The Finale Strokes and Celebration with a Cheering Crowd
Mystery Train Records
Finally breaking through the half-way point on my list of second-hand stores in Gloucester, today we look at another specialized store: Mystery Train Records (21 Main St., open 10-7 daily), which sells “rare and collectible vinyl recordings from every genre of music”. They also sell used CDs and DVDs.
As you can see from the photo, the store is located near the western end of Main Street (close to the main venues of Fiesta!) and shares the building with Cape Ann Cinema. I have been in the store a couple of times, but every time I walk in I am impressed by the size of the store and the shear volume of their inventory (pun intended)!
Apparently customers travel from miles around to come here, as stores of this sort aren’t all that common. They also sell on eBay.
Of course, to be able to use the vinyl records, you need to have a record player. If you don’t still have one in your house from before the dominance of CD’s and MP3s, but are longing for that classic sound, you are not without recourse. Mystery Train usually has a few in stock (new or used), and you can also buy them on-line.
St Peter’s Fiesta – Award Winners
Rotary Traffic–Coming and Going
St Peter’s Fiesta – Saturday Evening on Main Street
Submitted by Fred Bodin
Jalapenos Restaurant had a big line tonight waiting to get in. They do a fantastic job, and I’m grateful to be next door to them (on the left). So far, we’ve had a good weekend too.
St Peter’s Fiesta – The Parade – Homage to St Peter
Community Stuff 7/1/13
Sunday Greasy Pole Winner – Nicky Avelis
Good Morning Gloucester 2013 Saint Peter’s Fiesta Coverage
Could not be prouder of our team who once again just absolutely crushed it with this year’s Fiesta coverage.
You can forward this comprehensive Fiesta Coverage list to your friends and relatives who might have missed out on the fun.
Thanks for watching and thanks to our awesome team!
Good Morning!
If this picture doesn’t give you wood you’re a despicable human being and I don’t want to know you.
It’s Coming! Tick Tock Tick Tock Tick Tock
Just In From Gina Lampassi- Womens Seine Boat Race Eliminations To Be Held This Sunday at 1PM
Junior Women’s Seine Boat Vine From John McElhenny
Putting the finishng touches on the altar
Getting Ready For The Big Day!
Junior Girls Seine Boats
St. Peter’s Novena 2013 photos by Anthony Marks
St Peter’s Fiesta – The Set Up
This Is What Happens When You Row Seine Boats- From AmandaCakes
St Peter’s – Special People Start Fiesta
St Peter’s Fiesta Eve Comments From Gloucester Chief Of Police Leonard Campanello
Viva
Seine Boat Practice 2013
The workers are getting it done
St Peter’s Fiesta–Dedication 2013
Let The Fiesta Begin
Fiesta 2013
Wednesday the start of Fiesta 2013
2013 Fiesta..Wednesday From David Cox
2013 Saint Peter’s Fiesta Wednesday! From Thom Falzarano
2013 Saint Peter’s Fiesta Schedule Of Events
2013 St Peter’s Fiesta–5 K Race Start
Early Boats Get The Best Spots Photo by Anthony Marks
Fiesta on Thursday From Fred Bodin
2013 Greasy Pole Webcam Up And Running #Fiesta Baby!
FOR THOSE THAT JUST DON’T KNOW… IT’S DA GREASY POLE!!!!
2013 Fiesta Thursday Photos From David Cox
Joe Balbo and Joanne Frontiero’ Junior Girls Seine Boat Crew Xtra-Ordinary Eagerly Awaits Their Race
Live Fiesta Update From Kim Smith: Women’s Seine Boat Upset Rogue Wins!!!!
Fox 25 Live Chopper Video Streaming Of The 2013 Greasy Pole
Live Blogging- Junior Womens Seine Boat Race Underway- Vine From Kim Smith
Live Blogging Friday 2013 St Peters Fiesta From Peter and Vickie Van Ness
Video- Kyle Barry 2013 Greasy Pole Friday Winning Walk!
Junior Girls Seine Boat Crew Photos From Sista Felicia and Donna Ardizzoni
St Peter’s Fiesta – Marilyn Munroe enjoys Opening Ceremonies
Photos and video interview with Kyle Barry – Your Friday 2013 Greasy Pole Champion!!
Fiesta Faces in the Crowd
Friday’s Fiesta Fun
Live Blogging: Greasy Pole @ The Godfather’s Shangri-La Sat. 2013 Begins!
Live At Pavilion Beach From Kim Smith
Live Blogging: Zack Allen – Your 2013 Saturday Greasy Pole Champion!
Now that is a Fiesta Hat
2013 Greasy Pole Champ Zach Allen Grabbing The Flag Photos From Lowell Peabody
Girls Jr Seine Boat Races
Saturday 2013 Saint Peter’s Fiesta- Seine Boats Photos From Lowell Peabody
What a day on Saturday
2013 Saturday Greasy Pole Champion Walker – ZACK ALLEN!
2013 Saturday Greasy Pole Champ Zach Allen’s Winning Greasy Pole Walk Filmed By Kim Smith
Mass and the Procession
St Peter’s Fiesta – Fire. Police Dept. and Coast Guard Race
Greasy Pole Saturday Winner Zach Allen in Action
Live from the Greasy pole: Your Sunday Champ-Nicky Avelis!!!
Live Party’n from The Greasy Pole
Fiesta Wrap Up From Gloucester Ma Chief Of Police Leonard Campanello
Fiesta Hat Ladies In The Hizzouse!
Live from the Greasy pole: Your Sunday Champ-Nicky Avelis!!!
Good Morning Gloucester 2013 Saint Peter’s Fiesta Coverage
Sunday Greasy Pole Winner – Nicky Avelis
St Peter’s Fiesta – The Parade – Homage to St Peter
St Peter’s Fiesta – Saturday Evening on Main Street
St Peter’s Fiesta – Award Winners
St Peter’s Fiesta – Seine Boat Race – Final Strokes
Fiesta…Friday Evening
Beautiful Sunday Mass and St. Peter’s Procession
Fiesta..,Friday Sports at beach.
Fiesta Photos From Michael Miller
Standers vs Sitters On Pavilion Beach. Is There really any debate on this one?
Some of the Thrills & Spills of Sunday
St Peter’s Fiesta–5K Racers (Pre & Post Race) Faces
Prospect St. Rooftop
What a Fiesta
St. Peter’s Fiesta on Cape Ann TV TONIGHT Starting at 5
Fiesta..Saturday
Greg Cook Fiesta Photos At THEARTERY ON WBUR
Video – 2013 Sunday Greasy Pole Walking for Loved Ones and Former Champs
Countdown to Victory Sunday Final
What’s The Right Amount To Tip When You Get Takeout At A Sit Down Restaurant?
I’m always confounded at what I should leave for the person that takes my order when I place it over the phone at a sit down dinner place.
It’s not like they are waiting on you and serving you drinks. they’re basically taking the order over the phone, bagging it up from the kitchen and giving you change.
You gotta leave something, right? But not 20%, right? It’s always awkward.
How do you handle it?
Live from the Greasy pole: Your Sunday Champ-Nicky Avelis!!!
Live Party’n from The Greasy Pole
Fiesta Wrap Up From Gloucester Ma Chief Of Police Leonard Campanello
Hi Joey,
Buona Fiesta!! I am so happy to have celebrated St. Peters Fiesta with the citizens of Gloucester and met so many of your readers and thank them for their wonderful comments and support of the Police Department.
Over all, I think we had wonderful cooperation from the vast majority of people at the Fiesta and the establishments in the City. We had a low number of arrests for the very specific reasons that I outlined before the Fiesta. We were not going to tolerate any one who decides to become a disruptive influence on an otherwise enjoyable and fun family event. And as I said, the overwhelming majority of people respected this. In fact, as of today, we had only 17 Fiesta related arrests and they were misdemeanors. My office has thus far received no reports of injuries as a result of the arrests and disruptive behavior and I credit the City’s police officers, as well as the great support we received from the Essex Sheriff’s Department and the Massachusetts State Police. I cannot thank the majority of Gloucester residents enough for their cooperation and respectfulness throughout Fiesta. I think it also important to thank the City Administration, especially Mayor Carolyn Kirk, who was present throughout the Fiesta and often checked in with me to ensure my first Fiesta had the support of the City. The support of Mayor Kirk had a lot to do with the safe and enjoyable atmosphere of this years’ Fiesta celebration.
Some of your readers may have a concern about the deployment of K9 ‘s and their handlers at closing times. I can tell you that I am evaluating that response with the input I have heard from my officers, establishment owners, and citizens I have heard of. I would also like to ask your reader to call me directly if they have a concern. There is perspective in every police matter, especially when managing a crowd of thousands across several establishments who may have been consuming alcohol, and sometimes those perspectives can differ. I’m happy to discuss any issues the community has in working toward making next year’s Fiesta even safer and more enjoyable for all.
Again, let me say how much I was honored to have been a part of this event. As the Police Chief, I believe it was very successful and a safe event. As a person, I enjoyed it immensely and look forward to next year. It’s one of the reasons that Gloucester is such a special community.
Respectfully,
Leonard Campanello
Chief of Police
Go to http://www.goodmorninggloucester.com to subscribe to CBS Boston and North Shore Magazine Best Blog Award Winning Good Morning Gloucester
Fiesta Hat Ladies In The Hizzouse!
GMG Fiesta Video Production Truck Courtesy Thom Falzarano
OMG Look at our GMG filmingproduction truck" courtesy Thom No tripod attackers today!!! @Joey_C https://t.co/r3sVDmFeCa
— Kim Smith (@kimsmithdesigns) June 30, 2013
What a day on Saturday
Saturday at Fiesta, what a day, sunshine, rides, food and greasy pole.
Fiesta: Sunday Procession Video
Ocean Alliance on Operation Toxic Gulf
Posting from very rough seas today in the Gulf of Mexico, we bring you the third crew blog by Ocean Alliance campaign leader Iain Kerr: on-board The R/V Odyssey for Operation Toxic Gulf.
I spend a lot of time captaining a desk nowadays so it is good to be back at sea with old and new friends and one of my favorite species sperm whales.
I do feel very frustrated by the lack of interest in whales in the Gulf of Mexico after the 2010 oil disaster. I have pounded the streets contacting pretty much every funding body I know to keep the RV Odyssey at sea each summer collecting data and yet as we move farther from the event funding is getting harder to come by. What scares me here is the fact that we have a unique toxicological experiment going on in the Gulf and we need to grab every bit of data we can – from my perspective our team is running through a burning library grabbing whatever books we can before the fire (or the chemicals used to put it out) irreparably damage or destroy the books. This then leads to what drives me as an individual.
I am impressed again and again by the depth of human compassion how people rise to the challenge when a crisis occurs. When the Tsunami devastated the Indian Ocean over $14 billion was raised internationally. In 2010 $3.4 billion was raised for Haiti relief in a matter of months.
During the 86 days of the oil disaster in the Gulf of Mexico millions of people were riveted to the video feed of oil escaping into the Gulf. They seemed to become addicted to the live feed of an unfolding catastrophe. I thought that the Gulf spill would be a pivotal moment in humanity’s relationship with the oceans. You can imagine, then, how stunned I was when the leak was capped and people simply changed channels and tuned out. For Gulf species and residents, the potential long-term consequences of one of the largest oil spill’s and greatest release of dispersants ever to occur on this planet are unimaginable. But with the images gone, public concern seems to vanish.
It seems that unless people have a strong, tangible image on which to focus their compassion, we are not very good at staying involved. I fail to understand how our species can be so compassionate and yet, in the case of the Gulf — the ultimate case of ocean pollution — so naive. Because the oceans are down hill from everything and gravity never sleeps, everything ends up in the seas; yet it appears that without imagery of an unfolding catastrophe everyone assumes that the oceans can take all that we throw at them.
When our President Roger Payne founded Ocean Alliance in 1971 he did so with the goal in mind of setting up a ‘pathfinder’ organization that would tackle the difficult jobs and blaze a trail. Over the last 39 years (working with our partners around the world) we have succeeded on this front at many levels, but I remain deeply concerned by the way that ‘The tragedy of the Commons’ is being played out in the oceans. Roger said in a 1979 National Geographic article, “Pollution has replaced the harpoon as a mortal threat to whales, and in its way can be far more deadly.”
Since that time, Ocean Alliance has been focusing its efforts on documenting the levels and effects of ocean pollution on marine mammals, even though, given our limited resources, it would be hard to tackle a more difficult job. The news on ocean pollution turns out to be deeply disturbing. Despite evidence that ocean pollution is affecting our lives and those of our children, people don’t seem to get engaged, let alone enraged about its potential consequences for whales and humanity.
Please, be enraged and get engaged!
Thanks to the support of Sea Shepherd Conservation Society Global Ocean Alliance will continue to collect data in the Gulf of Mexico this year and, write scientific papers and inform educators, policy makers, and the general public on wiser stewardship of our irreplaceable oceans and their marine mammal populations, and on the links between healthy oceans and our own health.
We hope that you will join us on this journey and thank you for your support — Oceans Matter









