them in the right direction.” From that time on, I viewed the wine retailer as a “coach” essentially looking for and developing the “right talent” and putting that “talent in the right hands”.
I “soaked up” as much wine knowledge as I could hold. I started teaching a 5-part introduction to wine series I called “Become a Wine Expert,” which I still offer at Savour twice a year, in October and April. I decided I would like to open my own wine shop, with a unique vision, specializing in small-production, artisanal, boutique wines from around the world and a “Try before You Buy” business model, featuring wine-tasting machines, where customers could sample 20 different wines before settling on the right bottle. I knew I wanted a store with a strong focus on education, with particular emphasis on the most challenging task for the sommelier, chef, or retailer, the pairing of food with wine. So, to this day, I see myself much like a coach, as I taste every wine that comes through our doors at Savour, to be sure it meets our standards, and I sell it to the customer who presents the best fit. We keep extensive records, so we know our customers’ names, needs, and wine preferences. Many times, they can’t remember what they bought or liked or what they had the wine with (only that they loved it and want it again), but we remember. That’s the most satisfying part! Now, Savour has become a distinctive voice on the North Shore, where many come from Cape Ann, as well as towns like Andover, Beverly, and even Boston for our unique selection of wine and artisanal cheeses, as well as charcuterie, and even craft beers, mostly from New England.
It’s Thursday on Cape Ann and that means it’s time for the Cape Ann Farmers Market!
Join us at Stage Fort Park from 3:00-6:30 to get all your summer favorites (and maybe even the first peaches of the season!)
Food, music, crafts, and a gorgeous view! Come stock up for the weekend and enjoy all the market has to offer including free parking while you shop!
Sign up for our newsletter on capeannfarmersmarket.org so you’ll always know what’s new at the market!

Captivatingly beautiful was this morning’s ever-changing light as the rising sun was greeted by waves of fog.
https://www.instagram.com/p/BWursnWlN0V/
A fogbow mysteriously appeared and lasted for a good while.
Our Little Chick was nearly impossible to spot on his twenty-seventh day during the early shift and I was super happy to see the sun reappearing when Paul arrived at 8am.
Yesterday morning Little Chick had an extremely close encounter with the beach rake. He’s learned how to crouch and flatten low into the sand when people or predators are approaching. The thing is, yesterday he hunkered down in the path of the oncoming beach rake. Paul had to stop the driver to allow our chick to escape. I think this is an excellent example of why, for the time being, we still need monitors for a bit longer. Thank you Paul for being so attentive.
Camouflaged!
A Laughing Gull arrived briefly on the scene and stayed just long enough to catch a crustacean. Laughing Gulls eat baby birds too, so we’ll be keeping a watchful eye on this fellow.

@SeaportGrille: Join us every Wednesday at Seaport Grille for some Lobsterfest madness! See our flyer for details 🦐 #capeann #lobsterfest #gloucesterma
We are so lucky to have many places to take a walk or hike. Rafe’s Chasm is one of my many parent spots.

Good afternoon kids:
Hope everyone is well and enjoying the summer.
When: Saturday: July 22, 2017
Where: Train Station near Shaws
Time: 08:00 – 09:00
Ainsley mentioned since the trains are not running a good time to clean.
Thanks kids:
Donna


Dinner Specials Each Week!
Wednesday, July 19th – 7pm
Special Guests: HONKYTONK WOMEN!

That’s right, they’re back! Classy, brassy and oh so sassy. We are all so very
lucky to have Honkytonk Women among us. Garanteed to make you smile!
Starts at 7! ~ Fly
Dinner with great music!
*Each week features a special, invited musical guest
The Rhumb Line Kitchen……now features Janet Brown with some new and healthy ideas!
Plus a fine, affordable wine menu!
Upcoming…
7/26 – Ron Schrank
8/2 – Sasquatch
Visit: http://www.therhumbline.com/
Looking forward……to seeing you there 🙂
Ways to beat the traffic and work around MBTA closures– Bob Ryan (General Manager Cape Ann Transportation Authority) and Heidi Dallin (Gloucester Stage and so much more) are such incredible Gloucester–and greater Cape Ann– ambassadors.
Enjoyable read-
Boston Globe article by Hattie Bernstein “Heading to the Beach this Weekend? Here’s Some Parking Tips”
CATA Stage Fort Park trolley shuttle Park N Ride
Gloucester Harbor Water Shuttle and lighthouse tours

“Going to be a busy day,” says Ruth who just left a piping plover watch. Are you going to Good Harbor Beach? Let us know if you see the piping plovers. Feel free to clap off some gulls or crows getting too close, and share what you saw and the time. Add #Glostaplover and we can find it.
When Ruth left, they were by the creek. They could be anywhere–they move around throughout the day and night. For the most part they range a big area roughly by entrance 3 and wrapping way back around the creek end of Good Harbor Beach (rather than the Salt Island side)
Don’t miss Kim Smith’s photographs from yesterday PLOVER PATROL UPDATE FROM DAY TWENTY SIX!
https://twitter.com/glostaplover
Quick! Be the 315th crazy person to sign up!
http://www.blackburnchallenge.com/BBC_Race_Info.html
300 boats maximum but lots of boats have six nut jobs or more aboard so still room for one more. Do it. Think of it as a 90 dollar T-Shirt plus pain and the chance to be eaten by a shark. What’s not to like?
Your map to the road to perdition: BLACKBURN MAP
Group from Connecticut, they has just landed at Solomon Jacobs Landing, and were headed to Halibut Point Restaurant on Main Street.
A very friendly family visiting from Stoneham Mass.