REMEMBER !!!

BIG DAY IS AUGUST 18TH, MARK IT DOWN!

Monday, May 31, 2010

My Play

My play had a lot of characters.  The main characters were Alex and Daniel the bunnies.  There was a nice old woman.  The title of my play was Time of Week.  Dad kept on saying "the end" when it wasn't the end yet.  The wise old woman's necklace was made out of stars and glows in the night sky as the characters are sleeping. Two of the characters were able to wear it.  They were Alex and Andy.  There was a tornado that turned into ships and a 4 x 4 monster truck that was destroyed by a little car.  When the danger was happening they got into the WOKEOS courthouse. They spent four days and three nights with them.  Also there were twelve characters.  The tallest character was the wise old woman whose name is Ober.  Also the island was very windy and the lands they were to were Dadland and Forestland.  There was also a time when the 4 x 4 truck came back, but the car killed it quickly when it was coming out of the graveyard. All the characters had fun together.  The truck's name had eleven letters, it's real name is unknown. 

Sunday, May 30, 2010

Sacagawea

Sacagawea


(c. 1790-1812 or 1884)

A near-legendary figure in the history of the American West for her indispensible role on the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Sacagawea has become an enigma for historians seeking to trace her later life.
 The daughter of a Shoshone chief, Sacagawea was kidnapped by the Hidatsa when she was about ten years old and taken back to their village on the upper Missouri. There, she and another captive girl were purchased and wed by Toussaint Charbonneau, a French Canadian trapper.
 When Lewis and Clark engaged Charbonneau as an interpreter for their expedition in 1804, it was with the understanding that Sacagawea would also accompany them. Aside from her value as an interpreter, they expected her mere presence to speak well of them to Indians they would encounter along the way. As Clark noted in his journal, "a woman with a party of men is a token of peace."
Eight weeks before Lewis and Clark set out from the upper Missouri, a second token of peace was added to the expedition when Sacagawea gave birth to her first child, a son named Jean Baptiste Charbonneau but called Pomp or Pompey by Clark. Sacagawea carried her infant on a cradleboard as the "Corps of Discovery" headed upriver in April, 1805.
 Four months later, when the expedition had reached the navigable limits of the Missouri, Lewis set out to make contact with a Shoshone band, from whom he hoped to obtain horses for their trek across the mountains. When Sacagawea arrived to serve as interpreter, she found the band was led by her older brother, Cameahwait, who had become chief on their father's death. Deeply moved by this reunion, Sacagawea might have taken advantage of such an astounding coincidence to return to her people, but instead she helped the explorers secure the horses they needed and journeyed on with them and her husband to the Pacific.
 On the return journey, Sacagawea and Charbonneau parted with Lewis and Clark at a Hidatsa village on the upper Missouri, and from this point the historical record of their lives becomes somewhat conjectural.
Charbonneau evidently traveled to St. Louis at the invitation of William Clark, who had grown fond of the young Pompey and hoped he could induce his father to settle there. After a brief trial, however, Charbonneau returned to trapping, leaving his son in Clark's care. He worked for the American Fur Company, and later accompanied Prince Maximillian on the expedition that brought the artist Karl Bodmer to the upper Missouri in 1833.
 Whether Sacagawea accompanied Charbonneau to St. Louis is uncertain. Some evidence indicates that she did make this journey, then returned to the upper Missouri with her husband where she died in an epidemic of "putrid fever" late in 1812. Other accounts say that Sacagawea ultimately rejoined the Shoshone on their Wind River reservation and died there in 1884

Thursday, May 27, 2010

Kayaks

I like going in the kayak on the river and paddling. Sometimes we go so far but it's not five hundred feet.

Monday, May 24, 2010

A list of my favorite books.

1 . Ruby Lu series
2 .Curious George
3 . Charlotte's Web
4 . Geronimo Stilton 4
5 . Dr Seuss series
6 . Junie B. Jones
7 . Ricky Ricotta
8 . Captain Underpants
9 . Science and fiction books
10. biographies

Sunday, May 23, 2010

Morse Code Note

- ..   .   .-   .-.   -.-   ..   -..   ...
....   ---   .--   .-  .-.   -.--   ---   ..-?
-  .... .. ...   .. ...  -- --- .-. ... .  -.-. --- -.. .
.-- .... ---  .-- .- -. - ...  ..-.?
..  -.. ---
- .... --- .-.


OK,IT IS
MY NOTE.

Morse Code

T = -
H= . . . .
O= ---
R= .-.

Saturday, May 22, 2010

Thor's Dream Car

My dream car has 1,000 wheels! It has lights all over itself. It is kind of like the magic school bus. It has 9,099 seats. It can shrink down to zero feet zero inches. It can jump so high that it can fly over outer space. It can turn into the fastest motor boat ever. It can go so fast like this...ZOOOOM!! It speeds in zero seconds. When you are doing a taste test it zooms right into your mouth when you are not looking. It can turn into a trampoline, a car, a circle, a chair and other stuff. It can turn into a workout journal too. Also, it can zoom right into anything that has a screen without making damages in it. It can go faster than lightning. Sometimes it jumps into a rocket ship and sometimes you eat it when its turning into the food you are trying to eat. And also it can do a front flip and a back flip. If you kick it when its turned into a soccer ball when you kick it flies over your house. The highest it can get when its kicked over houses is 9,100 miles! And it sometimes turns into a sheet of paper which is origami. The tallest paper it can be is as big as the goliath frog. And sometimes it gets placed into a scrap book. That's never happend before!
THE END ZOOM!

Thursday, May 20, 2010

importance jars

VERY IMPORTANT       IMPORTANT            NOT IMPORTANT
                                                                                                    
exercising                           tv                              arguing
teamwork                          computer
bike riding                         church
reading                              compassion
homework                         video games
creativity                            grandparents
friends                               pets
dad
respect
mom
honesty
playing outside
y care
me

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Ben Franklin

Ben Franklin was here 1706 to 1790. There is a book called Who Was  Ben Franklin? Ben Franklin was a founding father of the United States of America, an inventor who created bifocal glasses, a musical instrument, and an artificial arm, and a scientist who discovered the nature of lightning during a thunderstorm with a kite with a lock on it.  

Monday, May 17, 2010

SUMMER LIST

1. Go to Nana and PopPop's home
2. Go outdoors in Maine
3. Play in pool
4. DWO
5. Go to Aunt Nan's home
6. Wait for Aug. 18
7. Make Thank You notes
8. Play with Mom
9.Read
10. Have fun
11.  Play with LEGO
12. Make a fall planner
13. Take pictures
14. Play with Mom
15. Wait for fall.

Pluto, dwarf planet

Gardening is fun

Stinktacular

Study up on Stink-isms from A to Z! A super-funny compendium of wacky
facts with compulsive appeal for fans of Stink and Judy Moody alike.

Cool

Curious, wonderful

Good Job

Iron Man 2

Butterfly life cycle