Friday, 14 September 2018
Wednesday, 5 September 2018
The Voyage Out To New Zealand
Dear Mike Knox, As I left my home in England, I made sure to grab all my valuable things. So, this letter may be short, but everyone got told to write a letter to people close to them, and since my parents died in the war, I will write to you. I will make sure to add every boring detail to my trip. Day one of the boat, people were enjoying the boat ride. But there was one little problem. the boat they put me on didn’t have any high walls, and it had a crack in the front of the boat, leaking into my cabin room, which I was lucky, I got put into a slightly larger cabin with other people. Which, if our room does flood I’m not the only one that is going to die first. But, you guys are lucky you are not here. Because these children on board are making a racket! I wish I could just throw them off board one by one. But sadly, I cannot do that.
Day two, I’m not going to write everyday, but I will try to write the most important days. No water has came through the crack yet, so I guess I am lucky. But people have just been sitting around doing nothing. Day 56. I got no idea how long it will be, I just hate everyone on this boat now. The people in the cabin, they snuck some treats onto the boat. But the other people, they make a lot of noise. You’re lucky your not here. But, there has been some water that gone through the crack, But the captain doesn’t care. He put on some tape stuff, and he said it should hold.
Day 72, or something like that. The tape stuff broke off, wasn’t ‘sticky’ enough. So we had to use things we bought on. Like ingredients for baking bread. We made it till it was sticky. But BIg Mike. I heard you like crabs, so I had been catching crabs. Also, we had been building these crossbows, so we can kill the fish that we find. Because we have been running out of food. The cabin is small also. The toilet is the worst thing ever, it’s a plastic bowl. Most of our water is boiled. Because we get our water from the crack. But, so far, boredom.
We crossed over the rough seas, hit a few fish of the way. There has been a sickness going around the boat within the past few days. Many people are been vomiting over the bow. The sea was really rough today, there had been more cracks in different cabins. So all of us has been trying to fix the accidents. After a few hours we had spotted some land, but it wasn’t New Zealand. We got told New Zealand is still another 50 days away. Day 99. I am writing this after a horrifying site. There was a fire on board. Many of us were scared, but everyone got bottles of water and put it on the fire. Then the captain span the boat so it would lean sideways,
Day two, I’m not going to write everyday, but I will try to write the most important days. No water has came through the crack yet, so I guess I am lucky. But people have just been sitting around doing nothing. Day 56. I got no idea how long it will be, I just hate everyone on this boat now. The people in the cabin, they snuck some treats onto the boat. But the other people, they make a lot of noise. You’re lucky your not here. But, there has been some water that gone through the crack, But the captain doesn’t care. He put on some tape stuff, and he said it should hold.
Day 72, or something like that. The tape stuff broke off, wasn’t ‘sticky’ enough. So we had to use things we bought on. Like ingredients for baking bread. We made it till it was sticky. But BIg Mike. I heard you like crabs, so I had been catching crabs. Also, we had been building these crossbows, so we can kill the fish that we find. Because we have been running out of food. The cabin is small also. The toilet is the worst thing ever, it’s a plastic bowl. Most of our water is boiled. Because we get our water from the crack. But, so far, boredom.
We crossed over the rough seas, hit a few fish of the way. There has been a sickness going around the boat within the past few days. Many people are been vomiting over the bow. The sea was really rough today, there had been more cracks in different cabins. So all of us has been trying to fix the accidents. After a few hours we had spotted some land, but it wasn’t New Zealand. We got told New Zealand is still another 50 days away. Day 99. I am writing this after a horrifying site. There was a fire on board. Many of us were scared, but everyone got bottles of water and put it on the fire. Then the captain span the boat so it would lean sideways,
Day 48. Last day before we arrive in New Zealand. Everyone packed up their things today, and just sat down waiting for the day to end. I invited my cabin mates in to stay the day in our cabin. I didn’t tell anyone this. But I brung some snakes and ladder. They enjoyed it, but you probably don’t care. You’re only reading a boring letter that the captain told us to write. But. this is the final hours before we go to sleep. So, I will be in New Zealand tomorrow.
Hope you found this interesting.
Cheers Mike
Hope you found this interesting.
Cheers Mike
Friday, 10 August 2018
Friday, 8 June 2018
Term 2 Math
In Term 2 we have been working on Basic Algebra and Linear Equations. Below is some of the work that we have learnt
Tuesday, 8 May 2018
Marti Friendlander | Social Studies Term 2
In Term 2 we have been researching different New Zealand paintings and have been writing about them. Once we did a few, we had to get into groups and pick a person. My group picked Marti Friendlander. A women from New Zealand.
Marti Friedlander
She began working as a photographer in 1964, when she travelled around New Zealand.
Her passion was taking photos of New zealand and the different events that took place.
Marti Friedlander photographed the people of New Zealand from the 1960s up until the present.
By bringing an immigrant’s perspective on her adopted country she showed New Zealanders to
themselves. She is particularly renowned for her portraits of artists in the 1960’s and 1970s, and for
her images of the last Maori women to have received the chin moko in a customary manner.
This is one of her Photographs "Neil & Tim Finn 2003"
By bringing an immigrant’s perspective on her adopted country she showed New Zealanders to
themselves. She is particularly renowned for her portraits of artists in the 1960’s and 1970s, and for
her images of the last Maori women to have received the chin moko in a customary manner.
This is one of her Photographs "Neil & Tim Finn 2003"
Social Studies Term 1
In Term 1 we did a lot of different activities. One of them was about our identity. Who we are. We also learnt about where other people are from. We had to look up how much people were from where in the census from the 1896-1916. We did most of the countries.
Wednesday, 11 April 2018
Kumara Trip
On Monday April 9th, the whole year 9 group at Greymouth High School went to Kumara for a English/Social Studies trip. We split up into 2 busses with 2 groups in each. When we arrived at Kumara, each group went to a different activity. The different activities were Drama, Games, Walk to a huge rock, and a lesson about Richard Seddon.
For my group in Drama, we chose to do accidents. Where we had to act out an explosion that happened in the mine. For the walk to the huge rock, the ground was all muddy. But when we got their it was just a big rock with a path around it so you can see how big it was. The lesson about Richard Seddon was just about the history of Kumara and all the things he did back when he was Prime Minister. Then our last activity was a game where we had to collect tennis balls and put them in our team circle.
For my group in Drama, we chose to do accidents. Where we had to act out an explosion that happened in the mine. For the walk to the huge rock, the ground was all muddy. But when we got their it was just a big rock with a path around it so you can see how big it was. The lesson about Richard Seddon was just about the history of Kumara and all the things he did back when he was Prime Minister. Then our last activity was a game where we had to collect tennis balls and put them in our team circle.
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