Double Claw Lobster, originally uploaded by captjoe06.
My View of Life on the Dock
Double Claw Lobster, originally uploaded by captjoe06.
Another freak lobster. Claw growing out of a claw. Funny how last year when I posted the picture of the half blue lobster some people had accused me of photoshopping it. Nope, that’s the way it is growing for real.
I wonder if there are the same ratio of mutations in humans but we just don’t hear about them?
Double Claw Lobster, originally uploaded by captjoe06.
This Baby Dogfish came up in a tote of lobsters the day before yesterday. How it got in with the lobsters I have no idea.
Baby Dogfish, originally uploaded by captjoe06.
Here is a picture of a baby dogfish. When we used to handle fish, many times the big female dogfish sharks would spill four or five of these baby dogfish out of her belly when we were dumping them into the big vats used to transport the fish to the processors. They all had these amniotic sacs attached to them.
This particular dogfish was mixed in with a tote of lobsters that came in. It brought back memories of those summers when we used to fill trailer loads full of dogfish every day right through the summer and into the fall.
Baby Dogfish, originally uploaded by captjoe06.
Here is the lobster claw growing in place of its old one from the underside of the lobster. You can see by the size of it’s other claw it has a long way to go to catch up.
Lobster Claw Regeneration Pictures, originally uploaded by captjoe06.
Congratulations to six local artists who have been awarded $9,000 from the Society for the Encouragement of the Arts to create site-specific projects based on Cape Ann ’s literary history. seARTS co-jurors – Susan Erony and Henry Ferrini were extremely pleased with the applicant pool which embraced the subject matter with enthusiasm. All but one project are using work of Vincent Ferrini –though in very different ways – evidence of his tremendous and lasting impact on the community. Each artist will show their work in collaboration with a local business. Some artists have already engaged a business partner but there are several still searching for the right match for their project. seARTS welcomes inquiries from interested business collaborators in any of the projects below that indicate partner/location to be determined. Business partners must be in downtown Gloucester or on the waterfront. The projects will be presented at an opening reception in October.
The recipients and partners are as follows:
Mark Teiwes, ( Beverly ): – Partner – Captain Joe & Sons, E. Gloucester . Multimedia project on State Fish Pier
Mark will present a series of exterior diptychs combining documentary portraits of harbor-side workers inspired by Vincent Ferrini’s poem, At the Brink. Teiwes will focus on the strength, struggle and dignity of workers. The diptychs will be on exterior walls of fish pier businesses. An online audio slide show component will consist of the subjects of the portraits reading At the Brink. Mark has also offered to run a community photo workshop on night photography and environmental portraits.
Willie Alexander, ( Gloucester ) – Partner on Main Street to be determined
Willie will produce a recorded singing of Ferrini’s poems over minimal musical accompaniment to be inserted into a soundtrack to be played on Main Street . There will be a live performance at the opening.
Susan Frey and Reverend Richard Emmanuel: ( Gloucester ) – Partner – Building Center- Gloucester
Susan and Rev. Emmanual will design and construct a Steele, an upright monument with text, using Ferrini’s poem, This House. They will be using scrap wood from the lumber yard and the sculpture will be in the corner of the parking lot near the Visitor’s booth. The sculpture will be 8x8x18’.
Martin Ray: ( Gloucester ) Building Center and other location to be determined.
Martin will create granite portraits of Olson and Ferrini on the grounds of the FHL house. The installation includes two foot tall granite carved “beach pebbles” inlaid with bronze and copper. These will be accompanied by bronze plaques with biographical and interpretive text.
Emily Sinagra: ( Gloucester ) – Partner and location to be determined
Emily will develop a theatrical performance based on The Wharf Rat’s Tale by R. Barry Fisher to be performed in nontraditional spaces. The story is about life on the waterfront during the Depression. The ensemble piece will continue beyond grant period. Emily would like to use local youth as the actors.
Ian McColl: ( Gloucester ) Dogtown Books windows and other locations to be determined.
Ian will produce a Shadow play production of Ferrini’s Telling of the North Star with expanded visual imagery and an original score. The opening performance will be in the window of Dogtown Books, visible and audible from the street.
The Partner with an Artist Program has evolved over the last 3 years with increasing interest and new thinking from artist applicants. This year, sixteen proposals were judged on quality and clarity of the project idea; inclusion of relevant literary texts in the conception or manifestation of the project; innovative adaptation/expansion of the artists’ work to meet the criteria of the grant; a willingness and ability to be site-specific in the project proposal; and merit of previous work.
The Partner with an Artist (PWA) program is funded by seARTS and through grants from the Massachusetts Cultural Council John and Abigail Adams Art Program and the Boston Foundation Bruce J. Anderson Fund. For more information about seARTS, contact Sara Young, Executive Director ed@searts.org or visit www.searts.org .
The lovely Miss Jana Winter just called to inform me that she was not in fact “blowing smoke up may ass”
(apparently she has been following along the Marie Claire posting and comments from earlier today)
She went on further to say that she was going to do a positive story on Gloucester, not because it’s a noble thing to do or an act of kindness, but because as a journalist, it’s what she believes and what she gets paid to do- To report on what she experiences.
And what she has experienced while she was here has been fantastic.
She went to Passports last night and got the lobster, BTW.
I mean how could you go wrong there, right? Especially with Captain Joe & Sons lobster on your plate!
We Rock!
Here’s another freaky crustacean to add to our collection of pics.
Look for us in the November issue of British Glamour.
Good Times In The Shoot For British Glamour, originally uploaded by captjoe06.
British Glamour Photoshoot, originally uploaded by captjoe06.
Look for us in the November issue of British Glamour.
It’s rare that a lobster will be landed, sit in our tanks over night and then in the morning go into the molting process.
It happened this morning and I captured it in pictures and video. It will take a bit to upload but look for it later.
Captain Joe’s and State Fish Pier from GMHC, originally uploaded by captjoe06.
Winter Down The Dock, originally uploaded by captjoe06.
Lobsters slow down, boats sit idle.
The unloading strap awaits the next landing.