Pouring the Concrete
You are the Balloon
The Oval Playground Community – Build.. Got it Done!
Steve Winslow submits-
Thanks for the many community members who turned out to erect the new playground at the Oval.. Here’s a few photos
1. Brian Palazola – grandson of Joseph Palazola who Palazola Field was named after. Brian’s daughter was so excited to hear about the new playground she dragged Brian out of bed first thing Saturday morning. Mike Palazola, Joseph Palazola’s son also gave a hand..![]()
2. Councillor LeBlanc checking out the new saucer swing.![]()
4. The Jacks Climber the kids at Pathways helped pick out
![]()
5. Playground equipment – all done.
![]()
Just a note – the site is still under construction.. Work will be completed in a few weeks and we’ll let people know when the ribbon cutting will take place.
Steve Winslow
Thursday November 13th , 2014 Cape Ann Weather..
Marine Forecast :
Thu NW winds 10 to 15 kt…becoming W 5 to 10 kt in the afternoon. Gusts up to 20 kt. Seas 2 to 3 ft.
Thu Night W winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 25 kt. Seas 2 to 4 ft. Showers likely. Vsby 1 to 3 nm.
Pod Cast Weather :
http://www.spreaker.com:80/episode/5202915
Hourly Forecast :
Pray for Paul Skate Around Fundraiser November 15th, 3:00p.m-5:00pm @ Dorothy Talbot Rink
Pray for Paul Russo Fundraiser Reminder Saturday November 15th @ Dorothy Talbot Rink 3:00 PM
In case you forgot Paul Russo’s fundraiser is this Saturday at the rink. There will be no charge at the door!
Skating 5$ Kids & 10$ Adults
Raffle 5$ per ticket (gift certificates)
Silent Auction (for over 10k$ in donation items)
Did we mention The Boston Bruins donated a stick signed by the 2013-14 Bruins team!
We hope to see you all there!
Paul Russo is from Gloucester, and frankly one of the nicest people you can meet. After graduating from Gloucester High School as a Captain of his hockey team, he took his bright mind and talent to Bryant University where he studied Accounting and received his Bachelors degree. While at Bryant he also shined on the schools Club Hockey team where he became Captain again. Paul then went on to earn his Masters in Accounting from UMass Lowell and accepted his current job at PwC in Boston.
This past Halloween morning, Paul suffered two seizures and was taken to Lahey Medical. Paul was diagnosed with Brain Cancer the following day. Just like many of us who are fighting to pay school loans, Paul could use support with now helping with his medical expenses for surgery and treatment.
Please keep Paul and his family in your hearts through this tough time, Join us to raise money and pray for a speedy recovery at the Dorothy Talbot Rink next Saturday. If you cannot attend the event you can donate to Paul’s page below.
https://www.giveforward.com/fundraiser/w3d6/paul-russo-s-brain-cancer-fundraiser?utm_source=facebook
Community Stuff 11/13/14
Hey Joey,
The darling cast of Godspell, Jr.
GODSPELL JR
Coming to St. John’s Episcopal Church – This week, November 14-16, 2014 Featuring a group of young talented performers from Gloucester, Rockport, and Manchester
Based on The Gospel According to St. Matthew, the musical uses major episodes in the New Testament – including the baptism of Jesus, the Last Supper, his arrest and crucifixion – to explore important ideas like compassion, love, forgiveness and sacrifice for the greater good. The show draws on various theatrical traditions and musical styles, including pantomime, charades, acrobatics, vaudeville, folk and rock to create a unique reflection on the parables of Jesus. Godspell JR. is presented through special arrangement with Music Theatre International (MTI) and its collection of musicals for younger performers. This show will be co-directed by Dr. Jay DiPrima and Mark Nelson, the music director of St. Johns.
Show times and dates:
Friday, November 14th – 7:00pm
Saturday, November 15th – 7:00pm
Sunday, November 16th – 3:00pm
All tickets ($10.00) can be purchased or reserved by e-mailing or calling Betsy Levick, Parish Administrator – 978.283.1708 ext. 14. Tickets can also be purchased at the door twenty minutes before each performance. (All proceeds will be used exclusively for future children and youth programs)
On November 14th, local artist Alan Winter will demonstrate that Astronomy is art, not just science, as the Gloucester Area Astronomy Club presents his Messier Sampler, a trove of 14 astronomical objects — the great Andromeda Galaxy, the Hercules Cluster, the Ring nebula, and many more — carefully described and displayed in spectacular and colorful detail.
We’ll learn first-hand where and what, how big, how old, how far away, and also how cosmically beautiful each one is. Tune up your eyes and ears for a tour through fourteen of the finest astronomical objects in the Cape Ann nighttime sky.
The Gloucester Area Astronomy Club meets on the second Friday of every month at the Lanesville Community Center, 8 Vulcan Street Lanesville, from 8:00 to 9:30 pm. Parking is free. The public is warmly welcomed and there is no cost. More information is available through the website, http://gaac.us, on Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/gaacpage or in the club twitter feed, @gaactweet.
How long before they take away our football?
So sad.
Should Your Child Play Football?
By John Guida November 11, 2014 3:40 pm
To the partisan battles of red and blue America, we can apparently add another culture clash: football.
Yes, the N.F.L. remains widely popular, despite its annus horribilis — among other things, the abuse scandals of Ray Rice and Adrian Peterson and, above all, the medical discoveries of the professional sport’s damage to a player’s brain.
Yet for all its popularity, the ground is shifting. As David Leonhardt writes for The Upshot at The New York Times, “Blue America — particularly the highly educated Democratic-leaning areas of major metropolitan areas — is increasingly deciding that it doesn’t want its sons playing football.”
He cites a poll conducted by the RAND Corporation for The Upshot: “Nationwide, only 55 percent of respondents said they would be comfortable with their sons playing football. The numbers for baseball, basketball, soccer and track were all above 90 percent.”
The ostensibly “liberal” view holds that football — especially at the professional level — poses risks both to players’ health and to American society at large. At The Los Angeles Times, Steve Almond, author of the book “Against Football,” criticizes “the cynical commercialization of the sport, its cultish celebration of violence and the more subtle ways in which football warps our societal attitudes about race, gender and sexual orientation.”
Over/Under 10 years, what do you think?
The push to make our kids as soft and overly sensitive as possible is well under way.
Why is there no outrage over other sports that have just as high injury rate or more than football? How come all these people don’t take their kids off of bikes?
Types of sports and recreational activities
Consider these estimated injury statistics for 2009 from the Consumer Product Safety Commission:
- Basketball. More than 170,000 children ages 5 to 14 were treated in hospital emergency rooms for basketball-related injuries.
- Baseball and softball. Nearly 110,000 children ages 5 to 14 were treated in hospital emergency rooms for baseball-related injuries. Baseball also has the highest fatality rate among sports for children ages 5 to 14, with three to four children dying from baseball injuries each year.
- Bicycling. More than 200,000 children ages 5 to 14 were treated in hospital emergency rooms for bicycle-related injuries.
- Football. Almost 215,000 children ages 5 to 14 were treated in hospital emergency rooms for football-related injuries.
- Ice hockey. More than 20,000 children ages 5 to 14 were treated in hospital emergency rooms for ice hockey-related injuries.
- In-line and roller skating. More than 47,000 children ages 5 to 14 were treated in hospital emergency rooms for in-line skating-related injuries.
- Skateboarding. More than 66,000 children ages 5 to 14 were treated in hospital emergency rooms for skateboarding-related injuries.
- Sledding or toboggan. More than 16,000 children ages 5 to 14 were treated in hospital emergency rooms for sledding-related injuries.
- Snow skiing or snowboarding. More than 25,000 children ages 5 to 14 were treated in hospital emergency rooms for snow boarding and snow skiing-related injuries.
- Soccer. About 88,000 children ages 5 to 14 were treated in hospital emergency rooms for soccer-related injuries.
- Trampolines. About 65,000 children ages 14 and under were treated in hospital emergency rooms for trampoline-related injuries.
It’s the same people who say we should hand out participation awards just for showing up. It’s the same people that are trying to tell us that we’re not supposed to appreciate beauty (and I get the difference between a creepy leer or inappropriate comment toward a woman vs a plain old compliment).
Jeeze I hope we don’t lose our football.
Science All Around Us Has Raised Over $18K Surpassing Their Halfway Point!
This is wonderfully exciting news not only for Captain Tom, Colin, and Nubar, but for our community at large. If you haven’t yet backed their Kickstarter program to raise funds for the the pilot of the series, Science All Around Us, the first of which will be created aboard Gloucester’s own Schooner Thomas E. Lannon, now is the perfect time. With less than two weeks to go, the project will not go forward unless the full $35,000. needed for the pilot is raised.
Read More About the Project from Captain Tom Elliis and Joey Here
If you have already donated, you can continue to help by spreading the word to reach as many people as possible during the fundraising campaign. Let your friends and family know about this exciting series and share the links on Facebook and Twitter.
More from Colin on the Science All Around Us
Look Out Below!
End of the Pier at the End of the Day
Touchdown!
Lone Gull
Every Single Man In America
Every last one.
Flat Ledge Quarry Standing on my head
Clouds Breaking Up Over #GloucesterMA Harbor 2:13 PM 11/12/14

Here’s a novel idea: FREE BENEFIT CONCERT
Yup, it’s free … and it’s a benefit for one of our favorite charities, The Open Door. Here’s your chance to have a great Saturday night before Thanksgiving and show these people they’re on to something!
Lisa Marie This Thursday @ The Dave Sag’s Blues Party 8:30-11:30pm 11.13.2014
It’s gonna be another knuckle-draggin’ night so let’s welcome back one of your all-time favorite singers: Ms. Lisa Marie. She’s comin’ at you with her glass-breaking jewel-encrusted uvula. She rocks, she rolls, she twists, she monkeys to that grisly thump we all think of as our heart, and finds a way to touch us all. Pass the Jameson, please….
And she’s bringing an action- packed riddim section for that pedal to the metal feel. First, there’s Mr. Silvertone Steve, fleet-fingered guitarist and online carbon-dating service entrepreneur for you oldsters.Makes a mockery out of pre-existing conditions. Then there’s Mr. Johnny Juxo, pinky -waggler Xtroidinaire on shoe-bashing keyboards. Sings like an angel. Wears great hats, too. Top it off with with the air-compressor stylings of that hirsutely magnificent drummbler, Mr. Steevee Chaggaris and my unique style of basso offendo and there you have it; a great night! Ask your doctor if the DaveSag Blues Party is right for you.
http://www.zyworld.com/lisamarie13/
Beware: Next week the world renown saxafrass terrorist, Mr. Gordon Beadle, will be returning for a night of carpet bombing. Don’t miss it!
And, again, if you want to see the best in improvisational Tin Pan Alley, The Old Salty Jazz Band underperforms Next Monday afternoon at the Rose Baker Senior Center right in downtown Gloucester from 1 to 3. Load up on prune juice and join us for a rollicking foray into the 20th century. It’s free!
40 Railroad Avenue
Gloucester, MA 01930
(978) 283-9732
Saturday’s Clean with Clean Gloucester and The One Hour at a Time Gang
There are three young people, 2 from Ipswich and one from Lynn, who have taken it upon themselves to uncover Gloucester’s historic Clark Cemetery from overgrowth that has buried it for years. They are about halfway through cutting back the brush and documenting the broken gravestones they find. It’s amazing when you see it. They’ve spent every Saturday all summer working on this, along with some goats who have the winter off. There is also an active party site with a fire pit and trash in the cemetery that we need to address.
So the plan is on Saturday November 15th from 8-9 am we will collect the trash and recycling and move as much of the cut brush as we can to the road for the DPW to collect and dump. City Councilmember Melissa Cox is going to organize a truck for pickup.
If you’ve never been to Clark Cemetery, it’s behind the First Parish Burial Ground on Centennial Ave on the left if you’re coming from the waterfront, on the right coming from Washington Street. When you see the old bridge you’re there. Park on the street on Centennial and walk through First Parish Burial Ground to the back. Bring gloves, pruners/loppers/tarps/rakes/chainsaw/brushcutters – any of these are helpful. There is an area of Japanese Knotweed that we will not be touching because it’s highly invasive. We will also not be touching the broken gravestones–there is training required in handling and repairing these.
Thank you all see you on Saturday.. Remember to bring gloves.
Gingerbread Muffin Tops With Mascarpone Frosting
Gingerbread Muffin Tops With Mascarpone Frosting
Click Read More For Step-by-Step Recipe Details
Continue reading “Gingerbread Muffin Tops With Mascarpone Frosting”
Google Search Is The Monster In It’s Space and No-One Else Is Even Close
This is a snapshot of which search engines were used to find GMG on Monday Nov, 11, 2014.
As you can see Google Search is far and away the most widely used by a mile. Microsoft’s Bing may have some cool features but wow the disparity between Google’s Search and everything else is just astounding.
Way down on the list from there in the list of referrers to GMG but still relevant every single day is Facebook. Twitter is barely a blip compared to Facebook.

















