By Alice Waugh
Two landmarks in the town center—the Lincoln Public Library and Bemis Hall—have been getting upgrades.
By Alice Waugh
Two landmarks in the town center—the Lincoln Public Library and Bemis Hall—have been getting upgrades.
Looking for a newer house in Lincoln with an extra-long bathtub? You might want to check with Paul Pierce, the 15-year veteran of the Boston Celtics before being traded to the Brooklyn Nets in July—he’s put his Winter Street home on the market for $2.65 million.
Even as Lincoln homes go, it’s nicer than most. Photos on the real estate listing for the five-bedroom, 7,631-square-foot house built in 2003 reveal lots of custom woodwork, huge rooms, a home theater—and what appears to be a custom tub for the 6’7″ Pierce.
Pierce’s home is not the most expensive on the market in Lincoln at the moment, according to ZipRealty.com. That honor belongs to the six-bedroom, 6,424-square-foot house on seven acres at 144 Sandy Pond Road owned by Philip and Lisette Cooper (asking price: $4.3 million). A five-bedroom, 7,521-square-foot home on 4.5 acres at 169-171 Lexington Rd. owned by Daniel and Yolette Cellucci is listed at $2.7 million.
The Lincoln Library Film Society will screen several short films by László Moholy-Nagy tonight (Tuesday, Nov. 12) at 7 p.m.
While best-known for a career spanning sculpture, painting, and industrial design, the versatile Hungarian-born Moholy-Nagy also did pioneering work in the field of photography, producing short documentaries and abstract films that show the influence of constructivism on his vision. He was forced to leave Germany in 1933, moving to London, and later emigrating to the U.S. as the director of the New Bauhaus in Chicago, which only lasted for one year. He went on to found the Institute of Design, part of the Illinois Institute of Technology, which offered the first PhD in design.
Here are obituaries of Lincoln residents who have passed away since June.
October 21
Robert Duncan, 71 — former teacher in Lincoln Public Schools, Fenn School assistant headmaster
October 2
Melissa Meyer, 70 — chaired the board of the DeCordova Museum for 12 years
Caroline Tracey, 71 — mother of Miffi, Beth and Robert Tracey
September 30
Jean-Marie Vogel — entrepreneur in the medical device industry
Do you love playing board games? Do you want to learn new games? We’re going to try another two Games Days at different times at the Lincoln Public Library.
Story and photos by Brett Wittenberg
Lying face down in the mud, snorting and rooting, were a bunch of stinking, lethargic and—if you asked kids visiting Drumlin Farm on Harvest Weekend—endlessly fascinating creatures.
Like changing leaves and cooler temperatures, Harvest Weekend has become an annual reminder that autumn is in full swing in Lincoln. On Oct. 19 and 20, more than 3,000 visitors came from near and far to take part in the agricultural fun.
At the pig pen, Jen Sundstrom’s three kids took turns weighing themselves on a scale that told you, if you happened to be a pig, whether you’d be a piglet; a “finishing” pig, ready for market, a sow or a boar (see photos below). They climbed a stepstool to observe the real thing inside a wood-sided pen.
“The kids are loving the pigs,” said the Medford mom, covering her smile and her nose with her white turtleneck (her children didn’t seem to notice the odor).
The farm animals were a clear favorite with the younger visitors. Others explored the crop fields, went on hay rides, and picked their own fresh potatoes, squash and tomatoes to take home. Volunteers and staff circulated among the goat house, the horse barn, the chicken coop and the raptor and reptile houses to teach visitors about the farm’s year-round inhabitants.
“What I like most is actually this—seeing the people hang out, enjoying the simple activities, going out to the pick-your-owns… enjoying our fields which most people don’t get out to, getting to see the crops that we’re growing, and being able to harvest some stuff themselves. That’s my favorite,” a Harvest Weekend staffer said.
Heading down the hill from the front gate, visitors caught sight of kids laughing and darting in and out of the canopy of a flapping rainbow-colored parachute, gluing googly eyes and pom-poms to miniature pumpkins, kicking pumpkin-colored rubber balls, and “milking” wooden cows.
After stopping by the refreshment stand for glasses of cold apple cider, cookies from Concord’s Verrill Farm and sugar-dusted cider donuts, kids crowded around enclosures housing chickens, goats, pigs, cows, owls, and hawks. Even house mice drew a crowd as they skittered around a box of leaves while a staffer described their diet and habitats.
Two-year-old Avery of Lexington, sporting a ponytail and silver puffy boots, said excitedly that the pigs were her favorite part of Harvest Weekend, though she also liked the chickens, who were “climbing up the houses,” she observed.
Drumlin Farm is an interactive classroom of zoological facts for its youngest patrons, but older visitors seemed just as enthralled. “I like the raptors, all the owls and hawks,” said 47-year-old Ed Krasinski, who traveled to Lincoln from Salem, N.H., with his eight-year-old daughter and his wife, who said she used to visit Drumlin Farm when she was a kid.
“We just came to bring the girls to see the animals,” said Julie Fuller, 65, who drove six hours from New Jersey to accompany her three granddaughters, a 5-year-old and two-year-old twins, on their outing.
Hal Baker manned a booth of brochures, pamphlets and energy-saving light bulbs for Next Step Living, a New England residential energy efficiency company. Although he was on the job last Sunday, looking to sign up passers-by for home energy audits, he seemed to be enjoying himself as much as any visitor. His personal connection with Drumlin Farm spoke to its enduring appeal.
“I came here almost 50 years ago,” Baker recalled. “The first time I came here is when I was a little kid with my parents back in the early sixties.”
What are your thoughts on a Lincoln community center, further development of Lincoln Station, and Lincoln creating its own electric company? Learn more and offer your opinions at the annual State of the Town meeting this Saturday, Nov. 9 from 9:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. in Brooks Auditorium.
The meeting will include brief presentations and then open discussion—but not votes—on these three topics that have been the subject of preliminary discussion by town leaders. For more information about each, see the October 2 Lincoln Squirrel article or read the town-wide mailing that offers background and some options for dscussion.
Keep watching the Lincoln Squirrel and join the LincolnTalk email list (if you haven’t already done so) for further information about possible live-blogging or tweeting from the meeting.
For more information about an of these events, call the Lincoln Council on Aging at 781-259-8811.
November 4 — 12:30 p.m.
Lincoln Academy with Chuck Miller: Getting the most of the town’s new website
Come to Bemis Hall on Monday, Nov. 4 at 12:30 p.m. to hear Chuck Miller, Lincoln’s IT director, discuss “Getting the Most of the Town’s New Website.” Bring a bag lunch. The COA provides beverages and dessert. The lectures last about an hour, including a question and answer period. Participants are welcome to stay after the program to continue their discussion.
November 4 and beyond –10 a.m.
Like to walk with friends?
Walking is a great way to stay fit. Walking with friends is more fun and will help you keep motivated to get into a healthy walking routine. If you’d like to join with others who walk once a week, come down to Bemis Hall on Mondays at 10 a.m. A group will walk from there or drive to a trail or other walking path for a short walk. You may walk for as long or as short a time as you like. Give it a try!
The Lincoln Agriculture Commission (LAC) invites land owners, farmers, and others to an information session on its agricultural lands mapping project on Tuesday, November 5 at 7:30 p.m. at Bemis Hall. This community-wide meeting will highlight the LAC’s new map of agricultural lands in Lincoln, which was developed using publicly available information, and will feature tips on leasing land to a farmer.
We are in the midst of an exciting period of opportunity for local agriculture due to a resurgence of interest in locally produced foods, However, a weak link in the revival of regional agriculture is access to land for the beginning farmer. New farmers are critical to sustaining our agricultural base and to replacing an aging farmer population. Those interested in starting agricultural careers are increasingly challenged as barriers to entry are significant and traditional venues for education are declining.
The LAC is a town board charged with protecting and promoting agriculture in Lincoln. To that end, the group is working to inventory existing agricultural lands and uncover properties that have the potential to support agricultural production. There are many properties in Lincoln that may have valuable soil and land characteristics that could help a farmer start or expand his/her business and produce food for the region. The LAC hopes that by providing information about farming opportunities in Lincoln, they can facilitate matches between farmers and landowners and increase agricultural production in the community.
For this land outreach project, the LAC is partnering with the New Entry Sustainable Farming Project, a Tufts University program that assists people with an interest in small-scale commercial agriculture to begin farming in Massachusetts. New Entry provides services for beginning farmers such as locating and helping with leasing farmland, education, training, business/enterprise development, and production and marketing assistance.
Please contact Ashley Davies, Farmland Matching Coordinator, at adavies@comteam.org or 978-654-5738, or Christy Foote-Smith, Lincoln Agricultural Commission, at cfsmith@massaudubon.org or 781-259-2201 if you have any questions.
By Alice Waugh
High winds on Friday morning contributed to several power outages in Lincoln, including several brief interruptions at the Lincoln School.
Lincoln Road was closed between Ballfield Road and Peirce Hill Road for a time when a tree snapped and fell across the road, bringing down power lines on the other side. The police station also lost power and had to switch to its backup generator, according to Lincoln Police Chief Kevin Mooney.
There were a total of three tree-limb breaks in Lincoln that led to power outages in town, Mooney said, but by 3:30 p.m., “we seem to be getting back to normal here; the wind seems to have died down,” he said.
An NStar map showing towns with power outages as of 3:30 p.m. on Friday, Nov. 1. Light yellows indicates less than 1 percent of customers affected; darker yellow indicates 1 to 10 percent.
Several other towns west of Boston and on the south shore also had outages. At 3:30 p.m., 5 percent of Wayland customers were without power. Lincoln’s outage rate at that time was 0.5 percent, according to the NStar website.