Category Archives: Essex County

No, That is Not a Monarch Caterpillar on Your Fennel! And Happy Pollinator’s Week

Earlier in the week Charlotte and I stopped by Cedar Rock Gardens for their ongoing 25% off all plants sale. We paused near the fennel plants when Charlottes asked, “is that a Monarch caterpillar on the fennel?” A teeny, tiny yellow, green, and black caterpillar was tucked in, sleeping in the foliage. She found two more so we purchased all three plants. Little did she know, that question is similar to one of the most frequently viewed posts on my website “No, that is not a Monarch Caterpillar on Your Parsley Plant!”

Black Swallowtail caterpillar recently molted with discarded skin

Black Swallowtail (Papilio polyxenes) caterpillars, especially in their early instars, are easily mistaken for the yellow, white, and black caterpillars of the Monarch butterfly. Butterflies oviposit their eggs on specific plants to their specific species. These plants are called larval host plants, in other words, caterpillar food plants. Monarchs only deposit eggs on plants in the milkweed family ( Asclepiadoideae) while Black Swallowtail females only deposit eggs on members of the carrot family (Apiaceae). Plants in the carrot family include dill, parsley, fennel, carrots, parsnips, and Queen Anne’s Lace. In days gone by, the Black Swallowtail was commonly referred to as the Parsnip Butterfly.

You will never see a Monarch caterpillar on fennel or parsley. Conversely, you will never see a Black Swallowtail caterpillar on your milkweed plants 🙂

Yellow, white, and black striped Monarch Caterpillar on Common Milkweed (Asclepias syriaca)

Yellow, green, and black striped and dotted Black Swallowtail caterpillar on fennel plant

Cedar Rock Gardens is located at 299 Concord Street in West Gloucester. For more information, visit their website here.

Happy Summer Solstice and Happy Pollinators Week!

#wickedtuna MARCIANO FAMILY ANGELICA SEAFOODS RETAIL GRAND OPENING TOMORROW, THURSDAY, JUNE 20TH!!

GRAND OPENING Angelica Seafoods Coming Thursday! Only selling local and US wild caught seafood, the beautifully designed, brand new retail location is offering a bounty of deliciousness, including Cape Ann lobsters, tuna, cod, haddock, swordfish, clams, sea bass, American shrimp (no gross farm-raised shrimp at Angelica’s!), and much, much more.

Nancy and Christina Marciano

Angelica Seafoods is owned and operated by Captain Dave and Nancy Marciano of Wicked Tuna fame, along with Dave’s sister Christine Marciano Sciola. The business is named after Nancy and Dave’s daughter Angelica. Captain Dave and Nancy’s area of expertise is of course seafood, while Christine is a successful business woman.  The shop is a welcome addition to Gloucester’s working waterfront district. Wishing the family the best of luck in this exciting adventure!

Tees, hats, hoodies, lightweight jackets, and even bobbleheads of Dave are also available for sale. Limited editions, like the heather blue tee, will only be offered in-store.

If you need inspiration on what to cook with the fabulous array of super fresh seafood from Angelica’s, check out the recipe page on the Angelica Seafoods website.

Angelica Seafoods is located at 52R Commercial Street Gloucester, MA in the freshly painted  peach colored building, adjacent to Saint Peter’s Square. Hours this first weekend are Thursday and Friday, 10 to 5, and Saturday and Sunday 10 to 3.

Great Blue Heron Flight Through the Treetops

With a wingspan of five and a half to six and a half feet, the Great Blue Heron is an extraordinarily fascinating creature to observe in flight.

 

MONARCH ALERT! #plantandtheywillcome

This past week, Monarchs have been spotted at my friend Patti’s garden in East Gloucester, at Wolf Hill Garden Center, and in our garden. I was overjoyed to see she was a female, depositing eggs on the tender new foliage of Common Milkweed (Asclepias syriaca).

Please write and let us know when you see your first Monarch. Thank you!

Wolf Hill is carrying a fabulous array of native plants, including both A. syriaca and Butterflyweed (Asclepias tuberosa).

Monarch egg – a miniature golden dome, the size of a pinhead

CONSTRICTOR SNAKES IN MASSACHUSETTS!

We were very, very sad to see this long, slender dead snake on our street however, it gave us the opportunity to learn more about the snakes in our neighborhood. We have here a beautiful Eastern Milksnake. Reading more, it appears to be one of two of the 14 species of snakes found in Massachusetts that is a constrictor, the other being the more rarely seen and declining Northern American Racer (a species listed as ‘of Special Concern’).

Fun facts – Milksnakes are generally nocturnal; they don’t bask in the sun and usually hide throughout the day. Milksnakes don’t actually squeeze their prey to death but suffocate it. Milksnakes will vibrate their tail when disturbed.

Don’t you love the patterning in the scales, both the checkerboard underside and the upper surface? Unfortunately, Milksnakes look similar to the venomous Eastern Copperhead, and they are often needlessly killed because of the resemblance.

How to tell the difference between the non-poisonous Milksnake and the Copperhead: They can be distinguished by a few basic characteristics. “The head of a Copperhead is copper-colored and never marked, while the Milksnake’s head has the light “V-” or “Y-shaped” mark.

Note the “Y” mark on the Milksnake’s head

The Copperhead has a wide triangle-shaped head joined to a narrow neck; the Milksnake’s head is narrow. The Copperhead has only one row of crossbands down its heavy body in contrast to the Milksnake’s 3 to 5 rows of blotches down a slender body. The Milksnake has smooth scales while the copperhead has keeled scales (raised ridge along the center of each scale).” From the Connecticut Department of  Energy and Environmental Protection.

Read more about snakes of Massachusetts here.

Baltimore Oriole Males all in a Kerfuffle

What’s all the fuss about? The males are establishing their territories. The last clip shows the more subtly feathered female.

 

How to tell the Difference Between a Male and Female Hummingbird

This past week we have had a mini entourage of three male Ruby-throated Hummingbirds vying for the affections of one female.  We think the boys have moved on but she has stayed. This is not unusual behavior. If she mated with one, which I think I saw but it was so fast I am not really certain, she will then build a nest and raise the youngsters all on her own.

In one clip, the hummingbird is cleaning it’s bill, in another, the female is going pooh. As you may or may not know, the male Ruby-throated Hummingbirds are easy to spot as they have the red gorget (pronounced GOR-jit) throat feathers. When light hits the iridescent feathers, the gorget lights up a brilliant red, otherwise, the gorget looks like a deep brown throat patch. The female’s throat is the same color as her breast feathers. You can see the female at 1:05. All the other clips are of the boys.

 

Beautiful, Beautiful Orioles and Don’t Forget to Set Out Orange Halves!

Currently in our garden and fields we are seeing Baltimore Orioles, Orchard Orioles, and new to my eyes, an immature male Orchard Oriole that has not yet grown into his adult plumage.

Baltimore Orioles finding nectar and insects in the crabapple trees. Love watching them hang every which way to poke at the blossoms.Immature Male Orchard Oriole

Orchard Oriole

Baltimore Orioles (and Catbird) in our garden

 

Thank You Happy Valley for the Beach Clean-up!

A huge shout out today to the volunteers from Happy Valley for the Good Harbor Beach clean-up Saturday morning! The photo below shows Richard and Donna setting up a tent of provisions for the volunteers.

Happy Valley is the fourth group of volunteers to tackle Good Harbor Beach this spring. You may ask, does the beach need so many clean-ups? The answer is a resounding yes!

This past week was Senior Skip Day with, at one point, reportedly, approximately one thousand kids at GHB. The teens came from high schools all around Massachusetts including Brookline, Stoneham, Wakefield, and Marlborough (these are the names of the schools provided by the kids). Beginning around 9am, the kids began pouring onto GHB, and drinking right from the get-go. Fortunately, the portable bathrooms this year are open in May (thank you City!) But they ran out of toilet paper so the dunes soon became the place of choice to relieve themselves. The kids were asked repeatedly to keep out of the dunes and to clean up their trash.

By early afternoon, there was an alcohol related fender bender in the parking lot. I don’t know if this is what prompted the Gloucester Police to come but at around 3:00 pm, there were two officers on the beach breaking up the party and carrying six-packs off the beach.

Thank you to whoever called the police! The weather was lovely and warm and there were a number of families on the beach that appeared very uncomfortable around the large groups of drunk and belligerent teens.

The above photos are of how the kids left the beach, and this is after the trash had been collected into piles by volunteers and the DPW. The gulls got into some and many pieces were blown into the dunes, along the shoreline, the marsh, and all around the parking lot.

We citizens who love and treasure Good Harbor Beach do not mind sharing the beach with teens skipping school, we just don’t think they should leave their mountains of trash behind, and also relieve themselves in the dunes. We are grateful to the DPW for cleaning up the garbage and grateful to all the volunteer groups that have been coming this past spring  however, we really need to manage out trash better. Allowing it to blow into the ocean and beach habitat is simply not acceptable!

Two suggestions, and if you think of any, please share-

Hand out trash bags to beachgoers, especially large groups.

Assign an officer on the beach to give out tickets for littering. Word would get out soon enough if the fines were steep enough.

 

 

 

 

 

Rose-breasted Grosbeak Fly-by!

When you hear Baltimore Orioles, but a Rose-breasted Grosbeak flies by instead- what fabulous underwing color!!.

 

Happy Mom’s Day II – brought to you by Super Mom!

Our valiant Super Mom has adapted extraordinarily well despite her missing right foot. This is her ninth year nesting at Good Harbor Beach, her third summer after losing her toes!

Happy Mom’s Day to all the Mom Superstars. We Love YOU!

More Tulipomania at Tip Top Tulips!

Tip Top Tulips is at it’s peak beauty, just in time for Mother’s Day!

Tip Top Tulips is located at 20 Lowes Lane in Ipswich (Rt. 133), behind the Dairy Queen.

For more information visit the Felix Family Farm website here.

TIP TOP TULIPS – BEST TULIP FIELD EVER!!

My friend Paul and his Dad have created one of the most enchanting family fun experiences imaginable. Tip Top Tulips beckons with rows and rows of exuberantly hued perfectly symmetrical cups of joy.  Charlotte and I came home with an armful, that she easily picked herself. There are lovely and large Darwin Tulips, fancy Parrot Tulips, delicate Lily-flowered Tulips, Fringed Tulips, my favorite – the “Broken” Tulips with multi colored swirls, and many, many more varieties in a symphony of scintillating shades.

Paul and Paul Wegzyn, owners Tip Top Tulips, Ipswich

The afternoon we visited, there were dozens of families picking flowers and taking photos. Benches and chairs are placed strategically throughout the field for optimum portrait taking. Even though the light was not cooperating, as is so often the case on a New England afternoon in springtime, it didn’t stop us from having lots of fun and we managed to take some sweet photos for a lovely memento.

In the love language of flower giving, tulips symbolize a deep and perfect love, and also rebirth. Treat your Mom to a very special gift for Mom’s Day, which is this coming Sunday, May 12th, and bring her to Tip Top Tulips!  Sundays are especially fun at TTTulips, with picnic areas, lobster roll truck, goat yoga classes, and a very friendly collection of farm animals.

Tip Top Tulips is located at 20 Lowes Lane in Ipswich (Rt. 133), behind the Dairy Queen.

For more information visit the Felix Family Farm website here.

 

Mass Audubon Monitoring Plovers at Gloucester Beaches

Good morning PiPl Friends,

Just a quick note to let you all know that the Mass Audubon team will be on Gloucester beaches monitoring the Plovers. I saw someone there yesterday at GHB from the roadside but Charlotte and I were on our way to an appointment and I couldn’t stop to say hello,. We did confirm though that the contract was signed yesterday. Mass Audubon did a great job last year and the Plover Ambassadors are looking forward to working with the Audubon team again this summer.

I am flat out with film finishing and planning client’s gardens and tried my best to keep the two from happening simultaneously but as the saying goes – the best laid plans… Things should ease up a bit soon and I will hopefully be providing you with more frequent updates about our Good Harbor Beach PiPls <3

Happy May!
Warmest wishes,
xoxoKim

Super Dad floofing after a bath

Happy May! Red-tailed Hawk Casting a Pellet

Hello Friends,

So many wonderful wildlife stories to share and I am so very behind is posting. We are in the final, final week of editing the Plover film for film festival release. After the film is “in the can,” so to speak, I’ll be able to get caught up sharing stories.

May is truly the magical month for migration in Massachusetts. Not only are we seeing a riot of migrants, but some birds are laying eggs, others are already raising babies, and the creatures that stay year round are letting themselves be known to prospective mates.  The earliest days of May in New England are especially magical not only for the heightened wildlife activity but because the trees, for the most part, have not yet leafed out.

This past week, I was able to film the return of the Brown Thrasher, Baltimore Orioles, a Kingfisher up-close (very briefly), Warbling Vireos, Northern Flickers, a not-so elusive female Red-winged Blackbird and male Black-crowned Night Heron, Piping Plover battles, Catbird building a nest, three Hummingbirds and a Red Admiral Butterfly in our garden, Wood Ducks, cygnets, and perhaps one of the most interesting, a young Red-tailed Hawk.

The hawk perched on a limb in the midst of an area where a number of songbirds were nesting. This of course created a mini ruckus. All the blackbirds in the vicinity flew in and began to harass him, including Grackles, Orioles, and Red-winged Blackbirds. They perched on adjacent branches and bravely dove at his backside, repeating the attacks over and over again for about one hour. The hawk eventually moved on, but not before he cast a pellet, to my great surprise. Just as do owls and kingfishers, hawks cast pellets. Although the pellets are much smaller than the owl’s pellets I have seen, that they cast them is no less interesting. Now if the tree had been fully leafed out, we would very likely not have seen this behavior.

Happy May!

 

CALLING IN Twin Lights Half Marathon Organizers and Race Participants – please clean up your trash :)

Post Update – Thank you so very, very much to whoever cleaned the parking lot this morning. We are so appreciative of your good work!

Hello Twin Lights Half Marathoners,

I hope you had all had a great run along the beautiful shores of Cape Ann. You came from towns all around Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island, New Hampshire, New Jersey, and even further afield. When you arrived at Good Harbor Beach to begin your race, you found a pristine parking lot. The past three weekends, three separate local organizations did an extraordinary job cleaning the beach, the dunes, and the parking lot. I stop by the beach early nearly every morning and Saturday, the day of the race, the parking lot was in fantastic shape however, when I returned after the race, that is not how the race’s start and finish line were left! 

We are inviting you and the organizers of the Twin Lights Half Marathon to return to Good Harbor Beach and clean up your trash. I picked up a bunch of your plastic water bottles, discarded socks, Starbucks and Dunkin’ plastic coffee cups but there is still a good amount left.

Perhaps you aren’t aware that all that trash you leave behind blows into the marsh, the dunes, and eventually, into the ocean. Or perhaps you haven’t seen the no littering signs. Good Harbor is a Carry In, Carry Out beach. But whatever your reasoning for just dumping your garbage at the base of the dunes around the parking lot perimeter, and on the asphalt, from one end of the parking lot to the far end, we would greatly appreciate it if you would please return to our beautiful beach to clean up your trash. Thank You so much for your consideration.

Garbage left behind after Twin Lights Half Marathon at Good Harbor Beach

BACKYARD GROWERS AT CEDAR ROCK GARDENS!

Saturday, May 4, Cedar Rock Gardens is generously donating all profits from plant sales to Backyard Growers! Your plant purchases on that day will directly support Backyard Growers’ garden-based school and community programming this season.

Plus, our team will be there from 8am – 4pm, ready to answer your veggie gardening questions while you explore Cedar Rock’s beautiful selection of seedlings. We can’t thank Cedar Rock enough for their steadfast support of our work and amazing generosity!

Visit Cedar Rock Gardens in West Gloucester on May 4 to support Backyard Growers and pick up some beautiful plants for your garden. We’ll see you there!

Cedar Rock Gardens is located at 299 Concord Street in Gloucester.

HUMMINGBIRD ALERT!

A newly arrived female Ruby-throated Hummingbird has been frequenting our garden since the last day of April! She has been stopping to drink nectar from the flowering Japanese Quince ‘Toyo-Nishiki’ and visiting the hummingbird feeder.

Please write if you have been graced by one of these little beauties yet this spring <3

 

Thank You Seaside Sustainability and Chris Cefalo for Helping Clean Good Harbor Beach

A huge shoutout to Rebecca Spencer, Colleen Meister Murdock, and all the volunteers with Seaside Sustainability for their tremendous clean up efforts at Good Harbor Beach.

This is the third week in a row that clean ups have been taking place at GHB, beginning with Cape Ann Climate Coalition Interfaith Group, followed by Applied Materials, and then Seaside Sustainability on Saturday. Each group of volunteers has come away with bags and bags of trash.

We are all so very grateful for these extraordinary good works by all the volunteers!

We would also like to give a ginormous shout out to USMC veteran Chris Cefalo. I have seen Chris often at GHB cleaning up trash but I didn’t realize until after speaking with him this morning that one of his main focusses is small pieces of plastics, roping, and monofilaments that you see entwined in the seaweed and debris at the wrack line. These bits of plastic are ubiquitous. They break down into micro plastics. We breathe them and they are now in our lungs and hearts. The bits of plastic are consumed by sea creatures of every imaginable shape and size. And it was monofilament wrapped around Super Mom’s foot that caused her to lose her toes.

Chris’s bucket this morning was overflowing and he had only traveled half the distance he had planned. Several years ago, Jill Ortiz, one of our Plover ambassadors, had been lobbying to get a (free) micro plastic bin set up at GHB. This would have helped volunteers like Chris dispose of the plastics. Unfortunately, the City showed zero interest and nothing came of her efforts. Perhaps now is the right time to revisit the topic. Just saying!

Many, many thanks again to all the super volunteers working so hard to keep Good Harbor Beach clean and safe for people and for wild creatures <3

The Wonderfully Joyful Empty Bowl Circus!

Photos of just some of our incredible community members who make the annual Empty Bowl Circus a tremendous success. Thank you Open Door for the invitation to photograph; it was my joy <3

Enchanting Seaside Circus at the Open Door’s Empty Bowl Event!

This evening’s Open Door’s Empty Bowl Circus was a magnificent success. It is such a joy to see  the community come together to help support the tremendous work done by Julie LaFontaine and her team. Lots of photos to come but in the mean time, the following is a short video of some of the marvelous Seaside Circus performances.

Seaside Circus Cape Ann was founded by Eileen Little. Performers include  Joel Hart, Erin DeMay, Kylie Rose, Katelyn Beaudoin, Judith Ngari, Soni Razdan, Ky Bernard, and Jessica Guilmain.

Music obtained from the Internet Archive of Royalty Free Music. Sway (Quien Sera) by Bob Carroll, Frank DeVol

April Full Pink Moon Over Eastern Point

April’s full Pink Moon over Brace Rock

 

Happy Earth Day feat. Applied Materials and the Good Harbor Beach Clean-up!

With thanks and our deepest appreciation to the crew from Cape Ann’s Applied Materials for the awesome cleanup at Good Harbor Beach today!

We’d also like to give a shout out to Cape Ann’s Climate Coalition’s Interfaith Group for the clean up that they did on Saturday.

Truly, Good Harbor Beach has never looked so pristine! We, and the PiPls, thank you!

Meet “Fierce” Dad. He arrived this year shortly after our original Mom and Dad returned. Fierce Dad successfully nested last year at Good Harbor Beach and he is waiting impatiently for his mate to also return. I write impatiently because he and Original Dad like to provoke each other over territorial boundaries.

 

 

 

Happy Earth Day feat. Herring Gulls in Flight and Beautiful to Me by Telamor

Herring Gulls in flight after the recent storm, with music by Telamor “Beautiful to Me.”

 

Happy Earth Day feat. the Carolina Wren and why we LoVe leaf litter!

Joy in the wild garden- What fun to observe our resident Carolina Wren vigorously tossing leaves around while looking for insects. Just one in a million reasons why we leave leaves on the ground, and don’t cut down expired flower stalks. Leaf debris and stalks create the ideal inset habitat, and insects are the number one food for birds during the breeding season. Songbirds need the extra protein to make eggs and keep their young well-fed.