Monday, September 29, 2008
New Trolls from the Rainbow Shop
For years, visiting the Living Rainbow store has been an important part of Kino field trips to Mount Lemmon. Recently Libby and Eli visited the nice folks there while collecting troll house materials. Debbie Fagan remembered Libby and gave her a fantastic gift for Kino -- two big, kid-sized trolls. The trolls, Walter and Wheeze (he's kinda allergic to the tree moss), are fitting right in in the primary center and everyone loves them! This morning everyone worked on writing thank you letters to Debbie. Thank you!
(Walter and Wheeze are the two fuzzy fellows in the middle.)
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Rio and the Quaking River Band in Arizona Blues Showdown
Rio and the Quaking River Band, which includes Lisa Otey, Chris, and others, will be competing in the Arizona Blues Showdown in Phoenix next weekend. They'll be performing a 20 minute set at 2:00 at the Rhythm Room on September 28. Ten other bands will be competing that day.
If they are among the finalists, they will perform again on October 5, and then the winning band gets to go to Memphis for the national competition. Lisa says she's gotten to go a couple of times and it's really fun.
The Rhythm Room is at 1019 E. Indian School Road and admission is around $7.
If they are among the finalists, they will perform again on October 5, and then the winning band gets to go to Memphis for the national competition. Lisa says she's gotten to go a couple of times and it's really fun.
The Rhythm Room is at 1019 E. Indian School Road and admission is around $7.
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
The As Yet Unnamed Sustainability Project
Four Kino students–Erik, Ethan, Klair, and Tyler – have launched a year-long challenge to themselves: to see if they can grow and produce their own food.
They all got interested in the challenge last year, when Neill Prohaska was teaching Environmental Science. Neill is now going to U of A, working towards masters degrees in both journalism and Latin American studies, but he is still supervising the project.
The four began working on their gardens before school ended last spring. Over the summer, they came up to Kino early in the morning before it got hot (like 5 am) to keep working on them. Limited to food crops that do well in the Tucson climate, they are growing beans, corn, peppers and squash, as well as the more exotic sorghum, amaranth, and panic grass. They are relying as much as possible on rain water from the water harvesting tanks that Harrison built for his senior project last year.
Since their garden is not yet ready for harvest, for the time being they are eating locally produced foods. Neill has a supply of dry corn from his garden; they are making it into hominy. They have teppary beans from Native Seed/ Search, eggs from Hickman’s Ranch, and peppers and okra that they bought at a farmer’s market.
“We started on the first day of school,” said Tyler and Klair. “Erik and Ethan started on the second day.”
”What have they been eating? “Not much,” says Tyler.
They are taking vitamin pills and supplements just to make sure. They’ve also given themselves some major wiggle room: anything that can fit through a straw.
“Ethan called me this weekend and complained that his friends were eating sloppy joes. I was going to joke that he could put some in a blender and drink it, but then I realized that he probably would,” said Neill.
Harley, Emmi and Lela’s father, is providing some loaner hens for eggs as well as givint them some baby chicks. The tilapia tanks, which Ethan is working on, will also be a regular source of protein.
Once they are producing more food, Neill says, they will take another look at the straw exception.
Klair says, “I been feeling more energy since we started. I think it’s the Jamba Juice.”
Tuesday, September 16, 2008
What? Are there lockers at Kino ?!!
If you are an old Kino student, this is probably the most shocking change since we gradually transitioned from sitting on cubes to sitting in chairs. For years, a perennial issue at school meetings has been "Why can't we have lockers that lock instead of open cubbies?"
Well, they aren't really lockers. They're cubbies with doors and they don't lock. This means we can continue to say, "This is a community and in a community we need to be able to trust each other."
Plus they are beautiful. Master carpenter Chris Schulz built them for us over the summer. They have adjustable shelves and are sized to fit today's big backpacks as well as the regular clutter, so the whole school looks cleaner. They will continue to look beautiful for years!
Well, they aren't really lockers. They're cubbies with doors and they don't lock. This means we can continue to say, "This is a community and in a community we need to be able to trust each other."
Plus they are beautiful. Master carpenter Chris Schulz built them for us over the summer. They have adjustable shelves and are sized to fit today's big backpacks as well as the regular clutter, so the whole school looks cleaner. They will continue to look beautiful for years!
Friday, September 12, 2008
Wet Hike
Help Support Kino with Good Search / Good Store
Anna has found probably the easiest, most painless way you can help raise extra money for Kino – using GoodSearch for your internet searches and passing through the GoodShop webpage on your way to buying something on the internet you were going to buy anyway.
GoodSearch.com is a Yahoo-powered search engine. You get the same search results as you do
with Yahoo. GoodSearch.com donates half its advertising revenue, about a penny per search, to
the non-profit that you designate.
Similarly, hundreds of on-line stores have agreed to donate a percentage of your purchase to your designated non-profit if you get to their store through GoodShop. These include Amazon, Travelocity, Circuit City, Target, Newegg, Drugstore,com, Macy’s – in fact, there are so many of the most popular on-line stores, it is worth checking before you make any on-line purchase.
They send a check once a year based on the number of sales and searches by September 30. So just for fun, let’s kick off this fundraiser with a bang. (No searchbots please; we’d be totally disqualified from participating.)
There’s a link to both at KinoSchool.org in case you can’t remember their names.
Where they ask, “Who do you GoodSearch for?” write “Kino School.”
GoodSearch.com is a Yahoo-powered search engine. You get the same search results as you do
with Yahoo. GoodSearch.com donates half its advertising revenue, about a penny per search, to
the non-profit that you designate.
Similarly, hundreds of on-line stores have agreed to donate a percentage of your purchase to your designated non-profit if you get to their store through GoodShop. These include Amazon, Travelocity, Circuit City, Target, Newegg, Drugstore,com, Macy’s – in fact, there are so many of the most popular on-line stores, it is worth checking before you make any on-line purchase.
They send a check once a year based on the number of sales and searches by September 30. So just for fun, let’s kick off this fundraiser with a bang. (No searchbots please; we’d be totally disqualified from participating.)
There’s a link to both at KinoSchool.org in case you can’t remember their names.
Where they ask, “Who do you GoodSearch for?” write “Kino School.”
Science!
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