Tag: Halibut Point
Ice forming in the quarries at Halibut Point
Gloucester Smiles-1371 with Visitors
Gloucester Smiles-1365
Gloucester Smiles-1364
Visitors from Tampa Florida and California
Visitors from Florida and Beverly Mass
Visiting Halibut Point from IN, NY, and Denmark
A Good Old Walk Through Halibut Point
Just doesn’t get old.
Tourist from Mississippi
Halibut Point Color
The Latest Guster Video Directed by Chad Carlberg, Shot at Halibut Point:
Jonathan Cahill forwards The Latest Guster Video
Hey Joey C,
Directed by Chad Carlberg, shot at Halibut Point:
Plants love a rainy foggy Summer Solstice
Bowl or Floor?
Don’t get me wrong. Β I grew up at the awesome Ground Round in Danvers where you could watch little film strip movies, play games, and chuck peanut shells and popcorn all over the floor. It was fantastic.
Fast forward, however, to now….and to Halibut Point Restaurant.
I love it there. Β I’m all for a quick meal and a beer sitting at the bar talking with Jack. I’m also not afraid to dive into the basket of peanuts that is inevitably placed directly in front of me. Β I do, however, while snacking….place my shells in the extremely convenient glass bowl that is ALWAYS strategically placed in close proximity to the peanuts themselves. Β What I don’t doΒ is channel my inner 7 year old….and chuck the shells all over the floor.
So, that being the case, I was a little surprised to watch someone eating peanuts and throwing the shells with reckless abandon…this way and that…all over the floor last night (that may be aΒ slightΒ exaggeration).
So, I ask you… If and when you happen to dine at Halibut Point…do you use the bowl or do you chuck shells on the floor? Β Be honest.
What to Feed the Robins
The robins in our community have several different habitsΒ for surviving winter. There areΒ year round resident robins that breed throughout Cape Ann during warmer months and also spend the winter here. Β A second group only breeds in our region, then migrates further south during the winter months. A third group, the robins that we see flocking to our shores beginning round about January 28th, are migrating from parts furtherΒ north. They are very hungryΒ and are looking for berries, fruit, and small fish.
In early spring, robins begin to disperse from flocks. The ground thawsΒ andΒ worms, insects, and snails once again become part of the robinβs diet. Spring, too,Β is when we begin to hear the beautifulΒ liquid notes of the male robin. He is singing to attract a mate. The robinβsΒ song is one of theΒ of most beloved and it is his musicΒ with whichΒ we associate the coming of spring.
With several edits and updates since I first wrote the following article, I think youβll find the informationΒ helpful in knowing what to feed and to plant for the robins.
Flock of American Robins Eating Sumac, Halibut Point Rockport
Food for theΒ American Robin
During the winter months Cape Ann often becomes home to large flocks of robins, and we have had the joy of hosting numerous numbers in our garden. I canβt help but notice their arrival. Their shadows descend, crisscrossing the window light, followed by a wild rumpus in the βDragon Ladyβ hollies.Β This pair of hollies is planted on opposing sides of the garden path, alongside my home office. I have learned to stealthily sneak up to a window, as any sudden activity inside startles birds that are investigating our garden, and they quickly disperse. Dining not only on berries of the βDragon Ladiesβ, but also the βBlue Princessβ Meserve holly and winterberry bushes, I find dozens of noisy, hungry robins.
These winter nomads flock to trees and shrubs that hold their fruit through January and February, feasting on red cedar, American holly, Meserve hollies, chokecherries, crabapples, sumac, and juniper. Robins traveling along the shores of Cape Ann also comb the shoreline for mollusks, and go belly-deep for fish fry. Depleting their food supply, they move onto the next location. Gardens rife with fruiting shrubs and trees make an ideal destination for our migrating friends.
YearΒ round resident robinsΒ will call your garden homeΒ when provided withΒ trays of chopped fruit and raisins, supplementedΒ with meal worms.
What to Plant for Robins
The garden designed to attract nesting pairs of summer resident robins, as well as flocks ofΒ winter travelers, would be comprised of trees and shrubs for nest building, plants that bear fruit and berries that are edible during the summer and fall, and plants that bear fruits that persist through the winter months. Suburban gardens and agricultural areas provide the ideal habitat, with open fields and lawns for foraging insects as well as trees and hedgerows in which to build their nests.
The following plants, suggested with robins in mind, will also attract legions of songbirds and Lepidoptera. The list is comprised primarily of indigenous species with a few non-native, but not invasive, plants included.
Trees for nesting ~ American Holly (Ilex opaca), Eastern Red Cedar (Juniperus virginiana), Red Maple (Acer rubrum), Sugar Maple (Acer saccharum), Flowering Dogwood (Cornus florida).
Summer and autumn fruit bearing trees, shrubs and vines for robins ~ Black Cherry (Prunus serotina), Blackberry (Rubus spp.),Β Flowering Dogwood (Cornus florida), Gray DogwoodΒ (C. racemosa), Red-osier Dogwood (C. sericea), Silky Dogwood (C. amomum), Elderberry (Sambucus canadensis), Apple (Malus pumila), Virginia RoseΒ (Rosa virginiana), Highbush Blueberry (Vaccinium corymbosum), Lowbush Blueberry (Vaccinium angustifolium), Wild Grape (Vitis spp.).
Trees and shrubs with fruits persisting through winter ~ Winterberry (Ilex verticillata), Mountain Ash (Sorbus americana), Crabapple (Malus spp.),Β Sargentβs Crabapple (Malus sargentii), American Holly (Ilex opaca), Meserve Hollies (IlexΒ xΒ meserveae), Eastern Red Cedar (Juniperus virginiana), Common Juniper (Juniperus communis), Chokecherry (Prunus virginiana), Smooth Sumac (Rhus glabra), Staghorn Sumac (Rhus typhina).
This is Not a Bee


iPhone 5s iOS8
Destination Gloucester….celebrity run in.
As if some steamers and a good drink at Halibut Point with a great friend isn’t excellent enough….last night I happened across a wonderful party of about 20 diners out to celebrate a wedding of dear friends. Β While we didn’t chat long, the happiness exuding from their large table was palpable and I was so happy to have had the chance to meet them.
The fact that I met them at all stemmed from the fact that some of the younger-than-me wait staff recognized one of the guests as a very handsome actor. Doing my due diligence as a GMG contributor (who happened to be wearing my GMG baseball hat…go figure) I introduced myself and got a bit of the scoop.
Yanic Triesdale, a Canadian actor, also adored in the United States as Michael on The Gilmore GirlsΒ in addition to other series and mini-series, is in town to celebrate the destination wedding of dear friends Isabelle Lafleche and very soon-to-be-husband, Patrice. Β While, maybe not as recognizable in person to those dining at Halibut, Isabelle is the fantastic, and incredibly beautiful, author of the novels J’Adore New York and J’Adore Paris. Β I can’t get to Barnes and Nobles fast enough. Β She also happens, as it turns out, to be good friends with GMG’s own, Kim Smith.
They were completely charming and talking with them made me smile. Β I was, for the record, incredibly happy to learn that my own dear friend, while recognizing that I was mildly intruding on a rehearsal dinner of sorts, bought the table a couple of bottles of wine in thanks for humoring me.
Excellent examples of friendship on both sides of my iPhone last night.
Cheers to friendship….mine, Kim’s, everyone’s. Β Cheers to Isabelle and Patrice on a glorious wedding and a lifetime of happiness. How special that they chose Rockport, of all places, to seal the deal.
Halibut Point Buffalo Chicken Sandwich Is No Joke
GloucesterCast With Toby Pett and Joey Ciaramitaro Taped 4/19/14
GloucesterCast With Toby PettΒ and Joey Ciaramitaro Taped 4/19/14
Subscribe to The GloucesterCast Podcast by Email
Topics Include: Gloucester MA, 01930, What up Homie?, Β Jim Casey, Lighten Up Francis, Toby Pett, Chamber License Plate, Bringing GMG Back Old School, Passports Wine Dinner, Killer Cheeses, Sidewalk Sweeping Day, Carry In/ Carry Out, Patti Amaral, 40 Barrels?, Masspirg, Effort To Get 5 Cent Deposit On Water and Juice Bottles, Big Mike’s Bikes, Getting Around Gloucester Via Bike and Water Taxi, Toby’s List of the Best Bartenders In Gloucester, Stoli O Tonic, Lime Shortage, Gene Silviera, Erika Baert, Ellen Tasker, Molly Marks, Halibut Point, Jack Muniz, Jamie Verga, Lobsta Land