In Honor of Earth Day ~ Xerces Society Letter to President Obama

April 14, 2014

President Barack Obama The Honorable Tom Vilsack, Secretary of Agriculture The Honorable Sally Jewell, Secretary of the Interior

Dear Mr. President, Mr. Secretary of Agriculture, and Madam Secretary of the Interior,

In light of the severe decline of both the eastern and western monarch butterfly populations that has occurred since the late‐1990s, we are writing to ask you to establish a multi‐agency monarch butterfly recovery initiative to restore the habitats that support the extraordinary migrations of this iconic species. We encourage you to direct the Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), Farm Service Agency (FSA), and Forest Service (USFS) of the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) and Bureau of Land Management (BLM) of the U.S. Department of the Interior to develop a cooperative, landscape‐ level initiative with the many stakeholders willing to help foster significant monarch recovery.

These migrations can be saved for future generations by restoring to the landscape milkweeds, the host plants for monarch caterpillars, and nectar plants that sustain the adult butterflies. These habitats would support pollinators and a large number of other species as well. The federal agencies that incentivize conservation of wildlife habitat on private lands and that directly manage wildlife habitat on public lands can play key roles in this effort by targeting funding and technical support for such an initiative.

As you know, the eastern monarch population has been declining for more than a decade, and this year scientists observed the lowest numbers ever documented, representing a 90% drop from population numbers recorded in the mid‐1990s. Since then, there has been a significant loss of milkweeds in agricultural areas of the Midwest, which is directly correlated with the declining monarch population. Monarch habitat has also declined sharply in the West.

Monarch Migration Map

Paul Mirocha Illustration for Monarch Watch

Continue reading “In Honor of Earth Day ~ Xerces Society Letter to President Obama”

Gloucester’s Earth Day, Saturday the 26th, at 9:00: Finishing HarborWalk Gardens Cleanup

There’s much going on around town for Gloucester’s Earth Day on Saturday. At the HarborWalk Gardens we’ll be finishing our spring cleanup. Come on down and I hope to see you there! You don’t need to be an experienced gardener; everyone is welcome!

American Copper Butterfly ©Kim Smith 2013 copyAmerican Copper Butterfly

Easter

Family means so much to me and being a grandmother is the best. If this is not the best do not know what more I could have.
Avery, Maddie, Riley, Owen, Cole and Nonnie.
April 20, 2014 Nonnie is so happy with her kids

Submit Your Short Film or Poem for Rockport’s Upcoming Festival!

 

The Red Shed Film FestSUBMIT YOUR FILM FOR THE RED SHED FILM FEST ON ROCKPORT’S MOTIF No.1 DAYĀ Are you a filmmaker? Apply to screen your film at the Red Shed Film Festival on Motif No.1 Day in Rockport! The Red Shed is a micro film festival featuring selected shorts produced on Cape Ann or with Cape Ann as the subject. The history, geography, art, people, city and towns of Cape Ann are all suitable for treatment — anything that conveys the region’s sense of place. The Red Shed Film Festival takes place on Saturday, May 17, 2014 as part of Rockport’s annual Motif No.1 Day festival of the arts. The Guidelines for Entries: Films must come in under 15 minutes and should be produced on, or be about, Cape Ann. Film structure and genre can be fiction or non-fiction, abstract or literal, linear or non-linear – play with your aesthetic tastes.Application does not guarantee screening. As such, a winner in this festival is anyone whose film is chosen to be screened. If your piece is chosen to be screened, you will be contacted based on the information you provide in the application (email or phone probably). Please submit your film at: www.rockportartfestivals.com/motif-1-festival-events/film-festival.Ā For more information please contact granitevisions@gmail.com 978.290.9200 or go to http://www.rockportartfestivals.com

SUBMIT YOUR WORKĀ FOR THE “WORDS BEFORE DINNER LITERARY EVENT”Ā ON ROCKPORT’S MOTIF No.1 DAY!Ā Have you written a poem or essay with Cape Ann as its theme? If so, we’d love to have your submission for the annual Words Before Dinner Literary event, taking place at 4 p.m. on Saturday, May 17th in downtown Rockport as part of the town’s Motif No. 1 Day festival. Readers will share selections of their own work from poems to brief essays (under 750 words) featuring the beauty, history, industry art and landscape of Cape Ann as inspiration. Please submit your work for consideration to rockportfestivals@gmail.comĀ and plan to join other members of Cape Ann’s literary community forĀ a few Words Before Dinner on May 17th. For more information go to www.rockportartfestivals.com or call 978-546-2861

“Too much of a good thing … can be wonderful”

You probably know this as one of Mae West’s most famous quotes and on Friday, she’ll be proven right once again. Ā Just like our Solstice benefitĀ at Gloucester’s UU Meetinghouse, this Friday, when 3rian King, Chelsea Berry, Renee Dupuis and others come together for a fresh take on The Beatles, we’ll have so much talent on stage that you could honestly complain it’s too much of a good thing. Ā But you won’t complain, will you? Ā Nope. Ā You’ll thank your lucky stars that you live in a town so full of talent that you can enjoy top quality entertainment all year long! Ā Or, you’ll kick yourself for not getting tickets and missing the show. Ā Which one will it be? Ā Get tickets here.

Once in a Lifetime!

Forgive my self-indulgence, but how often can one post something like this?! Ā So proud of my little guy!! Ā And….those employees at Fenway Park who arrange and execute these pregame ceremonies are beyond phenomenal!! Ā They made him feel like the most important person in the world even though they do this 81 times each season.

Warm fuzzies.

 

Are you looking For A Yummy Way To Use Up Your Left Over Ham From Easter Dinner?

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One of the best parts ofĀ holidayĀ feasts are the leftovers!Ā  For those who love turkey, the hot and cold turkey sandwiches stuffed withĀ variousĀ combinations of leftover Thanksgiving Dinner fixings are enjoyedĀ just as much as the feast meal itself.Ā  In Sicilian and Italian homes the back to back Christmas Eve Feast of “The Seven Fishes” and the Christmas Day Feast leftovers yield plenty of ingredients to whip up dozens of quick after holiday meals each year.Ā Ā ButĀ I have to admitĀ I especially LoveĀ the traditional EasterĀ feast leftoverĀ foods, like, cheese, eggs, lamb, ham, and fresh vegetables. TheyĀ can be turned intoĀ delicious quick and easy breakfast, lunch and dinner dishes that can be enjoyed throughout thisĀ school vacation week.Ā  Over the next few days I will be post some of my favorite Easter leftover recipe creations developed over the years, that my friends and family look forward to each year!

Todays Recipe “Pasta with Peas, Ham & Cipollini Onions” is one of my daughter Amanda’s most favorite pasta dishes! For recipe details and photos click see more Continue reading “Are you looking For A Yummy Way To Use Up Your Left Over Ham From Easter Dinner?”

Check Out- “Leash-law options on table tonight” By James Niedzinski

At The Gloucester Daily Times site
Leash-law options on table tonight By James Niedzinski

The fur may very well fly tonight at City Hall.

A proposed new dog ordinance, which may allow dogs to frolic leash free on city beaches, while also raising fines for owners who fail to pick up their dogs’ calling cards, will be up for a public hearing before Gloucester’s full City Council, a week after a council subcommittee passed a set of proposed changes without a recommendation to either approve or turn aside.

If the new ordinance gets approval from the City Council, the first offense for failing to pick up after a pooch is $50, and any subsequent offense is $100.

While dogs are allowed on city beaches during the fall and winter months, the City Council is also being presented with two off-leash options from an ad-hoc committee that began studying the city’s roughly 40-year-old ordinance last November.

The first option is to allow…

Click here for the entire story

Tuesday April 22nd , 2014 Cape Ann Weather..

Marine Forecast…
Tue S winds 10 to 15 kt with gusts up to 20 kt. Seas 2 to 4 ft.
Tue Night S winds 15 to 20 kt…becoming SW 10 to 15 kt after midnight. Seas 4 to 6 ft. Areas of fog. A chance of showers. Vsby 1 nm or less.

Tuesday Forecast : Partly sunny with increasing clouds through out the day highs generally in the lower 60’s with slightly cooler sea breezes at the shore .. Winds light out of the south , south east at 10-15mph … Tuesday Night chance of showers and a few thunderstorms after 9 pm or so lows in the mid to upper 40°s…winds south at 10-12mph …
Hourly Forecast :

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Extended Forecast :

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Thanks for viewing šŸ™‚
GMG weatherman
Peter Lovasco

Lanes Cove and Halibut Point From Mary Barker

Hi Joey,

I spent some time walking around Halibut Point and Lanesville recently. Despite the ice still left on some of the smaller more shaded ponds and the trees still dressed in their winter browns and grays, the sight of the ducks sunning on the rocks, the magnificent blues of the sky and water, and the gorgeous rock formations – natural and carved – helped me shed the winter doldrums. Here are a few photos.

Mary Barker

Floor in The Art Room-

Kate Seidman submits-
I just spent the last two weeks painting the floor in The Art Room- I felt like Tom Sawyer because before I was finished others wanted to join in and have fun too- thanks: Judy, Loren and Stella.
What a great crew! The floor is done but now I have to finish the rest of my renovations. Hoping to be open by May 1st. Stay tuned….
photo (75)
photo (76)

Kate and Stella painting The Art Room Floor…

Antennae for Design: Native Flowering Dogwood

white dogwood cornus florida Ā© Kim Smith 2013Currently IĀ am working like mad on design projects,Ā bothĀ creatingĀ new gardens and organizing existingĀ gardens.Ā Along withĀ butterfly and pollinator gardens, IĀ designĀ manyĀ different typesĀ of gardens, includingĀ fragrant gardens,Ā night gardens, children’sĀ gardens, and seaside gardens.Ā OneĀ of my favorite aspects of the design processĀ is creating the horticultural master plan, which is typically done simultaneously after discussing with the client their needs, hopes, and aspirations for their garden, and whenĀ working on the plan drawings.

While working on planting plans, I thought our GMG readersĀ would benefit from suggested plantings and illustrated design tips. I started this series awhile backĀ and called itĀ Antennae for Design, and still like that name.

Cornus florida rubra @ Kim Smith 2012 copy

In designing gardens the first step is always creating the framework and treesĀ comprise a major component inĀ establishing the framework, or bones, of a garden. TreesĀ provide a welcome sense of shelter with the shifting light and shadows filtering through the ever-changing ceiling.Ā Fragrance, flowers, the shelter they provide, form, and texture of the leaves are not the only attributes of a tree garden. During the winter months there is the elegant beauty of pure line, the beauty of the branch.

Cornus florida rubra pink dowood Ā© Kim Smith 2012 copyFor a multitude ofĀ reasons, oneĀ of my top choices whenĀ planting a tree-garden is our stunningĀ nativeĀ American dogwood (Cornus florida), both white and pink flowering forms. The fresh beauty of its spring blossoms, horizontal level branches, myriad pollinators attracted to the tiny florets, and the eleganceĀ of its bare limbs in winter are just some of the reasons why I love this tree! ForĀ a night garden especially, the white flower bractsĀ are especially luminous in the moonlight. And, the American dogwood is also a larval food plant for the diminutive Spring Azure butterfly’s caterpillar!

white dogwood cornus florida ©kim Smith 2013 copy

Ā Oh Garden of Fresh Possibilities! ~ Notes from a Gloucester Garden isĀ available at my publisher’s website, click here.

Here and Now – Rocky Neck Art Colony Spring Show

here and now

Opening Reception, Saturday, April 26 from 4-6:00 PM. Ā Show dates: April 24-May 11, open Thursday – Sunday from 12-4:00 PM. Ā Spring has sprung on Rocky Neck!

Honors Youth Choir of Chorus North Shore Spring concert ā€œSongs of Love and Friendshipā€ at Shalin Liu – Friday May 2

The Honors Youth Choir willĀ Ā  perform songs of love and friendship including selections from early opera, sentimental favorites, revolutionary war songs, humorous songs and even a little doo-wop.Ā  The concert will be a walk down memory lane with songs that cover the gamut of love and friendship.

Sunny says the youth have been working very hard to prepare for this concert and are looking forward to presenting an evening of fun, sentiment and beauty.

Youth in the Concert:Ā 
Rockport:Ā  Emily Dailey,Ā  Sarah Palmer,Ā  Sophie Shwartzer,Ā  Katrina Tuck
Gloucester:Ā  Lucas Brisbois,Ā  Lucia DiMeo,Ā  Olivia Francis,Ā  Moriah Murphy-Thornley,Ā  Shannon Murphy-Thornley,Ā  Kayla Saltonstall,Ā  Isabel White,Ā  Silas White,Ā  Rachel Wolfe
Essex:Ā  Anna Newkill
Manchester:Ā  Naomi Franklin,Ā  Madelaine Potter,Ā  Sarah Potter,Ā  Tori Potter
Ipswich:Ā  Taeko Abuza,Ā  Bailey Amazeen,Ā  Regan Amazeen,Ā  Elsa Anderson,Ā  Marina Beauvois,Ā  Elijah Bergner,Ā  Isaac Bergner,Ā  Nicole Brouillette,Ā  Daniel Buletza,Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Teaghan Duff,Ā  Maggie Gould,Ā  Myles Kercher,Ā  Rachel McCatty,Ā  Fiona O’Connell,Ā  Erica Prisby
Wenham:Ā  Shayne Bower
Boxford:Ā  Emma Vitale
South Hamilton:Ā  Ellie Greer
Rowley:Ā  Emily Beckingham,Ā  Alice Thornton
Georgetown:Ā  Grace McGrail,Ā  Laura Tarr
Newburyport:Ā  Isabelle Bacon,Ā  Anna Moreland
North Andover:Ā  Breanna McCarragher
Marblehead:Ā  Iryna Polunia