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Tag: Things to do
ALERT- INSANE WEEKEND PACKED WITH SHIT TO DO IN GLOUCESTER STARTING RIGHT NOW
This weekend is going to be absolutely retarded jam packed-
Today The Sidewalk Bazaar Begins
Farmers Market This afternoon
Tonight- Nights on the Neck -Rocky Neck
Friday and Saturday More Sidewalk Bazaar
Friday Night Art Haven 2 Year Celebration at Art Haven
Sunday- Gloucester Triathlon
Sunday Block Party Starting at 1:30PM
I’m sure I’m missing a ton but really now is there another community around having this much insanely fun things to do this weekend?
Right Here! Right Now! This Is The Place To Be!
You’re Invited! Art Haven Is Celebrating Two Years Open Friday Night
Director Dawn Gadow talks about all the happenings at Art Haven and especially Friday Night’s two year celebration!
Come Down To Art Haven Friday Night For The Open House Celebration And Feel The Positive Energy The Place Is Bursting With!
Gill Net Fisheries Event August 14th
We had the privilege to offload the Phyllis a at our dock in East Gloucester. The Arnold brothers are among the classiest men the fishing industry has ever seen.
On Saturday, August 14th from 10AM to 2PM at the Gloucester Marine Railways, Rocky Neck, we are celebrating the 100th anniversary of a group of fishermen from Charleviox, Michigan bringing gill net fishing to Gloucester and the whole East Coast.
They were called "the Michigan Bears" and the man who built the fishing vessel Phyllis A. was their leader.
The Phyllis A. is the oldest fishing boat in Gloucester Harbor (1 year older then Adventure) and she fished for the Arnold Family, out of Gloucester, for 75 years before becoming a museum ship over seen by the Phyllis A. Marine Association, a non-profit organization.
click the picture to view full sized
Barrence Whitfield Jamming With Willie Loco Alexander at GMHC August 7th
This is sure to be a fantastic event.
What I would like to point out and this banner is a classic example of graphic designers who design banners for poster flyers to go full page in coffee shops but not for the web. Just a few days ago I had this intraweb conversation about the frustration of posting flyers with tiny font with Jo Castano from http://www.artsgloucester.com/ and Kat Valentine from http://parlezmoiblog.blogspot.com/ who also will forward along community event fliers on their respective websites.
Maybe some graphc designers will read this and probably it should go into another post which I’ll get around to at some time. But for any people that design banners that will be viewed on the web please understand that the banner that you make to print out and go on walls of coffee shops with tiny font- that doesn’t translate too well to most blogs and web pages that are working with 500 pixels wide. Once your full sized poster gets shrunk down to 500 pixels wide it’s pretty much illegible. If your intent is to get your message across to other mediums- you might want to think about using a little larger font size-just sayin.
For more info about how to attend- http://northshorejazzproject.org/blog/2010/06/aug-7th-barrence-whitfield-the-monkey-hips/
Dory Rowing Is Not Just For Men
Contact the folks at http://www.internationaldories.com/index.html
or http://www.gloucestermaritimecenter.org/who_future.html
Get Involved!
Art On the Pier Sign Ups
Hi Everyone,
There is still time to register for ART on the PIER Sculpture and Molds session Ages 8-15
Tues and Wed. Mornings 9:30-11 Aug. 3,4,10,11, Snacks and Materials included. $90. There is a 10% discount for a sibling
Artist Bob Viau : owner of StudioVO: Commercial and Fine Art Studio of Gloucester.
Classes held at 121R East Main Street at the East Gloucester Marina.
Students experience the great atmosphere of creating on the harbor in a real "working" artist studio.
Contact immediately for registration.
CHECK OUT OUR NEW BUSINESS FACEBOOK PAGE FOR StudioVO!
Best, Deej Viau
Again and Again 2010 Sailbag Auction To Benefit GHS Sailing Pics
Again and Again 2010 Sailbag Auction Party Preview Video With Heidi Wakeman
Sailbag Auction Preview For Tomorrow Nights Auction/Party At Art Haven 7-9PM Thursday
The proceeds from the auction will benefit GHS Sailing and I was blown away at the talent and creativity of some of the bag designers. Hope to see you all tomorrow night and if you would like to place a preliminary bid on Madeline or Eloise’s bag let me know and I’ll start the bidding at your bid level.
Things To Do- Art Haven 2 Year Anniversary Open House August 6th!
Gloucester Writer Center’s Artist In Residence Sandy Tolan To Speak At The Harbor Room
Sandy Tolan will read from his new work-in-progress at the Harbor Room, across the street from the Gloucester Writers Center (see directions below) at 7:30 pm,
Thursday, July 29. The event is free and open to the public. Please RSVP:
978-283-7738
Sandy Tolan, the Gloucester Writers Center’s first writer-in-residence, is the author of two books and the producer of hundreds of documentaries and features for NPR and Public Radio International, and has written for New York Times Magazine, Audubon, the Nation, the Los Angeles Times Magazine, the Christian Science Monitor, USA Today, and dozens of other publications.
Sandy was a 1993 Fellow at the Nieman Foundation for Journalism at Harvard University. The following year he moved to Gloucester, to a house on East Main Street, a few blocks from the home of Vincent Ferrini – now the site of the Gloucester Writers Center. It was here that Sandy wrote his first book: Me and Hank, A Boy and His Hero 25 Years Later, an exploration of race and sports in America.
From 2000-2007, Sandy was the I.F. Stone Fellow at the Graduate School of Journalism at UC-Berkeley, where he divided his time between teaching and many journeys to the Middle East to research his second book, The Lemon Tree: An Arab, a Jew, and the Heart of the Middle East (Bloomsbury USA). The Lemon Tree was based on his award-winning NPR documentary about a Palestinian man and a Jewish woman whose families lived in the same house before and after the founding of Israel. The book won a Christopher Award for "affirming the highest values of the human spirit" and was Booklist’s "Editor’s Choice" for best adult non-fiction book of 2006. It was also a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award.
Sandy’s many awards for journalism include the United Nations Gold Medal, the Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Silver Baton, three Robert F. Kennedy awards, and honors from the Overseas Press Club. A dedicated teacher, Sandy takes as much pride in the recognition awarded to his students’ work as to his own. In 2007, his students won the prestigious George Polk Award for a series on the early signs of climate change around the world – the first time in its 58-year history that the prize has been awarded to students.
In 2007 Sandy joined the faculty of the University of Southern California’s Annenberg School of Journalism . He has just returned from the West Bank, where he has been researching his next book, a profile of a visionary young musician in Palestine.
In 1988, a photographer in the West Bank snapped a photo of an 8-year-old little boy with tears in his eyes, hurling a rock at an Israeli tank. The widely circulated photo symbolized the rage and frustration of the intifada. Later Ramzi took up the viola and his natural talent was noticed by a Palestinian music teacher. Eventually he received a scholarship to study at a conservatory in France. Today, Ramzi devotes all his energy to opening music schools in Palestinian towns and refugee camps, teaching both European and Arabic classical music. He has opened 10 schools, so far, serving 500 students. "I cannot tell you the feeling of playing music," Ramzi says. "But that’s what I was dreaming about: to give this as much as I can to other children. As much as I can. The music and the feeling." Famed conductor and peacemaker Daniel Barenboim praises Ramzi’s achievement, "This is an extraordinary collection of children all over Palestine that have all been inspired and opened to the beauty of life."
Sandy’s three-week stay at the Gloucester Writers Center has provided him the opportunity to focus on writing the first chapter of that book.
Again and Again Sailbag Auction Party Preview
The party and Auction to benefit Gloucester High Sailing program is from 7-9PM Thursday evening at Art Haven 180B Main St (across from the Police station)
The Mrs will be a judge and I’ll be on hand to take some pictures and video. The Bean and Snoop Maddie Mad have two bags entered in the auction as well.
You can bid on over 30 bags with light refreshments being served. Not to mention the fact that you can check out the beautiful work by the fresh young talent at Art Haven and The Hive.
Check out the video tonight with so much more from the fabulous Heidi Wakeman at 6PM
Things To Do- Willowdale Meadow Walk Sunday July 25th
Hi Joey,
Jill Buchanan from Essex County Greenbelt here. First, I love what you are
doing with Good Mornign Gloucester- it’s the essence of building community
and communication for this special place.
And in that spirit, I’m wondering if you would be willing to somehow
communicate to your followers about a really cool event that is coming up this weekend- not happening in gloucester, but still a fun thing
for cape anners to do.
It promises to be excellent with really great trip leaders.
Thanks so much.
Jill Buchanan
Essex County Greenbelt Association
978-283-4539
djbuchanan@verizon.net
Sunday, July 25, 1 – 3 p.m.
Willowdale Meadow Walk
Willowdale Meadow Reservation, Topsfield
led by Ed Becker
Come explore this Greenbelt property located at the heart of Willowdale
State Forest. Wildlife abounds here among the forest, meadow and wetland of
the 2,200 acre conservation area.
Directions: From Route 1, take the exit for Ipswich Road in Topsfield,
heading east toward Ipswich. Drive 1.75 miles. If you have reached Gravelly
Brook road, you have gone too far. Park along the fence, on the left.
This Weekend on Cape Ann From The Cape Ann Chamber Of Commerce
This Weekend on Cape Ann
July 23-25, 2010
Friday-Sunday, July 23-25
Tender
GLOUCESTER STAGE COMPANY presents Tender July 8-25. The family home, wallpapered with a lifetime of I.O.U’s, is about to go into foreclosure and Christopher, the Patron Saint of Travelers, is on standby. All that is tender is not green in this humorous and heartbreaking family drama by Kelly Younger. 978-281-4433
Friday, July 23
Overboard Concert
GLOUCESTER UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST CHURCH, located at the corner of Middle and Church Streets in Gloucester, will host an Overboard Concert Series every Friday in July at 8pm. General Admission, $10 – Students & Seniors, $5. Overboard is an a cappella group of 6 singers that have performed in Boston, the North Shore, and around New England and were nominated for 8 awards in 2010. 978-283-3410
Friday, July 23
Moonlight Sail
THE SCHOONER THOMAS E. LANNON will offer a romantic sail around Gloucester’s harbor and coastline in the moonlight on Friday, July 23, 9:00-10:30pm. It’s magical! The 65-foot Schooner Lannon sails from Seven Seas Wharf at the Gloucester House Restaurant, Rogers Street, (Rt. 127), Gloucester. Tickets are $40 per person and include dessert. 978-281-6634
Saturday, July 24
Manchester Arts Festival
9am-6pm. Featuring fine art, sculpture, textiles, pottery, jewelry, apparel & accessories, garden ornaments, photography, paintings, and more!
Saturday, July 24
Seascape Festival
THE GLOUCESTER MARITIME HERITAGE CENTER is proud to present SEASCAPE on July 24–25. This 2-day festival celebrates Gloucester’s relationship with the sea through music, dance, storytelling and the visual arts. SEASCAPE is produced with grant funding from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Massachusetts Cultural Commission. 978-281-0470
Saturday, July 24
Yoga Workshop
All levels welcome. Enhance strength, flexibility, balance and vitality along with deep healing relaxation and serenity. The workshop is on Saturday, July 24, 12:30-3:30pm at the 222 ARTS AND WELLNESS CENTER, 222 Eastern Avenue in Gloucester. $40. Props provided. Tea and treats following the workshop. Call for reservations: Deborah Shapiro 617-529-7655
Saturday, July 24
Views of Rockport, 1928-1937
CAPE ANN MUSEUM presents a film screening of "Views of Rockport, 1928-1937" on Saturday, July 24, at 3pm in conjunction with the current special exhibition, Ars Longa, Vita Brevis: Rockport Artists in the 1930s (on view at the Cape Ann Museum through October 16). This program is free with admission. Reservations are required. 978-283-0455
Saturday, July 24
Regina Carter Concerts
ROCKPORT MUSIC presents Regina Carter in concert at the Shalin Liu Performance Center on Saturday, July 24, with a second performance at 5pm. 978-546-7391
Saturday, July 24
Sunset Dessert Cruise
Tickets are now available for CAPE ANN ANIMAL AID’S popular Sunset Dessert Cruise on Saturday, July 24, at 7pm (Rain Date 7/25/10). Don’t miss this chance to watch the sun set, eat dessert, win raffle prizes, and enjoy the company of fellow animal-lovers–all aboard CAPTAIN’S BILL’S WHALE WATCH! Tickets $25. 978-283-6055
Saturday, July 24
Fundraising Dance
THE AMERICAN LEGION POST 113 OF MANCHESTER is hosting a fundraiser on Saturday July 24. Come Dance to the music of "Subject to Change" and help support your local American Legion. Tickets $10. 978-526-4591
Sunday, July 25
Sunday Morning Live
THE SEAWARD INN, Rockport, will feature Stuart and Lyn Ferguson, vocals and guitars with Phil Punch on bongos, Sunday Morning Live, July 25, 9am-noon during a Breakfast Buffet by the Sea. This amazing Trio is back by popular demand. No cover charge. 978-546-3471
Sunday, July 25
Celtic Music Cruise
Join Michael O’Leary & Friends for a sailing ‘seisiun’, an evening of traditional songs ‘n tunes aboard THE SCHOONER THOMAS E. LANNON as she takes a sunset sail around beautiful Gloucester harbor on Sunday, July 25, 6-8:30pm. 978-281-6634
Sunday, July 25
Antonio Gentile Bandstand Concert Series
7pm, Stage Fort Park, Gloucester, featuring Overdrive (R & B Rock with Horns)
Sunday, July 25
Rockport Legion Band Concert
ROCKPORT LEGION BAND CONCERT SERIES. Sunday, at 7pm at the bandstand overlooking Rockport’s Back Beach. Concerts will be held every Sunday evening through August 30; listeners are invited to bring their own chairs or blankets to this family-friendly program
Rocky Neck Art Colony Presents- Nights On The Neck This Thursday-
Gloucester - The Rocky Neck Art colony presents an evening of performance and entertainment from 5:30 to 9:00 pm. at Nights on the Neck, Thursday, August 5, 2010, on Rocky Neck.
Performers and entertainers include:
Three Sheets to the Wind, a group of local musicians and Schooner Adventure crew members, are preserving the history of maritime work songs (chanteys) and forebitter songs.
Carol St. John will explain how graphology (the study of handwriting) works, talk about appropriate uses, and call for participants to contribute handwritings to demonstrate its validity for a fun, friendly, positive event.
Rick Drost began singing with a Kingston Trio-style group in high school, continued in a small folk group in college, then a glee club, and an opera chorus. He started writing and singing around coffeehouses in DC and New England in the ‘70s, finally settling in Cambridge, MA, where he was a member of the folk-rock group Parts and Labor. He performs at least once a week, wherever he goes.
Catherine Strisik has been active in the writing community of Taos, New Mexico, for over 26 years. Her poems have appeared in numerous publications including The Cafe Review, The Comstock Review, Peregrine, Northwest Review, War, Literature and the Arts, and others. Her new book, Thousand-Cricket Song, from which she will be reading, is receiving much acclaim.
Laura Dow / Zumba. Working out can be healthy, rewarding, and beneficial; it can be lots of things, but it’s never been known to be an exhilarating experience… until Zumba! The Zumba program fuses Latin rhythms and easy-to-follow moves to create a fitness program that will blow you away. Laura will present three Zumba rhythms ~ Salsa, Tango, and Flamenco~ to give you a taste of the program that’s taking the world by storm.
Click here For Photos From Past Events At The Rocky Neck Art Colony Website
Chickity Check It!- 31st Annual Rockport Acoustic Music Festival Line-up of Performers
Hi – As promised, here is the Line-up of Performers for the 31st Annual Rockport Acoustic Music Festival
Click on Performers at http://rockportfestival.blogspot.com/
Here is the list:
12:00- Sound Check w/ John, Matt, plus!?
12:30- Brian O’Connor
1:00- Bandit Kings
1:30- The Dejas
2:00- Brad Byrd
2:30- What Time is it Mr. Fox?
3:00- Alek Razdan and The A-Train Orchestra
3:30- Baze Band (Christine, Greg Dann and friends)
4:00- Bob Kramer Band
4:30- Bingo Fridays
5:00- Jam till we’re done with Sonny Fishcakes Music Review
Throughout the day’s setups, experience Diabolis Musica.
Food sales to support Rockport’s own extravaganza – New Years Rockport Eve – Save room for: hamburgers, hot dogs, veggie burgers, chips, strawberry shortcakes, desserts, Nisu (Finnish Coffee Bread), popcorn, lemon ice, and beverages.
HERE IS AN OVERVIEW TO USE:
Please join us for the 31st Annual Rockport Acoustic Music Festival
See new info and video at http://www.rockportfestival.com
Sunday, August 15, 2010
In Millbrook Meadow – Across From Front Beach in Rockport, Mass
Noon to 6:00 PM
All Are Welcome for Free
See you there…. for:
BLUES – FOLK – JAZZ – WORLD – BLUEGRASS – JAMS
Food and Fun are always available
Spread the news… tell your friends about http://www.RockportFestival.com
Thanks to everyone for supporting this free community event!
David
David Cutler
http://www.RockportFestival.com
info@rockportfestival.com
617-331-7852
Seascape Festival at the Heritage Center is coming up soon: July 24-25
Hi Joey,
The Seascape Festival at the Heritage Center is coming up soon: July 24-25. I’m sending along an updated press release. We’d appreciate any coverage you might be able to give us.
Thanks,
Harriet
picture from the GMHC website
Heritage Center Hosts SEASCAPE
Two day festival features music, storytelling, dance and art
SEASCAPE. The Gloucester Maritime Heritage Center is proud to present SEASCAPE on July 24th and 25th. This 2-day festival celebrates Gloucester’s relationship with the sea through music, dance, storytelling and the visual arts. SEASCAPE is produced with grant funding from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Massachusetts Cultural Commission, and the McCarthy Family Foundation.
Beginning at 10 am on Saturday, a lively schedule of workshops and concerts will explore the cultural impact of Gloucester’s distinction as the oldest seaport in America. Featured performers include David Coffin, story teller Jay O’Callahan, Sea Shanty singers The Johnson Girls, singer Ken Sweeney, and native American musician Strong Eagle Daly. The performers will conduct a series of 50-minute long concert/workshops on both Saturday and Sunday, providing the public with opportunities to learn from experienced performers.
Workshops are open to visitors of all ages, with the exception of the Saturday 11 a.m. workshop with Jay O’Callahan, which is limited to 25 participants 15 years old on up.
Throughout the day on Saturday, master batik artist Mary Edna Fraser will facilitate the making of a 3’ x 10’ community banner. Participants will draw in wax and paint with dyes on silk as they add to a banner which will serve as the backdrop for the Saturday evening concert. Younger children will use crayons and water colors to have a similar experience while creating projects to take home. On Sunday, all participants will make small pieces to take home.
On Saturday evening at 7 pm, all performers will gather for a three hour long concert under the Heritage Center’s tent overlooking Gloucester Harbor. They will perform both individually and together, creating a lively night filled with music and stories. Students from the Cape Ann Center for Dance will perform a piece of choreography commissioned specifically for SEASCAPE, set to an arrangement by David Coffin of a popular “fishing” lullaby.
The festival continues on Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. with a second series of concert/workshops. There will also be a 3 p.m. concert bringing together all participating musicians in one long collaborative set.
Children’s activities and refreshments will be available throughout both days of the festival.
All of the daytime concert/workshops are free of charge. The same goes for the Sunday finale concert. Tickets to the Saturday night concert are $15 ($7 for kids 14 and under) and are available at the Heritage Center, in advance and at the door.
The Performers
David Coffin, who lives in East Gloucester, has performed throughout New England for the past thirty years. While his venues include concert halls, festivals, coffeehouses, and museums; he is most often found performing one of his two school enrichment programs throughout New England. He has also performed with the Cambridge-based Revels since 1980 as a singer, instrumentalist and, since 1991, as Master of Ceremonies.
At the heart of David’s work is traditional and contemporary folk music, including an extensive collection of songs from the Maritime tradition. Widely know for his rich baritone voice, his impressive collection of musical instruments includes concertinas, recorders, penny-whistles, bombards (loud Breton double reeds), gemshorns, cornamuse, shawms, and rauschphieffes.
Jay O’Callahan is one of the world’s best-known storytellers. He has performed at Lincoln Center, at the Abbey Theatre in Dublin and other theatres around the world, at the Olympics, and with the Boston Symphony Orchestra. His work appears regularly on National Public Radio. In addition to creating and performing stories, he leads workshops on storytelling and writing.
Jay was commissioned by NASA to create a story in celebration of the agency’s 50th anniversary in 2008. The National Association of Independent Record Distributors and Manufacturers awarded first prize to the High Windy recording of his story, “The Boy Who Loved Frogs.”
The Johnson Girls is an energetic all-woman mostly a cappella group performing folk music with an emphasis on songs of the sea and shore. Each member (Joy Bennet, Alison Kelley, Bonnie Milner, and Deirdra Murtha) of the group brings a specialty and style to the ensemble. The Johnson Girls’ extensive repertoire of both traditional and contemporary music includes songs with an Afro-Caribbean influence, of the inland waterways, of fishing, mining, Irish, Anglo-American, Italian and French Canadian ballads and work songs, and much more. With a sound that has been called “exciting”, “haunting”, “uplifting”, and “full of harmony”, the Johnson Girls give “hair-raising” performances of powerhouse chanteys, tender ballads and just plain fun songs, bringing audiences to their feet wherever they go.
Ken Sweeney performs mountain ballads, old time songs and sea music. A top notch player of the clawhammer banjo, English concertina, and harmonica, he also makes music playing spoons. He is a former member of the infamous Mystic Seaport Chanteymen.
Strong Eagle Daly, of the Nipmuc nation, handcrafts the flutes he plays. Each of Daly’s flutes contain a hand carved animal which faces the performer. He says that “in addition to the animals, the spirit of tree resonates through the flute as I breathe new life through it and give it a new voice.” Through Daly’s observation of different flute players and their varying techniques, he has created his own improvisational style and voice. He fills empty space with the haunting and inspirational sounds that come from the various woods and octaves of his flute.
Mary Edna Fraser is an internationally known textile artist who collaborates with scientists from a variety of disciplines to illustrate the changing environment. She researches her landscapes by hiking the terrain, exploring the waterways by boat, and by taking aerial photos from the open cockpit of her grandfather’s 1946 Ercoupe plane. She also uses satellite images and maps to plan her expansive compositions, which take the form of huge batiks. In 1994, she was the first woman to be honored with a one person textile exhibition at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.
Mary Edna’s work has been included in exhibits at many museums and organizations including the National Academy of Sciences, the New England Aquarium, Mystic Seaport , North Carolina Maritime Museum, and the Duke University Museum of Art.
Free Outdoor Family Concert, July 20 6-8pm, Masconomo Park, Manchester
Hi Joey,
Hope you’re having a great summer! We’ve got a very fun, free outdoor concert coming up next week that we would appreciate you posting about on Good Morning Gloucester. I’m attaching a photo of us and our CD album cover, in case you want to use either in the posting. Bring the whole family!!
The Music in Masconomo Park Summer Concert Series continues on Tuesday, July 20, from 6:00-8:00pm with award-winning children’s music artists Leeny and Tamara! Bring your lawn chairs and blankets, maybe the fixings for a nice picnic, and get ready for a fun evening of singing, dancing, learning, and laughing for the whole family! We’ll have a full band with us for this event. And, we are especially excited to be premiering some new music, including a song that was co-written with 9-year-old Sara Wheeler of Gloucester! (Rain date is July 21.) For more details, please visit our website at www.leenyandtamara.com and click on Shows.
THANKS JOEY!
Ilene Altman(aka Leeny
Go See- ANNIE, opening August 10 and running through August 15th
Hi Joey :
Jane Deering here, for the Annisquam Village Players. Our summer musical this year is ANNIE, opening August 10 and running through August 15th. Could you list the info below all the what/where/when/how. Thanks, Joey!
_______________________________________________________________________________
What : Annisquam Village Players presents the musical ANNIE
When : August 10 through August 15, 2010
Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday performances at 7:30pm
Friday, Saturday & Sunday performances at 8:00pm
Where : Annisquam Village Hall
34 Leonard Street, off of Route 127 North
Annisquam, MA 01930
Ticket prices : $15 General Admission
$30 Reserved Seating, ordered only online at www.annisquamvillageplayers.org
General Admission tickets can be purchased at :
The Bookstore of Gloucester, 61 Main Street, Gloucester MA 978-281-1548
The Annisquam Exchange, 38 Leonard Street, Annisquam MA 978-281-0358
Lula’s Pantry, 79 Main Street, Rockport 978-546-0010
Sea Fair in Annisquam Village only on Saturday July 31st
and online at http://www.annisquamvillageplayers.org
The Annisquam Village Hall is air-conditioned and handicap accessible.
Refreshments available at intermission.
Community Announcements- Girls Basketball Clinic –Yoga Camp – Manchester Arts Festival – Boy Scout Fundraiser
click pics for larger versions-
Girls Basketball Clinic At Cape Ann YMCA
Yoga Camp at Yoga for Health, 124 Main Street, Gloucester
July 26th-July 30th, 7:00 to 8:15 a.m.
Make a commitment to your Yoga practice and meet 5 mornings in a row with other dedicated Yoga practitioners for meditation, warm-up stretches, a 30-minute Flow and a guided deep relaxation. Instructor, Janet Green Garrison brings 35 years of teaching experience to each session. Yoga Camp is for any student who is presently attending Yoga classes and wants to take his or her practice deeper. Call 978-281-5525 or email: yogaforhealth@comcast.net
Hey Joey,
Would you please include this Boy Scout fundraiser?
Boy Scout Troop 112 Fundraiser to defray summer camp costs
Free Car Wash
Saturday, July 17, 2010 (weather permitting
East Gloucester Marina, East Main St., Gloucester
8am to 12pm
Oh, and here are a couple of pics of our float and the boys in the Horribles Parade!
Many thanks from all of us!

