
Susan Casey Lipsett’s ‘Merica Flag Cake

My View of Life on the Dock

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And Look For Special Rainbow Colored Fireworks For the Orlando Victims

Working fire at Rhumb Line. Started on the exterior and got inside into the attic. Fire is knocked down. No injuries reported yet.
From Mayor Sefathia
Rockport is looking ready for it’s bonfire on the 4th!

Our son Alex, one of several awesome chefs at Passports Restaurant, not only loves to cook, but is also an avid bike rider. This week he finished building a bike he has been working on in his spare time. It’s beautiful and very super cool. Proud. ❤
Deborah Cramer thanks Good Morning Gloucester for mentioning her book and asks for photographs and stories about horseshoe crabs, otherwise known as the nearly scene stealing co-stars from her inspiring book on red knots (sandpiper shorebirds), The Narrow Edge.
We do. Please send in photos or stories if you have them about horseshoe crabs in Gloucester or the North Shore for Deborah Cramer’s project. Write in comments below and/or email cryan225@gmail.com
Here’s one data point. Look closely at this 1869 Winslow Homer painting. Can you spot the horseshoe crabs? Can you identify the rocks and beach?



While reading The Narrow Edge, and looking at Kim Smith’s Piping Plover photographs, I thought about Raid on a Sand Swallow Colony (How Many Eggs?) 1873 by Homer and how some things change while much remains the same.When my sons were little, they were thrilled with the first 1/3 or so of Swiss Family Robinson. As taken as they were with the family’s ingenuity, adventure, and tree house–they recoiled as page after page described a gorgeous new bird, promptly shot. They wouldn’t go for disturbing eggs in a wild habitat. The title ascribed to this Homer, perhaps the eager query from the clambering youngest boy, feels timeless. Was the boys’ precarious gathering sport, study, or food? What was common practice with swallows’ eggs in the 1860s and 70s? Homer’s birds are diminutive and active, but imprecise. Homer sometimes combined place, figures, subject and themes. One thing is clear: the composition, line and shadow are primed and effective for an engraving.

Harper’s Weekly published the image on June 13, 1875. Artists often drew directly on the edge grain of boxwood and a master engraver (Lagrade in this case) removed the wood from pencil and wash lines.

2016. Wingaersheek dunes and nests 140+ years later.



The standard pronunciation of clematis is considered to be /ˈklɛmətɪs/ (klem-ə-tiss).[2][3][4][5] Other pronunciations include /kləˈmætɪs/ (kləm-at-iss)[2] and, particularly in the UK, /kləˈmeɪtɪs/ (klə-may-tiss).[2][3
The sails were really billowing on Sunday.

It’s a dream come true! Yes, fresh daily-made by hand pasta has come to 11 Center Street in downtown Gloucester. I had some last night, and OMG! It’s stunning! Support our local businesses folks!!

It’s going to be a glorious weekend and what more could we ask for!! Looking forward to the beach, kayaking, maybe some biking! Hope everyone gets out and enjoys every minute! 
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Extend your 4th of July Relaxation and Celebration this Tuesday, July 5th-
RELAX. CELEBRATE. DONATE
40 Beach St. Manchester-by-the-Sea. (At Harbor Point. Near the Manchester MBTA Stop and Dunkin Donuts.)
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Author of “The Mind Illuminated” and neuroscientist, John Yates (Upakasa Culadasa), shares his research and personal insights in this rare East Coast talk. Please join him.