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The LincolnLincs is the place for important information about school events, notifications, dates and deadlines and news about the Lincoln community.
Go to the "LINKS TO DOCUMENTS"section of the blog to download forms or documents discussed in the posts.

After more than 40 years, we're still the Greatest School in the Universe!

Tuesday, February 11, 2020

We Need YOUR Help!

We need your Help – Please Act Now

The Lincoln PPT (Program Planning Team) needs YOUR help! We are looking for a person to fill the following position on our team. Please contact the Lincoln executive committee at LincolnK8PPT@gmail.com.
Auction ChairsThe Lincoln auction is the main fundraiser for the Lincoln school. The auction committee works together to create a fun day of fundraising. Grab a friend and make a difference!
● Volunteer responsibilities - The auction chairs work with members of the auction committee to plan, organize, and run the Lincoln Auction in October. Solicitations, organizing donations, recruiting volunteers, planning kids activities and food vendors, and leading the committee to complete activities are also a part of the position. 
● Needed skills - Creative thinking, organization, interpersonal, and strong communication skills are a must for this position. 
● Time commitment 
○ Auction committee meets once a month from (Feb) to (August) 
○ September (once or twice a month) once a week in October and as much as possible the week of the auction 
○ Day of auction in October (9am to 5pm) 
○ After the auction (once to pack away items and once to fill out thank you cards) 
● Supports provided - The Lincoln PPT Executive Committee is available for organizational and practical support. The Treasurer will work to provide budgetary information and financial support as per the budget. Previous auction chairs will be available to help guide and answer questions; however, feel free to put your own “stamp” on this event. 



Snow Tubing coming up on February 15!

Lincoln K-8 Family Snow Tubing at Ironwood Springs
Saturday, February 15th, 2020
3:00 - 5:00 PM (Session 1)
5:30 - 7:30 PM (Session 2)
Sessions are limited to 80 tubers per session
TICKETS MUST BE PURCHASED FIRST COME FIRST SERVE
Tickets are $5 per tuber.
Purchase tickets through Eventbright:
The password is: LincolnK8
** Kids 3 and under are free when accompanied by a paid adult **
A release of liability form will need to be signed by every snow tuber and
brought with at the time of the event. You can print these off your efiles or
some will be sent home from school.

Lincoln Fundraisers

Our 2020 Fund Raisers to support all the programs at Lincoln















What and When is Rock Town?

What and When is Rock Town
Rock town Tour is a musical performance by our Uppers’ Program to show off their acting and musical talents to the community and Lincoln and to inspire others.
The tour has been scheduled for March 25, 2020
Schedule
9:20  Leave Lincoln
9:45  Perform at Franklin
11:00 Perform at Scheels (short performance)
11:30 Eat Lunch at Apache Mall Food court
12:30 Load busses
1:00   Perform at Riverside
2:30   Perform at Lincoln K-8

Lincoln Memory Books

Lincoln Memory Books


The Lincoln Memory book team is in the process of putting together another fantastic yearbook!  We are beginning to take orders online for the great price of $12.00, which incidentally has not changed in eight years.

To order online, visit www.Book.hrimaging.comSelect elementary and Lincoln K-8 Choice 254262.

Order forms will be coming home next week but ordering online is so much easier and is available now!!!!

Memory books make great displays at high school graduation parties
Great way to match names to faces that your children talk about this year and next fall
A couple of years from now students look back and remember people and some of the interesting things they did while at Lincoln. 
Middle school autographs are fun also

 
 

Old Lincoln Shirts

Got old Lincoln T-Shirts
Are you unsure of what to do with Lincoln shirts that are no longer worn or are too small?  Beginning February 17, you may donate them to Lincoln parents that hope to transform them into auction items!  We want to turn old Lincoln T-Shirts into quilts or other crafted good and then donate them to the Lincoln Auction.  Shirts for donation may be dropped off in the office.

Thank you so much!

The Pollinators Movie

The Pollinators Movie
The PollinatorsWe at Lincoln have been concerned about pollinators and their survival.  We have a butterfly garden and have two honey bee hives located about two blocks from school.  Both are used by students to study pollinators and their role.  Our bees are purchased through the Bee Shed and spend the winter in California pollinating the Almond groves. 

The Bee Shed is proud to sponsor the local showing of "The Pollinators"..."a documentary about migratory beekeepers and their truckloads of honey bees as they pollinate the flowers that become the fruits, nuts, and vegetables we all eat." Showings at the Gray Duck Theater on 2/21, 2/22, 2/23, 2/28, 2/29, &3/1. A special one-hour discussion about the film will be held after the Sunday, Feb. 23 matinee. Show times here: www.grayducktheater.com   show times (see attachments)


The Pollinators: A Different Kind of Bee
Movie
By Jacob Clark Blickenstaff

When I was growing up in Northern California in the 1970s, my parents read “back to the land” writings and took them to heart. For about a decade, I lived on what was essentially a small farm. We had chickens for eggs, a cow for milk, and a large garden that produced most of the vegetables we ate in the summer and fall. We also had a hive of bees that pollinated our few fruit trees, but that mostly lived on wild forage. I have clear memories of eating honey right from the comb collected from our own hive. It was pretty cool.
Bees have been getting attention for the last 10–15 years because of significant die-off events that threaten commercial agriculture worldwide. The 2019 documentary The Pollinators gives a detailed picture of the commercial bee industry in the United States, and examines the ongoing threats to bees.
The filmmakers talked to beekeepers, bee scientists, farmers, and even farm-to-table chefs to get a range of perspectives on the issues. Some of the farmers share innovative techniques they use to be more bee-friendly. The documentary includes suggestions for how individuals can make choices in their daily lives to support both managed and native pollinators.

Importance of Bees
Many of the fruits and vegetables we expect to regularly find in the supermarket rely on insects for pollination. Recall that pollen from a male flower has to get to a female flower to produce a fruit, and that what a botanist defines as a “fruit” includes a lot of produce a dietician would call a “vegetable,” including peppers and tomatoes.
Bees are so important for the pollination of nut trees like almonds that millions upon millions of bees are trucked to California every year for the short pollination season. Once that season ends, the bees are packed up and moved to other parts of the country to pollinate other crops like apples, cherries, and blueberries. Some beekeepers move their hives more than 20 times each year, following the flowering/pollinating schedules of different crops.

Threats to Bees
Many separate threats to bees have combined in recent years to make it especially hard for both managed and native bees to survive. Farmers have switched to pesticides that are less harmful to people, which is good. Unfortunately, the newer pesticides take longer to degrade in the environment, so once the pesticide is on a field, it can be toxic to bees for years to come. Other chemicals used on farms are also harmful, including fungicides to control fungus on crops and herbicides to control weeds.
When one kind of crop takes over large areas of land, only a short window of time occurs when that crop produces the nectar and pollen that bees need for food. Managed bees are fed or moved on to another crop, but local native bees have nothing to eat when the crop is not blooming. With little or no food, the hive is severely weakened. Bee colonies can also become infested with an even smaller insect, the verroa mite, a bee parasite. It attaches to the body of a young pupa or adult bee and sucks out essential nutrients. If several mites attach to one bee, they might kill it outright. The mites also carry viruses harmful to bees, causing even greater damage. While a healthy colony could probably handle any one of these three threats, two or more could be fatal.
A feedback loop exists in which the one problem weakens the colony, making it more susceptible to additional threats. It is important to note that beekeepers tend managed bees: Colonies can be fed when forage is not available and can be treated for mites; new queens can be introduced to keep a colony going. Native bees and other pollinators can’t move away from pesticides or from areas where crops replace seasonal forage, so they are even more susceptible to these hazards.