Contact Marcy Plante at 978-526-8900 ext 384
or programs@manchesterathleticclub.com 978-526-8900 ext 257
My View of Life on the Dock
Contact Marcy Plante at 978-526-8900 ext 384
or programs@manchesterathleticclub.com 978-526-8900 ext 257
From Wikipedia;
“Tilt–shift photography is the use of camera movements on small- and medium-format cameras, and sometimes specifically refers to the use of tilt for selective focus, often for simulating a miniature scene. Sometimes the term is used when the shallow depth of field is simulated with digital post-processing; the name may derive from the tilt–shift lens normally required when the effect is produced optically.”
We’re Live Now As Of 10:53AM St Joseph’s Pasta Feast Prep In Full Effect!
Click Here To See Sista Felicia’s Kitchen Live–
When the behemoth iceboat Rocket was built in 1888 she was said to be among the fastest vessels on the planet – capable of over 100 mph. With a gaff rigged sail. Rocket is the treasure of the North Shrewsbury Ice Boat and Yacht Club in Red Bank, NJ, and just one other boat in this class remains – Jack Frost, of the Hudson Valley Ice Club. There had been one other, Icicle, built for John A Roosevelt, an uncle of FDR. For sport in their day they would race trains, and Icicle once beat the “Chicago Express” on a run between Poughkeepsie and Ossining.
Rocket was rebuilt by Bob Pulsch who won the Betty Ramsey Trophy in the 2004 Gloucester Schooner Race with Heron, the 1911 Crowninshield schooner he had rebuilt. Last week Rocket sailed again, for the first time in almost 100 years. Bob Pulsch (80) and others aboard are regulars in the Gloucester Schooner Race in Adventurer.
Rocket Launch
http://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news/seemingly-never-ending-winter-joy-ice-boaters-n49426
February 1994, Cape Ann Marina From Peter Seminara
Bob Quinn Submits-
This scene is off Cherry St, over the DPW sand pile.. Turkeys Roosting In The Trees
Al Bezanson Submits-
If they don’t have it you don’t need it
http://www.portlandcompany.com/boatShow/
In his follow-up to Lunatic Heroes, Martignetti sheds all defenses to reveal the viscera of a mind shaped by the dark and confusing forces of his childhood. This collection of memoirs and essays focuses mainly on Martignetti’s adult years, and features the pivotal characters of his ever-entertaining personal narrative. From the cascade of memories and emotions triggered by an accidental butterfly killing in “Cocoon Talk,” to the homicidal impulses prompted by a visit to his boyhood home in “Sign,” from the heartbreaking to the hilarious musings inspired by beloved pets in “Mochajava” and “Dog,” and throughout the uncensored sexcapades of “Mad,” “The Wild,” and “Feast of the Hungry Ghost,” Martignetti’s colloquial, humorous, and intimate style will keep you riveted, crack you open, enthrall and embrace you with an honesty normally reserved for not even the closest of friends.
Masconomet Regional High School junior Isabelle Yabe has been named Grand Prize Award Winner for her piece “Japanese Heritage” in this year’s 6th Congressional District High School Art Show. The awards were presented Saturday, March 8, by U.S. Representative John F. Tierney at Montserrat College of Art’s 301 Gallery, 301 Cabot Street, Beverly. This marks the 20th year Montserrat has hosted this competition. The exhibit included 124 pieces from 25 different high schools and one homeschooled submission.
The exhibition was juried by Chris Van Allsburg, a Caldecott Medal winning author and illustrator whose books The Polar Express and Jumanji, are among his 15 publications, and Greg Bokor, a designer who is the founder and CEO of Cloud Factory, who has done work with such major global brands as Buick, Pepsi, Target, American Eagle and many others. The competition was open to high school students from public and private schools within the 6th District of Massachusetts, as well as high school students home-schooled within the district.
Saturday, March 19th, from 9am to 2pm – Electronic Recycle Day at the GHS Parking Lot. Recycle any kind of electronic item (computers, scanners, flat panel monitors, copiers, etc.) for $5 each, appliance (dishwashers, dryers, stoves, microwaves, dehumidifiers, refrigerators, AC, exercise equipment, lawn mowers, small engine items, snow blowers, lawn mowers, etc.) for $10 each, computer monitors for $10 each, TVs for $10-25 each. NO FEE: cables, keyboards, cell phones, car batteries, sewing machines, and some other items.
We will also be recycling bicycles (NO FEE)! Bring your unwanted old or new bicycle and drop it off; it will be reused. Any bicycle is a good bicycle: mountain, road, BMX, cruiser, kids’, etc. – old or new. Our aim is to keep bikes from being thrown out when they can be reused.
Gloucester Police Department, Healthy Gloucester Collaborative, and Gloucester U at Gloucester High School have partnered to bring a brand new course to the Gloucester U after-school program!
Students will work hands on with GPD and other instructors from the field, travel to various exciting locations, and even have the opportunity to earn 1 academic credit!
Click the link below to Register for the Course! https://docs.google.com/forms/d/175dEHKu5mb3oyFkKRXAHcGlHI8XDlKqwL9BZSs9Whns/viewform
For more information got to Go to http://gloucesteru.weebly.com/new-course-offerings-session-2.html or Contact:
Samantha Whitney
Lead Program Coordinator
Gloucester High School Library
Latitude 43 and Turner’s Seafood Team Up For Maritime Gloucester!
On Monday, March 31st, Jake DaSilva and his team will welcome the crew from Turner’s Seafood into the Latitude 43 kitchen for a sustainable seafood dinner. The chefs will prepare dishes highlighting underutilized, local seafood to showcase the best of what the waters off Gloucester have to offer.
The three-course meal will feature underutilized fish that can typically be found at Turners Seafood or on Lat 43’s specials menu (think beyond haddock to skate wings), and each guest will receive a recipe card detailing how they can prepare this local seafood in their own home. The three-course meal is $33.00 with a percentage of the total going directly to Maritime Gloucester to support a new fisheries exhibit.
For reservations call Latitude 43: (978) 281-0223. The restaurant is located at 25 Rogers Street, Gloucester, MA
The award-winning documentary MAIDENTRIP is about the life and adventures of 14 year-old Laura Dekker, the youngest person ever to sail around the world alone. Laura sets out—camera in hand—on a two-year voyage in pursuit of her dream.
In the wake of a year-long battle with Dutch authorities that sparked a global storm of media scrutiny, Laura now finds herself far from land, family and unwanted attention, exploring the world in search of freedom, adventure, and distant dreams of her early youth at sea. Jillian Schlesinger’s debut feature amplifies Laura’s brave, defiant voice through a mix of Laura’s own video and voice recordings at sea and intimate vérité footage from locations including the Galapagos Islands, French Polynesia, Australia, and South Africa.
Doors open at 6:00 pm, film begins at 6:30. Tickets for the show can be purchased online at or at the door, as space permits. Prices are $10.00 adults * $8.50 students & seniors (60+), and $7.00 for CACC and MG Members. ADVANCE TICKETS ::: http://www.CapeAnnCinema.wordpress.com/advance-tickets
This event is a benefit for Maritime Gloucester. Let’s pack the theater!
Movie trailer:
Hello Joe!
I am one of those ‘ladies’ who run at dawn with Pixie Harrington. We’ve been at it for over ten years and I am sure by now folk along the back shore hate us since we wake them up with our loud conversations!
I am sure we have met through Bob Gillis.
Anyway here’s why I am bugging you.
I am running the Boston Marathon on April 21. I am running for the National Multiple Sclerosis Society. This organization is very near and dear to my heart as I myself have MS. I have been on an incredible mission for the past 14 years running marathons, climbing the highest peaks in the world, the first person with MS to go to the North and South Poles and I began training to hopefully run the Iditarod in the not too distant future.
All of this may sound crazy especially for a person living with MS but I do all these extreme adventures for one reason only. I want to change the perception of what MS looks like and challenge those living with MS to chase their dreams and goals. As I tell them they all have a mountain, the mountain is MS now what are you going to do with it? My journey has been incredible and hopefully if I can make life easier for one person suffering with MS my mission will have been oh so worth while.
Sorry to be so lengthy in my request. Perhaps you can help me. I am hosting a fundraiser at Jalepenos on March 24. Jalepenos is wonderful to host these fundraisers for many of us and now they are doing it for me. Would you be able to publicize this for me on Good Morning Gloucester?
When: March 24
Where: Jalepenos
For: The National Multiple Sclerosis Society and Wendy Booker’s run of this year’s Boston Marathon
From: 4:30pm until closing
Thank you so very much in advance. If you need more information please let me know.
Wendy
Hello Joe,
I hope you might include this information about the library book sale in Good Morning Gloucester.
Thank you
Dianne
The Friends of the Rockport Public Library are having a Spring Forward Book Sale on Friday, March 21 from
10 AM to 5 PM, Saturday, March 22 from 10 AM to 5 PM and Sunday, March 23rd from 1 PM to 5 PM.
This sale has an abundance of books in all categories including many children’s and young adult titles, along with history and politics, biography and memoir, art, cooking, crafts, gardening, both recent and well-aged fiction, mysteries, and lots more. Movies on DVD and VHS and music CDs will be on sale as well.
Spring also brings back the popular bake sale with home made offerings for $1 donated by library friends.
All monies raised at the book sales is used to enhance programs at the library including museum passes, children’s programs and cabin fever movies.
The library is located at 17 School Street on the corner of Broadway in Rockport.
www.rockportlibrary.org 978 546-6934
submitted by Dianne Anderson
Friends of the Library board member
THIS WEEKEND! DEMAND YOUR SPRING! AT POP GALLERY!
Click here to see the live feed, ask questions, we’re live!
A quick post for our Robin friends.
Robins do not eat bird seed. With very little fruit remaining on the branch and the ground once again covered in snow, I made a quick trip to Essex Bird Shop yesterday to pick up a tub of mealworms. Our resident Robins quickly found the little tray we had set out and it was clear that they were very hungry.
Oftentimes you’ll see a robin cocking its head, as if it were listening for earthworms. Robins have what is called monocular vision, which means their eyes are on the sides of their heads and that the eyes can work independently of each other. The robin is not hearing the worm, but seeing it! Worms make up about 20 percent of the American Robin’s diet.
American Robin Flock Halibut Point
The Robin is the One
That interrupt the Morn
With hurried — few — express Reports
When March is scarcely on –
The Robin is the One
That overflow the Noon
With her cherubic quantity –
An April but begun –
The Robin is the One
That speechless from her Nest
Submit that Home — and Certainty
And Sanctity, are best – Emily Dickinson
More about the American Robin:

For more information about why we can see the moon and sun at the same time please following the following link.
http://www.universetoday.com/75848/why-can-we-see-the-moon-during-the-day/
Breaking News! Brenda Malloy was walking on Wingaersheek Beach around noon today and discovered this partially eaten crocodile (or alligator) carcass. She estimates its length to have been at least 8′ long, as more than 4-1/2′ of it still remains. What do you folks out there see – crocodile, alligator, baby sea serpent, and where did it come from? It was right above the high tide mark, so if you want to see it, get out there before dark. It is located on the beach in front of the stucco mansion with the red roof.
E.J. Lefavour
World View! A Benefit Concert for Temple Ahavat Achim honoring Amy and Mark Adrian Farber for their 40 years of service!
Sunday, March 23rd at 4 pm at the breathtaking Shalin Liu Performance Center in Rockport, MA!
Tickets are almost sold out – get yours NOW! General admission is $50/per person.
This morning my new comare Maria Cannavo came over to help me make the St. Joseph bread for tomorrow feast. In less then 3 hours we sampled our first batch of hot Italian bread… Heavenly….. OMG …..Delicious! Monday we plan to meet again to make the bread for Next Tuesday nights S.t Joseph Trolley Festivities! Thank you Maria I’t always fun baking with you! XO Muah