Which one speaks to you?

My View of Life on the Dock
Which one speaks to you?

TONNO ITALIAN RESTAURANT GUEST CHEF WINE DINNER SERIES CONTINUES WITH CELEBRATED CHEF TONY SUSI
Wine dinner series features a rotating line up of Chef/Owner Anthony Caturano’s friends from the Boston area
WHO: Famed Chef and Restauranteur Anthony Caturano brought his old-world style of cooking to Gloucester and debuted Tonno coastal Italian seafood restaurant in June 2016. Now Anthony has invited his Chef friends from the Boston area up to the north shore to launch a wine dinner series.
WHAT: Tonno’s Guest Chef Dinner Series launched in January and the first Wednesday of every month features an exclusive menu from one of Anthony Caturano’s talented chef friends.
On Wednesday, April 5 nationally recognized Chef Tony Susi of Capo is sharing a special menu of fine Italian food with house-made pastas and more. Chef Tony Susi’s culinary career has taken him all over town – from humble beginnings in the heavily Italian North End…
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Celebrate Women’s History Month with a lively presentation by Museum docent Margaret Bernier focusing on the life, loves and work of artist Margarett Sargent. Offered in conjunction with the Cape Ann Museum Book Group’s reading of The White Blackbird: A Life of the Painter Margarett Sargent, written by her granddaughter Honor Moore. To complement this program, a selection of works by women artists from the Museum’s collection will be featured in the galleries.
Margarett Sragent, Women and Mirror, 1933-1936, oil on canvas. Gift of Alvin and Estella Hochberg, 2002.
This program is free for Museum members or with Museum admission, paid on arrival. Space is limited; reservations required. Reservations can be made by calling 978-283-0455 x10, emailing info@capeannmuseum.org or online at Eventbrite.
Rafe’s Chasm is so beautiful. As you walk through the woods and then the ocean appears. Went out there late Sunday afternoon. The wave action and wind were very strong. You must be very careful out there and stay up high and do not go to the bottom rocks.

Earth Day Clean Up will be held on April 22, 2017. The time is 9:00 – 11:00. If you would like to participate please let me know. The One Hour at a Time Gang will be cleaning Main Street. Also please remember that everyday should be Earth Day. Please dispose of your litter properly and remember that cigarette butts are litter. Thanks all.

It was a beautiful ending to the first day of spring! You can see a little sparkle from the Boston skyline on the horizon. Looking forward to more of these!
I’ve never been much of a Soap Opera fan, but we all know the expression, “Like sand through an hour glass, so are the days of our lives.” Life is such a blur these days that it feels like time is flying by this quickly. As crazy as it is, we try to find time to stop and smell the salt (or the roses).

Susan LaRosa shares the following –
Documentary on New England Fishery,
‘Sacred Cod’, Holds Free Public Screenings in DC and Boston
Film to make television debut on the Discovery Channel on April 15
WASHINGTON (Saving Seafood) — March 16, 2017 — A new documentary on the state of the New England cod fishery will be screened for the public in a free special engagement in Washington, D.C. The film, Scared Cod: The Fight For a New England Tradition, was directed and produced by Steve Liss, Andy Laub, and the Boston Globe’s David Abel.
The film is a “feature-length documentary that captures the collapse of the historic cod population in New England, delving into the role of overfishing, the impact of climate change, the effect of government policies on fishermen and the fish, and the prospect of a region built on cod having no cod left to fish.” It features interviews with fishermen, scientists, and federal policymakers.
April 4, 2017: Boston’s Park Plaza Hotel as part of the Center for Effective Philanthropy’s national meeting. More here.
April 13, 2017: The Boston Public Library as part of a Conservation Law Foundation screening.
Sacred Cod will premiere on the Discovery Channel on April 15.
The Museum of Natural History has announced plans to hold a free public screening on Friday, March 23, at 6:30 pm. Registration for the event is free and can be done here. Following the screening there will be a panel discussion with Mr. Liss and Mr. Abel, moderated by Nancy Knowlton, the Museum’s Sant Chair for Marine Science.