
Summer beach weekend

My View of Life on the Dock

Tranquility…

Hi Joe –
Is there any chance that you could put a notice on Good Morning Gloucester that the SVDP clothes closet will be reopening this Saturday, June 4 in the basement of St. Ann Church (no longer in St. Ann School) . The closet will be open on the first and third Saturday of every month from 9AM to 12noon. Entrance to the closet will be through the door on Smith Street. We look forward to warmly welcoming all our friends back. It has been a long time since we closed due to the pandemic.
Thanks, Joe, for your help. Sorry for the late notice. If you have any questions, just email me back. You are welcome to come for a visit!!
Jeanne Smith


Turn off your wifi if more than one person in your house is voting because it is isp restricted
Each round ends at 9AM the following day except the championship round which will end on the 5th at 9:05AM so we can livestream the results.
The Champion from the online readers voting will receive the Jeanne Cup.
The final four will also be visited by a GMG panel and have a separate Judges vote for a different prize that will be announced at a later date.
If you subscribe to the blog you won’t miss the results-

What beautiful craftsmanship on the Polaris. It totally caught my eye the other day.




















It was one of those days when there was a haze coming off the water as well as some fog lingering in the air in mysterious ways. There were several vessels fishing or heading out near the breakwater even though the water was pretty choppy. The vessels included My Girls II, Clean Sweep, Lady Dee, Joy Frances, First Impression II, Miss Rebecka, Whitney & Ashley, Bay Drifter and Michael D.







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What a beautiful street scene.
Available as a print contact me at goodmorninggloucester@yahoo.com

Meet Mom Muffin and her calf Flower at Appleton Farms.

GMG Jim Dalpiaz performs “Taps” at the site of the World War II memorial on the boulevard to honor the sacrifices made by our military.






photos: Poppies bloomed before lilacs in Gloucester, Ma. 2022 (Salt Island Road, Eastern Ave., elsewhere)
I wrote about the poet and his poem, In Flanders Field, in prior posts. Republishing excerpts with links:
“Veteran of the Boer War and WWI, a teacher, and doctor, Canadian John McCrae wrote In Flanders Fields in the spring of 1915 while still at the bloody battlefront in Ypres, Belgium, in an area known as Flanders. The Germans had already used deadly gas. Dr. McCrae had been tending to hundreds of wounded daily. He described the nightmare slaughter: “behind it all was the constant background of the sights of the dead, the wounded, the maimed.” By this time he had already devoted his life to art and healing. He couldn’t save his friends. How could anyone?
Twenty years prior, he sketched poppies during his medical residency in Maryland. He published poems and stories by the time he was 16. I’m not surprised he noticed the brilliant fragile petals and horror. He wrote for those who couldn’t speak and those who had to see.
Meningitis and pneumonia killed him January 1918 after several months battling asthma and bronchitis. His poem and the emblematic poppy continue to inspire and comfort…”
Catherine Ryan, see 2016 GMG
“In Flanders Fields was penned by Lieut. Col. John M. McCrae, Canadian physician and soldier, during the First World War, following the first German chemical attack, early spring 1916, Second Battle of Ypres. Bonescattered, torn and trampled fields germinated scarlet poppies and so many, many simple white crosses.
The fallen went from war to peace.
In Flanders Fields was first published in London Punch December 1915. By March 1916, American newspapers carried the poem ( including Norwich Bulletin, and KY Citizen, June, 1916)
McCrae died in France in 1918, and there rests in peace and vitality.
The common poppies sway by design, are tall and reaching; their architecture flings the seeds further and their flowers appear to open and close, intermittent as firecracker displays. (Individual flowers bloom for (mostly) a day, but the one plant will produce hundreds of flowers over the season.) The large translucent blooms indeed blow, glow and grow. Those adjectives in the first line opener of McCrae’s poem have swapped around in different versions. “Blow” it is.”
Catherine Ryan see June 2021 GMG


I’ll be spending the next several days sailing Penobscot Bay with Finn on his class trip aboard the Schooner Mary Day. Thanks, Harborlight Montessori for making this happen.
















Freedom isn’t free…
