He notes a whole lot of estrogen taking over and says he wants to take a stand and take it back in 2014.
What do you guys think?
Has GMG lost it’s edge? Does it need to have an edge? Is it just right?
I put it out to you our readers in a poll.
My View of Life on the Dock
Hi Joey,
Would you please POST the following:
Due to the snowstorm, Open House at Eastern Point Day School scheduled for Wednesday, January 22nd, has been POSTPONED until Monday, January 27th, 9:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m.
As always, thank you fro your help and support,
Bob
Eastern Point Day School Open House on Monday, January 27th from 9:30 am –11:30 am
New Lower Tuition = More School Choice
Interested parents, guardians and their children are invited to visit Eastern Point Day School on Monday, January 27, from 9:30 to 11:30 am to meet the dedicated faculty and students that make Eastern Point Day School a unique and enriching community for children to thrive.
Eastern Point Day School is an independent school, Pre-K to 8th grade, focused on thematic teaching with an emphasis on curriculum integration and academic excellence, delivered in a nurturing, creative, and dynamic environment. Tuition rates have been reduced to support EPDS’s mission to provide an exceptional education to our Cape Ann communities.
EPDS offers rolling admission, options to augment homeschool learning, scholarships and financial aid. For more information, please visitwww.easternpointdayschool.org or email at info@easternpointdayschool.org.
Translucence at Flatrocks Gallery Jan 24-Feb 25
Winter is the season of brittle fragility. Ice crystals from overnight storms shatter morning sunlight as it passes through trees. Ponds freeze over and we walk across them looking down at worlds mysteriously layered, as light strains to pass through.
In the same way that winter ice alters the sensation of seeing, so glass is a universal tool for looking. “In the end,” says artist Josiah McElheny, ” it’s not the glass that’s important, it’s what you see through it.”
The idea for this show began with a fascination for the simultaneous depth and transparancy of ice. Its ability to reflect and to create introspection at the same time is a window into the mysteries of the world of ice and snow.
We searched out work that embodied these qualities. Megan Mowins, a Gloucester native now working at Diablo Glass in Boston, has brought to us a group of highly dedicated glass artists; Chris Watts, Keith Cerone, Matthew Cronin, Evan Voelbel, Aron Leaman and Toby Helene Walters. They exhibit the many disciplines of glass.
On our walls are Debbie Clark’s works on glass layered with paint, pen , gold and silver leaf, Judy Robinson-Cox’s black & white photos, Linda Cordner encaustics and Otto Laske’s digital photography. Along with a special collection of Beth Williams jewelry to dazzle!
Translucence runs from Jan. 24 through Feb.25. There will be an opening reception on Sat. Jan. 25 from 6-8pm. On Sat. Feb.15 there will be an artist talk at 4pm. Winter hours at the gallery will be Friday-Sunday 12-5 and by appointment..
—
Cynthia Roth and Anne Marie Crotty, owners
flatrocks gallery
Please join us this Saturday, Jan 25, at 7 pm as we host Peter Krasinski in his 11th appearance accompanying silent movies.
Come see the fun when theatre going was crafted for an individual audience and the audience responded with enthusiasm.
Organist Peter Krasinski will deliver an accompaniment that will make these films unforgettable.
We will first screen the 1921 short film THE PLAYHOUSE starring Buster Keaton. Awaking from his wacky dream, a theatre stage hand inadvertently causes havoc everywhere he works.
Then we will screen the 1921 feature: THE NUT starring Douglas Fairbanks (not JR!) and Marguerite de la Motte. An eccentric inventor tries to interest wealthy investors in his girlfriend’s plan to help children from poor neighborhoods.
Come young, come old, this is fun for the whole family. The program starts at 7 pm, but we’ll feature classic Warner Bros. Cartoons from 6 pm on. FREE POPCORN!
St. John’s Church, Gloucester is at 48 Middle Street with parking at 33 Washington Street. Come early and enjoy the lively shopping and restaurant scene.
Tickets at the door: $15/$10 seniors and students. 978.283.1708
Come experience a bygone era that will come alive for you. Peter Krasinski accompanies movies around the world and will delight you.
Morning snow showers followed by cloudy skies / few sunny breaks 12-17 degrees .. Winds North 20-30 mph with gusts to 40mph…
Wednesday Night lows 5-10 above NW winds 15-25 mph gusts to 30 mph..
Wind Chill values 10-15 below zero ..
Marine Forecast
Wed: N winds 25 to 30 kt. Gusts up to 45 kt in the morning. Seas 9 to 14 ft. Light freezing spray. Snow. Vsby 1 nm or less.
Wed Night: NW winds 15 to 20 kt with gusts up to 25 kt. Seas 7 to 10 ft. Light freezing spray. A chance of snow showers.
Joey,
Please share this link to the foundation Scott Southard founded in my sister Elise Hansen’s honor. Folks can help continue Elise’s work by spreading the word to potential applicants – high school students on Cape Ann – and/or by donating to the foundation.
http://elisehansenfoundation.org/
Welcome to the Elise Hansen Foundation!
We are providing scholarship grants to young adults seeking to make change in the world. Annual deadline to apply is February 20.
If you have thought about an internship in social justice, wanted to work on a green project, or to become part of a leadership or enrichment program but need financial support to realize that goal, the Elise Hansen Foundation wants to hear from you. We provide awards up to $2,000 for a qualified applicant who completes their program. Tell us what your vision is and we can help make those first steps easier. The motivation to launch this project comes from the inspiration of our friend Elise Hansen, a tireless warrior for justice. Through the generous support of her many friends we are pleased to honor her in sustaining her mission.
Thanks, Joey.
Erika
Hi Joey-
I’m hoping you could put this on the GMG blog and see if anyone might be able to come up with something. A buddy of mine and I just purchased 6 and 8 Center St in downtown Gloucester (mainly known for being the home of K9 Kuts). We are just starting to plan our rehab of the exterior of the building and I’m hoping that someone out there in the GMG universe might have an old picture that shows what the buildings looked like before they were sided as they are today. I know from peeling back some of the siding that these were once clad in traditional clapboard, but any old photos or memories that anyone might have would go a long way towards the historic restoration of the property. I also plan to check in with Fred B, the historic commission, and city archives, but thought GMG would be a great avenue as well. I can be reached atrtjones1@gmail.com if anyone has anything to share. Pic of building as it currently is is attached.
Thanks, and thanks for the blog, it’s a great aggregator of so much that goes on in our community.
-Randy Jones
What a treat to happen upon this pair of yellow-legged shorebirds feasting on tiny invertebrates in the mudflats at Henry’s Pond.Â
The Yellowlegs were foraging companionably alongside the Mallards, American Black Ducks, plovers, and Kildeers. I returned the following dawn and they had already departed for parts warmer. Perhaps we’ll see them again during their spring migration as they journey north to breed in the boreal bog forests of Canada and Alaska.
Here on Cape Ann, we are fortunate to catch fleeting glimpses of species such as Greater Yellowlegs during the great annual fall migration. The map below shows the boreal forest biome (biome is another word for ecosystem), which lies to the south of the tundra and the north of deciduous forests and grasslands. The ground in the boreal forest is damp and boggy because of snowmelt and little evaporation due to cooler summer temperatures. The moist ground and long day length at northerly latitudes during the summer makes for explosive plant growth–Think Bird Food!–not only in the wealth of plants, but myriad insects attracted!
I believe the pair to be Greater Yellowlegs. If any of our wonderful expert bird lovers would like to weigh in on this, I would be grateful. Songbirds and shorebirds that I have filmed on Cape Ann are featured in my Monarch film and I am in the process of writing the script. I want to insure that all the bird identifications are 100 percent accurate.
Addendum: Many, many thanks to Kate and Patricia (see comments) for identifying the pair as Greater Yellowlegs (Tringa melanoleuca)!!
Map courtesy google image search.
MUSIC & MEDITATION IN THE MEETINGHOUSE
With Chris Crotty and Steve Lacey
SUNDAY EVENING, January 26, 2014 at 7:30pm
GLOUCESTER UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CHURCH
Corner of Middle and Church Streets
Open to the Public with Free-Will Offering
Social Gathering Afterwards with Refreshments
For more information click here
Lobster Weathervane, Annisquam, Ma. photo from Anthony Marks
Joe, this was taken from our back yard (which is the ocean). Len took this picture during the blizzard and was looking at his pix and discovered the tornado. We also had thunder and lightening which lit up the entire house. I thought you may want to see this.
(Roseann Chardo).
Hello Joey,
I took this photo last week of the greasy pole
and inner harbor ,the colors are really vibrant in winter
and I think the light is really fine tuned .
Shelley Vincent
The “GMG Cook” list continues to grow! This weeks GMG Cooks are Bruce & Linda, and Linda Rae Castagna!
Bruce and Louise from St. Catharines, ON Write~Hey Joey!
Is Spring ever going to get here? We’ve been getting extreme
weather in the Niagara Peninsula, much the same as Cape Ann.
You can tell
Sista Felicia that her receipt last week of the Peppercorn Flank Roast was
Splendid! Very tender, extremely tasty and a big hit at our Sunday supper, even
though I had to bundle up when facing the BBQ.
The Pork Chops are next
on the winter-time cook list!
All the best,
Bruce & Louise –
St. Catharines, ON
Maritime Gloucester Kicks Off 2014 Speaker Series
Maritime Gloucester is kicking off its winter speaker series, Maritime Gloucester TALKS with weekly presentations in February featuring acclaimed presenters and hometown heroes who will focus on the themes of Schooners. Tom Balf, Maritime Gloucester’s Executive Director remarked, “as the host of the city’s annual Schooner Festival, we are proud to continue exploring schooner history and reaffirming its place on today’s waterfront. We are excited to introduce a hands-on workshop as part of the series where participants can learn basic and traditional navigation techniques. Maritime Gloucester is a place where we learn by doing.”
All presentations are free and open to the public, donations appreciated. Weekly programs start at 7:00 p.m. on Thursdays in the Gorton’s Seafoods Gallery at Maritime Gloucester. Advance online reservations are strongly encouraged at www.maritimegloucester.org or by calling 978 281 0470. The schedule and speaker bios follow. Maritime Gloucester TALKS will continue into March with a series on Climate Change. In April, Maritime Gloucester will host the UMass Large Pelagic Research Center’s annual speakers series.
FEBRUARY 6-Adaptive Sailing Program aboard the Schooner, Sugar Babe, Capt. Ed Boynton. Come and learn Capt. Boynton’s program that brings people with disabilities sailing aboard theSugar Babe. Ed will recount the schooner’s traditional past and exciting new mission.
FEBRUARY 13-Fitz Henry Lane Online, Melissa Trafton, Senior Researcher & Martha Oaks, Curator, Cape Ann Museum. The Cape Ann Museum is redesigning its Fitz Henry Lane Gallery and in addition, in 2015, the Museum will launch Fitz Henry Lane Online, a catalogue raisonné and research tool, featuring new discoveries and scholarship surrounding Lane and his milieu. Join us for a journey behind the scenes of Lane’s landscapes and learn more about the plans for the renovation and the FHL Online project.
FEBRUARY 20 –Lessons of Historic Ship Preservation Projects, Harold A. Burnham 2012 N.E.A. National Heritage Fellow Master Shipwright. Through slides and discussion, Capt. Burnham will showcase several ship and vessel preservation projects he has been involved with over the years including fishing schooners Adventure, Effie M. Morrissey/ Ernestina, and Evelina M. Goulart. He will discuss the lessons he has learned during the projects while balancing historic integrity, seaworthiness, financial stability, and preservation practices.
FEBRUARY 27-Secrets of Celestial Navigation, Carl Herzog, Instructor, Sea Education Association (SEA) and former editor of Reed’s Nautical Almanacs. In the GPS age, steering a ship by the stars can seem like a mystical lost art. We’ll discuss the various ways that cultures across the globe and throughout history have used the stars for ocean navigation. In this hands-on workshop, participants will explore some simple practical skills you can still use with the night sky today; examine some of the tools of the trade, and answers questions like, “What do you see when you look through a sextant?”
Photo: Gloucester’s Own Adventure and Ardelle, by Carl Gustin
Event – My Play’s performance from Mary Beth Smith
I’m not sure it you cover events outside of Gloucester and mind a little self-promoting… I’m a playwright from Rockport and my play, “Keep A-breast”, won the Peter Honegger Prize for Top Honors in the One Act Category in The Firehouse Center for the Arts’ New Works Festival. It’s a dramedy about my experience with breast cancer, playing one night only on Friday, January 24th. It’s sold out with lots of survivors coming – we’re all wearing “a splash of pink”. Here’s the description:
Betty’s doctor recommended she seek advice from the multi-disciplinary board to decide treatment for breast cancer. But why is the lusty mailman and cranky waitress from the diner waiting in the queue to examine her? Why does her mother get to comment from above on everything Betty says to defend herself? And are Betty’s boobs really all that important anyway? And to whom?
I appreciate your mentioning it because I’m hoping to find a theater to perform it in October for breast cancer awareness. If it’s not appropriate, no worries. I work a lot and without your blog, I wouldn’t know what was happening in Gloucester and when. Really appreciate it.
Hi Joey,
Would it be possible to get the January deal for the Y posted on GMG? A JPEG is attached. Super deal worth over $200. It would be great if you could help us get the word out!
Thanks,
Chris Erbland
Artist Gabrielle Barzaghi and poet Patrick Doud present their collaborative
program of poetry and art titled Persistent Images
Gloucester, MA – The Gloucester Writers Center presents Persistent Images, a
collaborative program of poetry and drawings by Gabrielle Barzaghi and Patrick Doud,
on Wednesday, January 22 from 7:30 to 9pm at the Gloucester Writers Center.
Gabrielle Barzaghi, a Trident Gallery artist and a Senior Lecturer at the New England
School of Art and Design at Suffolk University, has had her work shown at the Boston
MFA, the Currier Museum, the Fuller Museum, and the Cape Ann Museum, which
recently acquired three pieces for their permanent collection.
Patrick Doud is a strong, prolific poet and author, who has already published several
books of poetry and two books of fantasy. His published books of poetry are Girding the
Ghost, The Man in Green, and Hickory Bardolino Poems. In June 2010, he published his
first entry in his series The Winnitok Tales titled The Hunt for the Eye of Ogin. In less
than a year, Doud had already published his second entry to the series, The Mornith War.
For over a year, these two local artists have shared their work with one another to create a
collaborative presentation that truly displays the literary and artistic talent that Gloucester
has to offer.
The Gloucester Writers Center is a working writers center in a working town. It was
founded in 2010 to save the late poet Vincent Ferrini’s home and turn it into a working
writer’s center. Its mission is to preserve, promote, and celebrate Cape Ann’s rich literary
legacy and to encourage writing and the belief that all voices count.
For more information about this event and upcoming events from the Gloucester Writers
Center, please visit gloucesterwriters.org or visit us at 126 East Main Street, Gloucester,
MA 01930.
Winter Storm Warning!!!
Gale Warning
Storm Warning further south / East
Tue: N winds 10 to 15 kt. Gusts up to 20 kt in the morning. Seas 2 to 3 ft. A chance of snow.
Tue Night: NE winds 20 to 25 kt with gusts up to 30 kt… Becoming N 25 to 30 kt with gusts up to 40 kt after midnight. Seas 5 to 8 ft. Light freezing spray likely. Snow likely. Vsby 1 nm or less.
To view more about Clark and his book Waltzing With Lady Luck
check out the web page-Â https://www.facebook.com/WaltzingwithLadyLuck
“Life’s most persistent and urgent question is, ‘What are you doing for others?’”
Martin Luther King, Jr. (1929 – 1968)
A native of Atlanta and the son of a preacher, King developed a non-violent response to racism that was heavily influenced by Tolstoy, Thoreau, Niebuhr, and especially Gandhi. His doctoral thesis (at Boston University) was on the writings of Paul Tillich. Though he was a Baptist, the American Friends Service Committee, a Quaker organization, made it possible for him to visit India to further his studies in 1959. A leader of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, he was a key player in the Montgomery Bus Boycott, the Selma protests and the 1963 March on Washington, at which he delivered his iconic “I Have a Dream” speech. Though he was the target of FBI investigations for his anti-segregation work and anti-Vietnam War position, he received the Nobel Peace Prize in 1964. He was assassinated while in Memphis supporting a black sanitation workers strike. Just days later Congress passed the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1968 which, among other advances, prohibited discrimination in housing based on race, religion, or national origin. He was posthumously awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by Jimmy Carter in 1977.
A picture speaks a thousand words ~
Ira Wilmer (Will) Counts Jr. was a photographer best known in Arkansas for his photographs during the 1957 desegregation of Central High School in Little Rock. His photographs have been widely recognized as among the most memorable of the twentieth century.