Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Karaka Point History
A long time a go maori lived at Karaka Point. They lived in whare which were made of harekeke, tree branches and tree trunks. Then when an enemy tribe attacked the Karaka Point tribe will know because they will have look outs. Once the tribe lands on the beach the tribe on the hill throw rocks at the enemy tribe. The injuries would have been really bad maybe even broken bones.
Room 2 has been learning about the history of Waikawa Bay. Waikawa Bay is in Picton, New Zealand and was home to Maori tribes such as the Ngatimamoe who once owned Karaka Point.
Ngatimamoe built forts and threw rocks off the cliff to defend the pa from raiding tribes.
Karaka point was used to protect the Ngatimamoe in war time. In 1850 the New Zealand government bought Waitohi from Ropoama, so he moved his people to Waikawa, typhoid killed most of his people. In 1920 Waikawa Pa School was burnt to the ground by an arsinist. During World War 2 in Waikawa Bay was well protected from the enemy by Navy, Army and Air Force because Queen Charlotte Sound had an air craft hanger and two war ships. Today Waikawa has changed a lot.
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Kiwi
The Kiwi is a New Zealand icon aand it is a endangered species. There are eleven types of kiwi...
there is the Little Spotted Kiwi, Brown Kiwi, Rowi, Great Spotted Kiwi, Haast Tokoeka and Southern Tokoeka.
The biggest Kiwi is the Great Spotted Kiwi at 45 cm long, the size of a Turkey and the smallest Kiwi is the Little Spotted Kiwi at 25 cm long the size of a Bantam.
There are only 78,000 Kiwis left in New Zealand. They are found in North land, Coromandel, South land,west coast and Stewart Island and they live in forest and on mainland islands.
There body features are claws, bill ,feathers, whiskers and long strong powerful legs. The Kiwi can't fly so they run from predators. There predators are stoats, ferrets, cats and humans driving cars.
Monday, June 15, 2009
How Well Does A Kiwi Smell?
We read a book today called "How well does a kiwi smell?", it really interesting did you know that the kiwi can smell really well according to Bernice Wenzel, a scientist who did some kiwi experiments. The kiwi has one of the best noses in the world. Bernice Wenzel has proven that the kiwi can smell worms really well in the dirt. It can smell the food without tasting it. First they put food in the small little ice-cream cone shape, then they put soil in the little cones there are three aluminium cones and the soil fills up to about two centimeters before the top. Then they put food, like worms and huhu grubs, they put mesh over the three tubes to stop the kiwi tasting the soil. It was really interesting it was the most interesting book ever. Check it out in the New Zealand School Journal Number 1 1989 part 3 I recommend this book from Nico Van Beek.
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Ashers Time At Waikawa
My time at Waikawa Bay School was awesome! I came in 2008 and joined Mrs Eastons class and we learned about Margaret Mahy, an author. One year later I was in Mrs Parsons class. It has been the best class in the world! We were learning about World War One and Two, it was really cool. We all learned the poem called In Flanders Fields. Sadly tomorrow I am leaving to go back to England. I really really like this school and could never ask for a better one.
Room 2 Blog
Room 2 is having a lesson on blogging and making sure that the work that they post makes sense, is spelt right, has interesting words to capture their audience and has compound and complex sentences.
Friday, June 5, 2009
ANZAC Day
25th April 1915 SPLASH ! SPLASH ! Troops trudging through the water...
"Holy heck barbed wire! They knew we were coming."
It started then and there. In a couple of seconds all you could hear was gun fire. We didn't know how many men died that day but it was around five - six hundred New Zealand men. 26th April 1915 by now we had Dug Trenches, but under all the gun fire it was very hard to get to sleep, we got used to it eventually, but we were all afraid of dying and not living to the end of the day. Days of terrible fighting went past, hundreds of New Zealand soilders died and many deaths and injurys had a occurred. Finally we started evacuating and then we were on ships back to New Zealand.
We commemorate ANZAC Day for all the suffering and deaths.
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