And they’re back! Clean Harbor Swim
GOOD CLEAN FUN!
99 swimmers. 1.2 miles. Final racers coming in now. Well done all! Most were in wetsuits–I heard many comments about the water being cold. “The coldest one I remember.” I will add some information and photos here later when I’m at my office; complete results will be posted to the New England Open Water Swimming Association Facebook page. Mostly personal best athletic feel in the air, some clean connection.
First place (third year in a row)





No pot of gold
Saw a little touch of a rainbow before the thunder yesterday but didn’t find my pot of gold 😋

And they’re off Clean Harbor Swim

Joey’s 2009 interview with Richie Martin
Related posts:
8/13/16, race above same day: And they’re back
8/12/16 Gloucester’s Clean Harbor: H2O No No’s are in the past – some history of the swim
8/10/16 Accclaimed writer, Gloucester resident, and one of the trio that inspired the Clean Harbor Swim Sarah Fraser Robbins excerpt ( the title of her classic book The Sea is All About Us was a nod to Gloucester summer resident TS Eliot’ Four Quartets)
8/6/16 litter 1978 Crackdown at the quarries
8/4/16 history of the swim and news about 2016 Celebrate the Clean Harbor Swim
Bravo! Gloucester Stages’s YAW in the news- winter spring summer or fall the best kids acting classes around
Congratulations! Marvelous Heidi Dallin and crew really deserve this praise! 
LEARNING FROM AN OSCAR NOMINEE- Lindsay Crouse’s visit was on the front page of the Gloucester Times! Wendy Waring’s visit was also on the front page of the Gloucester Times and in the Boston Sunday Globe!



Mark your Gloucester live event calendar: Paul Catania’s drag show stars coming to the Cape Ann Cinema & Stage August 19th
Paul Catania writes:
Good afternoon Joe! I am throwing a drag performance event at The Cape Ann Cinema and Stage on August 19th. I was wondering if GMG could assist in putting out the the good people of Gloucester. There will be drag queens of comedic, burlesque and sexy grandeur. Other special surprises as well. I have left the link to buy tickets directly through Cape Ann Cinema as well as the official flyer! Hope this message finds you well and take care.

Drones and The Lannon
More Cape Ann Community News-
http://www.capeanncommunity.com
Hey Joe,
Was wondering if you could put something up on GMG about drones and ask the owners not to fly them over the Lannon. We have been sailing at the breakwater and a drone has been following us around and really bothering our passengers on 3 occasions. I reached out to Craig Kimberly and Martin Delvecio and it’s not them, are the only people I know with them.
Anything will help.
Weekend Event Planning From Mayor Theken and Chief Campanello
Yikes!
Quilty Critter Lobsters
BEAUTIFUL SKY BEAUTIFUL BIRDS
ONLY THREE SHOWS REMAINING ~ DON’T MISS AVP’S BEAUTY AND THE BEAST!
Follow This Link

Yellow boat in the fog and rain

Nor Easter Flag Football – registration for the Fall is currently open
Nor Easter Flag Football – registration for the Fall is currently open to all boys and girls of Cape Ann – ages 4-14.
Log on to NorthshoreFlagFootball.com , use the drop down town for Gloucester and select the Fall.
Any questions we can be reached on Facebook or by email gloucester@northshoreflagfootball.com
Come and have a fun filled fall , registrations are filling , tell a friend, bring a team
Froback Friday Video
Gloucester’s clean harbor: H2O no no’s are in the past

Did you read about Cape Cod’s Big Water Drinking Problem in the Boston Globe magazine this past weekend, the cover story? Oy, complicated.
There’s still time to register for the annual Celebrate the Clean Harbor Swim which will be held at Niles Beach Saturday morning. Swim or raise a toast–there is so much to celebrate.
Swim to celebrate Gloucester’s clean water
Swim to celebrate the moments people help*
Swim to celebrate a history of ongoing conservation
Swim to celebrate the guys on the DPW crews
Before it was Celebrate the Clean Harbor it was… clean it.
Thirteen year old Elinor Doty swam a mile and a half in 29 minutes, ahead of 16 other swimmers in 1979. The race was in tribute to John McPhee, head of Gloucester Sea Scouts. “We tried to get swimmers who knew John McPhee,” said race organizer Jim Doty, Elinor’s father. “I’d like to make it an annual event if I can swing it…”
“Rounding out the field of 17, was 68 year old Sara Robbins, who was surprised by an unexpected visitor during the middle of the race. “The grey harbor seal popped up beside me to show me a two-pound flounder that he had caught,” said Robbins, who has been training a half mile each day for the past two weeks. “I’m not too fast but I get there.” She said she used the side stroke during the whole course.”
Gloucester Daily Times
Doty came in first place again in 1980 when the swim morphed into the ideal kick off event for Cape Ann’s Year of the Coast. Because of water quality, several parents wouldn’t let their children participate. “And only two are from the Cape Ann YMCA, James Doty notes, which usually supplies more contestants.“

Water pollution was rarely mentioned if at all before the Cape Ann Year of the Coast, an undeniable avalanche tipping point. One 1980 article has a picture of Sarah Fraser Robbins, Sarah Evans and Chandler Evans. The 8 year old was ceremoniously passed from boat to boat and then dropped in so three generations could swim across the finish line. In 1981 organizers reminded people that they didn’t need to complete the swim, they could jump in and swim across the finish line in support. I wonder if that tradition was maintained?
1980 swimmers besides the Evans clan and Doty–Gloucester residents, unless otherwise stated: David Hayden (2nd place), Karen Hartley of Dorchester (3rd place), Andy O’Brien of Rockport, Barry Hallett Jr, Darrell Hallett (swam part way alongside his brother), Kay Rubin, Polly Doty of Dedham, Jack Crowley of South Weymouth, Carl Blumenthanl, Chris Lovgren of Gloucester, Stan Luniewicz, Bill Jebb representing Sea Tec, Steve Haskell Sea Tec, Sharon Kishida Sea Tec, Earl Kishida Sea Tec, Jan Childs, Chris Sanders of Rockport, Chris Vonalt of Rockport, and Sam Rugh.
Councilor Carolyn O’Connor led a brief awards ceremony. I love the quip recorded in Laura Meades 1980 sports report Hardy Swimmers Keep Heads High: “As they went on, the swimmers shouted encouragement to one another and checked their progress. “What’s ahead of us?” asked Steve Haskell of SeaTec Inc, a diving firm. “A couple of 8-year olds,” replied SeaTec’s owner, Bill Jebb, swimming beside Haskell.”

1980


I hope DPW feels proud that their work protected us, Gloucester’s famous harbor, our legacy.


Before the waste water treatment facility was built in 1984, untreated waste (sanitary, storm water, industrial, you name it) was discharged directly into the inner and outer harbor. Gloucester was not alone. Rockport, Essex, Beverly- there were many North Shore stories. I wish I knew the name of every person that did the necessary retrofitting and water treatment labor. They dug up roads, laid pipe, cleaned up messes, dealt with outfalls, extended sewer lines, requested a decontamination shower and changing area (1978) so they wouldn’t have to wash up at home, engineered, mapped, and monitored what was necessary to bring us from a crisis by 1980–and lawsuit– to where we are now in 2016. DPW continues to address storm water pollution, also mandated, and will make next year’s compliance deadline. (Gloucester is not unduly impaired by industrial waste like some other communities that will feel the pinch.) Thanks to Larry Durkin, Environmental Engineer, DPW, and Senator Tarr’s office for pouncing on MBTA’s pesticide spraying.
To paraphrase the famous George M Cohan quote: My mother thanks you, my father thanks you, my brother thanks you, andI will add that my children thank you, future generations thank you, wildlife thanks you, businesses thank you, truly all of Gloucester thanks you!
**I grabbed material for this post from GDT headlines thanks to Sawyer Free Library. Newspapers on microfilm are available in the Reference Department. I am not alone in dreaming of the day when Gloucester archives, Gloucester Daily Times, and other essential research are digitized. I tend to repeat this ongoing plea.**
Catherine Ryan
It’s not one person, event or decade that stands out. There’s an incredible timeline of care. Who would you add? part 2
Water in the headlines this week, followed by a few more past headlines.
Boston Globe -The other Cape’s Cape Cod’s big drinking problem: When you live on what’s essentially a sandbar, pollution, septic systems and political roadblocks add up to one tough challenge, by Barbara Moran
CNN Study Public Water supply is unsafe for millions of Americans by Susan Scutti
“Though 194 public water supplies with higher-than-recommended chemical concentrations are located in 33 states, three-quarters of the toxic water supplies are in just 13 states: California, New Jersey, North Carolina, Alabama, Florida, Pennsylvania, Ohio, New York, Georgia, Minnesota, Arizona, Massachusetts and Illinois.”

the study itself http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acs.estlett.6b00260
Drinking water contamination with poly- and perfluoroalkyl substances (PFASs) poses risks to the developmental, immune, metabolic, and endocrine health of consumers. We present a spatial analysis of 2013–2015 national drinking water PFAS concentrations from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s (US EPA) third Unregulated Contaminant Monitoring Rule (UCMR3) program.






Gloucester Smiles-318
Dave Boudreau At Cape Ann Chimney and Hearth Is The Pablo Picasso of Wood Burning Stove Refurbishment
Dave Boudreau At Cape Ann Chimney and Hearth Completely Refurbishes The Vermont Castings Intrepid Wood Burning Stove
Contact-
Cape Ann Chimney and Hearth
http://www.capeannchimney.com/
7 Pond Rd. Gloucester MA 01930 – 978-283-1119
Check Out The Video-
Here’s the before pictures of our Vermont Castings Intrepid-
And After Dave Boudreau Performed His Magic-
New Gaskets, Paint, Firebrick, and Replaced The Griddle Top Which Had a Broken Handle. Thanks Dave and Cape Ann Chimney and Hearth For The Excellent Service! I’m Looking Forward To the Installation Photos For Our Readers.

Resting
This skiff was resting in the marsh off the river waiting for the tide. Kind of like us waiting for the 5 o’clock bell to ring on a Friday! Have a great weekend kids!










