Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Rock climbing

Rock Climbing.

Excited as ever, my class and I  walked into the doors of the rock climbing manchon. We all sat on the most extremely comfortable chairs ever.  Yeeeeeeeeees!!! I got to the top of the first rock climbing wall, even though it was the easiest wall to climb. We were at flax rock having the time of our lives. We were having the first day of camp on the 22/4/2014.

The second climb looked alot harder and everyone said it was very hard. I waited till it was my turn which took a while. While I was waiting I looked around to see what I could do next, I saw Ryleigh getting to the top and everyone started shouting Ryleigh, Ryleigh, Ryleigh, so I started joining in. She got to the top. She put both hands on the rope and Mrs Hardaker lowered her back down the rock climbing wall.

It was my turn now and I was determined to get to the top. It was easy at the start but as it got higher it got a lot harder. There were less rocks and my arms were aching more and more the further I got up. My dad was at the bottom so I wanted to make him proud of me. I couldn’t make it. My arms were aching. I tried to grab the next rock but it was too far. I put my foot on a higher rock and then I went to grab the next hand hole but it was still too high. I did what I had to do. I was wedged in the chimney so I put my left foot on the back and my right foot on the front and then my hands to the side and started climbing and you know what, It worked, I got to the top.

It was mint! I would come back any time any day.

Written by Cameron Orr

The Luge

The luge!!!


Whoooosh!!! I went like thunder down long twisty track. full speed down the straight  I went down the track, still there was not enough speed to pass my dad. I knew the loop was coming up but my dad didn’t I still went at almost full speed I turned as tight as I could but I span out My dad go way away from me now I would never catch up to him now. I remembered the short cut It was very steep but it would get me lots of speed. I took the shortcut  I was going way too fast and then slammed into dads side. We both spun out and we both couldn’t get going again. dad got going but then bumped me and gave me a boost, just enough to get me going it went zooming down the track again I saw that dad was right behind me I got to the last corner but then slammed to the edge .

How trees were created

How trees got created


Long long ago over 1,000 years ago Tane Mahuta was traveling across the land with his 6 brothers (Tu, .Taronga, Ruamoko, Rongo, Tawhirimatea and Humia). And then hears a message from someone creepy, he looks around but no one was there. He goes to talk to his mother about it and she said “it would be another god”. She senses thats its Tawhiri. “ Check on Tawhiri also see if it is him, if not, Sorry to waste your time”.

Tane mahuta went back that night to see what it was, but it wasn’t Tawhirimatea it was a tree the first tree Tane mahuta the tree was dying tane then rushed to his mother but before he started running to his mother he thought no I must save the tree before it dies he nels down next to the tree “now how do I save you little tree “ tane said

He touched the tree and it got better
He touched it again and it had grown into a big tree
He touched it again and it dropped billions of seeds on to the ground
He touched it again and then all the other trees grew.

By Cameron O

My Pepeha

Ko Cameron toku ingoa.
Ko David toku koroua.
Ko Shirley toku kuia .
Ko Murray toku papa.
Ko Roise toku mama.
                                                          I te taha o toku papa, no
Aotearoa.
I te taha o toku mama, no
Aotearoa.
I whanau ai au I
Heretaunga
I tipu ake ai au I
Heretaunga
E noho ana au I
Heretaunga
                                                      Ko takitimu te waka
Ko Te Mata te maunga
Ko Tutaekuri te awa
Ko Parkvale toku kura

Thursday, October 16, 2014

How trees were created

How trees were created


Long long ago over 1,000 years ago Tane Mahuta was traveling across the land with his 6 brothers (Tu, .Taronga, Ruamoko, Rongo, Tawhirimatea and Humia). And then hears a message from someone creepy, he looks around but no one was there. He goes to talk to his mother about it and she said “it would be another god”. She senses thats its Tawhiri. “ Check on Tawhiri also see if it is him, if not, Sorry to waste your time”.

Tane mahuta went back that night to see what it was, but it wasn’t Tawhirimatea it was a tree the first tree Tane mahuta the tree was dying tane then rushed to his mother but before he started running to his mother he thought no I must save the tree before it dies he nels down next to the tree “now how do I save you little tree “ tane said

He touched the tree and it got better
He touched it again and it had grown into a big tree
He touched it again and it dropped billions of seeds on to the ground
He touched it again and then all the other trees grew.

By Cam

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

How much sugar is to much sugar

How Much Sugar Is Too Much Sugar ?
We watched
Nigel Latta
Is sugar the new fat?

Questions
How much sugar is enough for a day?
Men, 9 teaspoons
Women, 6 teaspoons
Kids, 4 teaspoons
Whats good about sugar?
What bad about sugar?
how does sugar affect our bodies?
What's in our food?
Do we know what amount of sugar we are eating in your life?
Is sugar in  every product?
What products should we buy?
What products shouldn't we buy?
Is juice better than soft drinks?
Is soft drinks better than juice?
are spreads on your toast/bread good for you?
Is there a better option than samwidges?
whats the best juice for our health?
whats the best fruit for our health?
whats the best soft drink for our health?


What I found out?
Too much sugar can make you get diabetes.
If you get diabetes, you need to inject yourself every day.
If you get diabetes, some people will get body parts cut off
If you eat too much sugar you may get put to sleep, and all your teeth will get cut off.
How much sugar for men, women and kids
Men, 9 teaspoons
Women, 6 teaspoons
Kids, 4 teaspoons
You can lose diabetes
Sugar can affect your whole life
Stop drinking fizzy drinks
Stop eating junk food
Stop eating takeaways
Only eat as much sugar as you're allowed
65% adults have obesity
33% children have obesity





Monday, October 13, 2014

Cape Kidnappers

Cape Kidnappers

Against my face
The sweet summers breeze,
Down the beach we went.

On the Quad,
Collecting mussels,
Everyone Enjoying their life.

Meeting the gannets,
Feeding them food,
Now going back,
along the track.

Now back at home,
Eating our muscles,
Back at,
Home sweet home.

JPEG ImageJPEG ImageJPEG Image

Cape kidnappers Chart
If my family enjoyed it or not.
Enjoyed, Green , 99%
Not Enjoyed, Orange. 1%

graph.png

Friday, September 05, 2014

Production

Production

I really liked doing the production because I was one of the people from room 19 and room 12 that got one of the parts . I really liked my part because it wasn't to easy and it wasn't to hard, the main things that I liked is that instead of just the classes on stage sing, we all sing. I liked the part that I have because I get to kiss my muscles. From the beginning I thought we would never be able to pull this off but every time we practice we get better and we get a step closer to performing I loved performing to the school and to all the parents that came. Thankyou to all the parents that came to watch us perform, We all loved having a little giggle every now and then. On the first night I was very nervous but from the second to the last I was so excited I just wanted to get out there and enjoy performing. All the practicing was getting me tired  And after I performed I was very tired. I’m still very tired but I wish we could do it over and over again .

Actors

Parents:
Ranginui,           Mohit
Papatuanuku,    Mia

Gods:
Tane Mahuta ,   Grayson
Tawhirimatea ,   Cameron D
Tangaroa ,         Cassius/ Oscar
Tu Matoenga,    Isaac/ Jesse   
Rongo,               Connor
Humia,               Cameron
Ruamoko’          Adam/ Samuel

Narrators:
Nar A,                Aidan
Nar B,               Georgia
Nar C,               Nikita
Nar D,               Liska

Chorus:
Sam
Annabel
Sapphire
Zac
Paige
Victoria
George
Michel
Boody
Kesha
The order of the production plays.
The Legend of Ranginui Papatuanuku,
The Legend of  Maui And the great fish of NZ,
Half time,
The Legend of the 7 Whales
The Legend of Te Mata O Rongokako
The end

By Cameron



Sunday, August 31, 2014

Learning Logs

Learning Logs

Learning logs or journals let students keep notes of their thoughts and feelings about their work. A log need be no more than a page.
Students will have some time in class to complete it.


. The most important thing I learned this week was....
I didn’t now that I was so good at acting.

. What I found most interesting this week was
That we got to do production all week.

. What I enjoyed most about this week was…
Learning new things about production and how to get better

. One thing that still puzzles me is…
Why the dates of the production got changed.

.What I need help with is …
What I need to improve on in the production.

. What pleased me most was…
It pleased me that I could get one of the main roles.

. This week might have been more helpful for me if…
If I wasn’t so nervous before I went on stage.

Wednesday, August 06, 2014

Italian Hockey


5 AND 6!!! Mrs Hardaker yelled. Connor and I sprang into action at full speed we sprinted to the noodles. I slamed myself on the ground and snached the noodle. I slapped the balloon directly towards the goal but mohit sprinted towards me he bowled me over to the side, I was in deep pain. Mohit started  to very close to the goal but Connor was waiting there for him. I got up and sprinted to help Connor. Connor jumped and slammed the balloon but he missed. mohit hat got a goal. NOOOOOOOO!

Tuesday, August 05, 2014

Mount Taranaki


Taranaki used to live next to Taupo. Both Taranaki and Tongariro loved Pihanga and fought over her.Taranaki was beaten badly his cone was broken off the tip of his head,  his sides were gashed and almost broken to pieces. taranaki moved back underground and traveled down the Whanganui River to the coast. Taranaki left the  Whanganui River and entered the sea and headed northwest and Taranaki was led by a giant stone named Te Toka a Rauhoto. They surfaced to see Pouakai on the horizon. Diving again Taranaki followed the guide stone up the hangaataahua (stony) River. Taranaki resurfaced beside Pouakai. Te Toka a Rauroto flew eastward between Pouakai kaitake and then landed near the sea.

And there you go, there it the maori legend of Mount Taranaki came to stand where it stands tall today.

By Cameron O

Tuesday, June 03, 2014

The three kete of knowledge.

The legend of the three kete of knowledge.

The three kete of knowledge was brought to earth by a great and mighty god, Tane. Tane chose a learning school on the topmost heaven. to place the three kete of knowledge.

Tane had packed only a patu , his strength and his courage.

Tane began his journey by climbing the ropes of giant swirling whirlwinds of his brother tawhirimatea had made the winds. Tane made it to the to top, the second overworld. Tane’s  wicked evil brother whiro, was trying to beat him  to the three kete of knowledge. When Tane reached the the third overworld whiro was just behind him. He looked back behind him whiro was slowing gone in the load of bats, mosquitoes, owls and sandflies. Tane heard the voice of his brother calling for the bats, mosquitoes, owls and sandflies to attack Tane. he started sprinting for his life, but tawhirimatea blew all of the attackers away.

He reached the eleventh over world where he saw the gateway to the topmost te rangi, heaven. he entered the gates and into the learning school. There he met Rehua. Rehua presented to Tane The three kete of knowledge. Rehua told him what they were called. The first one was, of mental and physical challenges.The second one ment, the kete of emotions. the third was the kete of prayer.

Tane made his way back  to earth, but on the ninth overworld Whiro was waiting to attack him. When Tane and Whiro met They had a great battle.Tane would of been beaten but the three kete made him strong. Tane had defeated Whiro and threw him into the underworld.

Now Whiro brings bad thoughts, sickness and death to us. bats, mosquitoes, owls and sandflies still annoy us today, but it remind us of the three kete of knowledge.

Friday, May 16, 2014

Ormie the pig

Ormie the pig catches a flight on a plane that was plastic ,and he made it himself. Ormie jumps out of the plane. Right after he jumped out, he reminds himself HE FORGOT HIS PARACHUTE!!!!! “ oh no” he said to himself. Ormie is going over 300 km per hour. Ormie gets stripped from his clothes. Ormie starts flapping his arms like an crazy hawk getting suckedd into a hurrakane. Ormie gets only three metres close to the fridge. and then .... KABOOM!!!!! a ton dynamite makes the fridge go flying into the air 100km per hour with Ormie on it. Ormie the pig is sitting on top of the fridge at sky high with the cookies right next to him. Ormie gets so close to getting his hands on the cookies but then KASPLAT!!!!!!Ormie is flat on the bottom of the plane. Ormie gets stuck by his fatness on the bottom of the plane when the fridge goes flying down onto the ground faster than light speed.“me cookies WA WA WA WA WA” he shouts.
3 hours later.
He finally falls of the plane.
3 hours later.
He lands on the fridge.
1 second later
he is staring at the cookies
3576 hours later
he is still staring at the cookies.
Ormie the pig is sitting on top of the fridge with the cookies. Ormie the pig gets so close to getting his hands on the cookies but then KABOOM!!!!!!
It
was
the
dynamite.
1111 years later.
He finally gives up
He walks home and right as he walks home through the door the first thing he hears is “oh finally your home” because were having cookies for dinner.
The end HA HA HA



My goals

My reading goal.
I think I need to picture it better in my head.

My writing goal.
I think that I should use more onimaterpaigh.

My maths goal.
I should ask for help when I need it



Monday, May 12, 2014

My Goals

My Maths Goal
I think That I should go over what I have done to check.

My Reading Goal
I think that I should work on summarise the chapter better.

My Writing Goal

I think I should use more describing words.

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

Arrow town



Arrow town
The Arrow Basin was formed when the great glaciers carved out the Wakatipu Basin.
Local Maori passed through the area on seasonal trips to hunt native birds and extract pounamu (green stone). Waitaha, the first tribe, were later joined by Kati Mamoe who were driven south after fighting with Kai Tahu. By the 1700s the three tribes were locked together by marriages and peace alliances.
William Rees and Nicholas von Tunzelmann were the first Europeans to establish farms in the area. Rees’ cadet, Alfred Duncan, provides us with one of the first descriptions of the Arrow River ‘flowing like silver threads through the blackened [matagouri] scrub-clothed plains.’
It was not the silver look of the river but the gold it contained that saw Arrow town evolve. Jack Tewa, a shearer for Rees, was the first to discover gold around May 1861, followed by either William (Bill) Fox or the team of Thomas Low and John MacGregor late in 1862. It is unclear who was next. Being a forceful character, Fox took credit for the discovery and for a while the town was called Fox’s.
Although there were attempts to keep the discovery secret, there were 1,500 miners camped down on the Arrow River by the end of 1862. 12,000 ounces (340 kg) of gold were carried out on the first gold escort in January 1863.
For a small town, Arrow town has a big history. Situated at the foot of the mountains of western Otago, this former goldfield settlement was previously known as Fox’s Diggings, Arrow River and Arrow town. Original buildings such as the Bank of New Zealand and the General Store have been preserved.  So have several miners’ cottages, now dwarfed by an avenue of oaks planted in the main street between 1867 and 1877. This diminutive thoroughfare is one of the most photographed in New Zealand, partly due to its character but also because of its historical legacy.
British and Irish miners, along with a smattering of Americans, French, Italians, Germans and Scandinavians, arrived in the region after gold was discovered in 1862. Nine years later, Arrow town’s population had risen to 138 settlers and 70 Chinese sojourners, mainly from the Pearl River Delta. The industrious, mostly illiterate or semi-literate sojourners reworked land that had been abandoned. Their purpose was two-fold: to earn money to send or take home and to return to their families in this life or as bones.
In 1840 my great great grandfather, Thomas John Lister, was born in Yorkshire, England. And grew up in Arrow town.Jane Godfrey was his wife, they got married in 1868
He had eleven children, their names were...
1. George Lister, 2. Thomas Lister, 3. Clara Lister, 4. Leonard Lister, 5. Leah Lister, 6. Ethel Lister, 7. James Lister, 8.Ernest Lister, 9. Arthur Lister, 10. Lewis Lister 11. John Lister.
Thomas Lister passed away in The fourth of December 1900 at Arrow town,NZ. He passed away in his gold mine because his the whole thing collapsed on top of him  and no one ever knew why It collapsed.
Here is a photo of him at his house.36ThomasListerOutsideHisHutMed.jpg



here is the newspaper article that is about him passing away.ThomasListerAccident.JPG
Arrow town is the much visited, historic, four-season, holiday destination, located only 20 minutes drive from Queens town, South Island, New Zealand.

Arrowtown is a former gold-mining town built on a rich history literally waiting for you to explore.
Continue reading to learn more about Arrow town, or to start planning your Arrow town activities, there are heaps to choose from!
Arrow town is a quaint historic gold-mining town only 20 minutes drive from spectacular Queens town. Arrow town is at the heart of the Southern Lakes ski areas, and is known for its hot summers and striking autumn foliage. Arrow town has a number of superb cafes & restaurants. On the main street of Arrow town, Buckingham Street you will find shops selling New Zealans's finest clothing, souvenirs, arts and crafts, gift ware, and wines. A wide range of accommodation is available in Arrow town or nearby Queens town.
  • Visit the Chinese Village
  • Choose a golf course - Millbrook Resort has a international class 18 hole championship golf course.
  • Hike to the Old Mace town - Walking track maps can be picked up from Lake Districts Museum.
  • Explore the pools of the Arrow River
  • Follow the Historic Walk around town
  • Check out the Bungy Bridge
  • Try one of the old pubs
  • Catch a trout at Lake Hayes
  • Relive the Gold Rush at the Museum
  • Horse trek the old trails
  • Ride the Double Decker Bus
  • Relax at Waterfall Park
  • Sample the great vineyards - Amisfield at Lakes Hayes and Gibbs-ton Valley Winery are close by.
  • Try parapenting
  • Hire a gold pan, you never know!
  • Raft the Kawarau and Shot over River
  • Nice day for a horse and carriage ride
  • See Skippers, the Canyon of Gold
  • What a great place for a bike ride
  • Four wheel drive trips

History

Arrow town was established as the town of Foxes in 1862. It was the discovery of gold in the Arrow River which led miners by their thousand into the district and resulted in the formation of settlements adjacent to the gold diggings.
William Fox, John O'Callaghan and a small band of miners had discovered gold in the Arrow River some weeks prior to the fact becoming known and by being secretive they managed to have the diggings to themselves. In this time they recovered some 230 lbs of gold! Ultimately the population of Arrowtown rose to over 7,000 people, and the now ghost towns of Mace town and Bullendale counted for several hundred more. The Arrow River became famed as one of the world's richest sources of alluvial gold, and many miners made their fortunes in the diggings.
Many of the early miners were fairly nomadic and lived in canvas tents, not having the time, money or inclination to build permanent lodgings. However, the merchants and hoteliers were always quick to recognise a good thing, and some of the stone buildings in Buckingham Street date back to 1862 or 1863, which was only months after the beginning of the rush.
Trees were of course planted in the area, with many coming from Europe, the Americas and Australia. The wide variety of trees in the district is now one of its great attractions and the seasonal changes, particularly in the Autumn, add greatly to the landscape. The main Avenue of Sycamores and Oaks was planted in 1867 and to this day is a feature of Arrow town.
Since the gloss went out of the gold rush in the early part of this century, Arrow town has continued on as a small satellite town to Queens town and as a base for agriculture in this part of the basin.
More recently, with the increase in visitors from New Zealand and all over the world, the town has become an attraction as an example of a living historic town. Strict preservation orders protect the originality of the town's historic buildings, and the excellent Lakes District Museum has many displays pertaining to the pioneering past of the district.