My View of Life on the Dock
Hi Joey,
Thanks so much. I love your blog!
After taking a course at the Maine Media Workshops in Rockport, we came to Gloucester to spend a few days. My husband and I went walking around 5:30am one morning this summer and shot some pictures. One was the Cape Pond Ice house, the basis for the attached painting.
Cheers,
Pat Meier-Johnson
Pat contacted me a couple of days ago asking me what I could tell her about the Ice Company-
Hi Joey,
We visited Gloucester this summer and I am working on an oil painting that features the huge ice building on docks. What can you tell me about it? Would you like me to send you an image of my painting when it’s done?
Pat
Rather than write out a long explanation I just did a search in the GMG search box in the right hand column of the blog and forwarded her the link (there’s probably 60-70 Cape Pond Ice Features We’ve done on Cape Pond Ice, some very interesting videos as well-
Click to View the Breathtaking Slide show
Gloucester Youth Leadership Council is now recruiting. Applications will be accepted online https://docs.google.com/spreadsheet/viewform?formkey=dG1sS21tY2VacVBINXZWWWZKeHQyVGc6MQ or on paper until 11/9/2012. For more information contact:
Caitlin Kreitman
Healthy Gloucester Collaborative
Youth Coordinator
978-491-9052
Facebook.com/HealthyGloucesterCollaborative
Aria McElhenny writes-
Hi Joey, Frankie and Ryan,
As the weather starts to get chilly, here at Next Step we all start thinking about one thing: bikini & speedo dodgeball.
Thought you guys and the 2012 tournament participants might like a reminder of how their hard work raising funds at the tourney had an amazing impact on teens with cancer. The video below is from our summer youth conference for teen cancer survivors. These youth spent four days together learning how to manage their disease, laughing, riding a zip line and sharing their stories. The music in the video is an original song written by the youth and recorded at the conference.
Way to go dodge-ballers, you changed a lot of lives this year.
Thanks again from all of us at Next Step,
Aria McElhenny
Development Director
Like us on Facebook! www.facebook.com/NextStepFund
The Next Step Fund
For Young People With Cancer and Blood Disease
www.nextstepnet.org
For those new to GMG here is a recap of the Tourney from Craig Kimberley-
To Learn More About The Sargent House Click This Text For The Website
Barb Silberman and Judith Nast Show GMG Readers What’s Up At The House On The Hill
To Learn More About The Sargent House Click This Text For The Website
Judith Sargent Murray’s Writing Closet and Concealment Shoes Found In The House
The on-line system that sells advanced tickets and takes credit cards will be turned off at noon on tomorrow (Thursday). Just because it’s a benefit doesn’t mean you have to pay full price. So click here and get cheaper tickets now. Or just show up at the Gloucester House and pay $15 cash at the door. Either way, you won’t want to miss this concert. You’ll be among the first to hear some of Jim Odgren‘s newest music. Here’s what said in a recent email, The band is sounding terrific. Lots of songs from “Day Dreaming” as well as our cd that is as yet unreleased. And some additional songs in the same genre.
While Vickie was complaining yesterday about people who wait until the last minute to announce their live music lineup, and then forget to tell us at gimmesound.com, which, BTW, is the ONLY complete live music listing for Gloucester & Cape Ann in ANY MEDIUM — meaning that if you’re not listed, you’re not getting the word out, which it’s your own fault ’cause it’s free … anyhow I digress.
While she was getting gimmesound up to date, I was at a meeting with Peter Jenner, who happens to be Chair of the School of Hospitality Management at Endicott College, and he invited me to a reception at their new digs at 33 Commercial St. later in the day where Endicott’s arts profs & deans were going to hobnob with people from Gloucester’s arts scene, the whole shebang being dubbed Arts Endicott meets Arts Gloucester — in a word: OUTREACH.
While I was there, I posted a live photo from the event (see here). I met some interesting people, saw people I knew, drank wine, ate hors d’oeuvres, listened to a short, concise and interesting presentation and saw a dance performance — all very well put together. But here’s what really struck me. These people are truly interested in immersing themselves into Gloucester’s culture. They see the entire city — and everyone in it — as their partners. This is far more significant than the fact Endicott is offering degree programs in Gloucester (see this post), which is pretty big in and of itself.
So if you didn’t go last night (I almost didn’t) I recommend that you contact somebody at Endicott that is teaching in the field you work in every day and tell them what you do. This isn’t only for people in the arts — it’s everything — literally. Check out their website here.
As I said in this post, “Becoming a college town is likely to be the best thing that has happened to Gloucester this century.” And I’m not exaggerating.
Heres your first view of downtown from the second section of the turbine erection via Steve Spencer

Only On GMG Baby! Stay tuned for your insider pics, much more to come!

Panorama Time!

Fred Bodin writes-
Saturday night I had a visit from these wonderful women, all from Cambridge and the North Shore. L-R: Lauren (granddaughter from Reading), Elaine (daughter hailing from Newburyport), Jean Ann (the Mom, from Lynnfield), Lynn (daughter on Rocky Neck), and Charlene (daughter in Cambridge). When I asked them to gather for a photo, they spontaneously picked up Jack Sullivan’s 48" gold leafed Cod. So Gloucester! They’re now friends of GMG and you’ll see them at my gallery events.

I wish to thank Donny and Matt for letting me have some fun in the crane. It was very cool.
From the depths of the Rockport Middle School Drama Dept. under Mr. Keith McCarthy, director, rises the brilliant and hilarious and mesmerizing masterpiece by John Heimpuch.
FOB Deb Schradieck was returning from a trip to FL and saw this car parked in the Logan Express parking lot. She said it immediately made her think of GMG. Didn’t I hear that Paul was away? Does anyone think this might be his car? If it is, I think he’s asking for a smash and grab with all those ducks lined up on the dashboard like that. If it isn’t, I think Paul and whoever does own this car need to meet.
E.J. Lefavour
I am often asked about the Banded Wooly Bear caterpillar and questions range from, “Why am I seeing a Monarch caterpillar in the fall” (the Wooly Bear is not a Monarch caterpillar) to “how will the Wooly Bear survive the winter?”
The Wooly Bear caterpillar is the larva stage of the Isabella Tiger Moth. They are typically seen in autumn as they search for a place to curl up for the winter–under a rock, log or leaf debris or in the chinks of bark. The heavy coats of members of the Acrtiid family of moths help them overwinter, along with their ability to produce a natural sort of antifreeze called cryoprotectant.
Banded Wooly Bear Caterpillar (Pyrrharctia isabella)
The following spring, the caterpillars emerge from their winter nap, begin to feed, form a cocoon (pupate) and emerge as the adult form of the Isabella Tiger Moth. Female Isabella Tiger Moths deposit their eggs on a wide variety of plants including birch, elm, maples, asters, sunflowers, spinach, cabbage, grass, and plantain; all caterpillar food plants. In our region there are usually several generations per year and it is the last generation of the growing season that over winters, nestled in, well-hidden and wrapped in their furry coats.
Fun fact from wiki: Caterpillars normally become moths within months of hatching in most temperate climates, but in the Arctic the summer period for vegetative growth and hence feeding is so short that the Woolly Bear feeds for several summers, freezing again each winter before finally pupating. Some are known to live through as many as 14 winters.
Isabella Tiger Moth (Pyrrharctia isabella)
Isabella Tiger Moth image Courtesy wiki
What you are looking at is a mirage.
This isn’t really happening because as we all know Marine Industrial Activity and Non-Marine Industrial Activity Can’t Co-exist. You can’t have all this marine industrial activity and loud cranes operating right in front of the area where people are eating their lunch on an open air deck. That’s just preposterous!!!
What’s Next? Dogs and Cats Living Together?
From Ghostbusters-
Dr. Peter Venkman: This city is headed for a disaster of biblical proportions.
Mayor: What do you mean, “biblical”?
Dr Ray Stantz: What he means is Old Testament, Mr. Mayor, real wrath of God type stuff.
Dr. Peter Venkman: Exactly.
Dr Ray Stantz: Fire and brimstone coming down from the skies! Rivers and seas boiling!
Dr. Egon Spengler: Forty years of darkness! Earthquakes, volcanoes…
Winston Zeddemore: The dead rising from the grave!
Dr. Peter Venkman: Human sacrifice, dogs and cats living together… mass hysteria!
Mayor: All right, all right! I get the point!
Click for larger view-
BTW, that Fishing boat in the left of the frame? Must have also been photoshopped, you can’t have fishing oats tied up at places where there are open air-restaurants. No-way- No how! Photoshopped or mirage- you make the call.