Friday, November 30, 2007

Pilgrims

The Landing of the Pilgrims
by James Daugherty
Report by J.J. Hinrichs

The pilgrims were separatists. Separatists means they were separating from the church of England. The church of England was adding things into the Bible and the separatists did not want things added to the Bible. They were living in England and they were being threatened by being put in prison so they had to flee. They went to Holland and then they were called pilgrims.

While the pilgrims were living in Holland, they lived in an area called “Stink Alley.” They lived there because they did not have a lot of money and they did not have very good jobs.

Then some of their daughters married some of the Holland boys and some of their boys joined the Holland army. All of the boys and girls were forgetting the ways of England. The parents wanted to move because they did not want the children to forget the English ways.

They decided to go to America, but they did not have enough money. They decided to get the Mayflower to sail them to the New World. When they were sailing one of the sailors said that he hoped to throw half of the pilgrims over but within a few days he died. Everyone thought it was God’s hand. No one else got a sickness.

When the pilgrims landed they started exploring and found a graveyard of the Indians. They found a man that had yellow hair and they did not know if he was a chief or a lost sailor. They also found mounds of corn. They found pots and a bunch of stuff.

Then the pilgrims built a storage house where they put the sick and the food. Next they built some houses on the hillside and finally they built a fortress that was 12 feet high all around the houses.

There was a terrible sickness and they got really cold from the winter. Only nine women survived. The ones that were still sick but could still walk had to go work on the storage house. They did not have a lot of food. They had to give only one scoop of corn for each person.

One day Squanto came and he taught them how to plant corn, stomp on the ground at the beach and eels would come up (which doesn’t work anymore). Squanto had a friend named Samoset they could both speak English. Samoset brought Chief Massasoit to do the peace pipe with William Bradford. He brought ninety other braves with him. The woman were afraid to feed this many. Samoset fixed it, he told his braves to go into the woods and bring back four other deer. They also ate lobster, clams, duck, goose, and of course turkey. It became a barbecue.

Many things happened, like Squanto died. Some of the Indians planned war once against the pilgrims, there was a rattlesnake skin that had a bunch of colors on it and it was filled with arrows. The pilgrims filled it with bullets and sent it back.

Once they had a drought and they prayed for eight hours and then it began to rain lightly with no wind. The pilgrims praised God.

Wednesday, November 28, 2007

Sarah, Plain and Tall

Sarah, Plain and Tall
by Patricia MacLachlan
Report by Jonathan Hinrichs

There was a father with two children, Anna and Caleb. Their mother had a son, Caleb, then she died the next day. So Caleb never had a mom. They always wanted a mom.

Once there was a man who advertised for a wife and he got one. So that’s what Caleb and Anna’s dad did.

Then a woman wrote a letter to them and said, “I do not have a husband. I live by the beach. My name is Sarah and I am plain and tall.”

Then they wrote letters back and forth. Then one day she wrote a letter that said, “I will come. I have a yellow bonnet and I am plain and tall.” She said she would be at the train station.

The day that Sarah came, papa went to the train station. Caleb and Anna first saw dust in the passage. Then they went to the wagon and out came Sarah and she came with her own things. Then they wondered if she would be nice and she was.
Sarah brought many special things with her. She gave some of them to the children. Like a shell that you could hear the ocean in. And a stone that was white and very round. She also brought her gray cat named Seal. Seal was gray and white just like the seals. Sarah told them that she would miss the ocean.

They went through a lot of hard times. Like one time they went through a kind of storm that was really bad and they had to stay in the barn and the house almost fell but it didn’t.

Caleb always asked Sarah if she brought some of the sea. One day she brought gray, blue and green pencils, and candles. She said to their father Jacob that they would get married in the summer.

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Snakes

Snakes, Snakes, Snakes
by Jonathan Hinrichs

Snakes are very powerful reptiles. A reptile is cold blooded which means it needs to get heat from the sun because it doesn’t make its own heat.

Snakes can eat things much bigger than their head. Because their jaw unhooks and their teeth only go backwards it helps them to suck the prey into their mouth. We would be able to eat a whole watermelon if we could eat like a snake.

The way God designed a snake they don’t have stretchable skin like us. So they have to shed their skin when they grow out of it.

Snakes have to eat just like people. They’re more like the second on the food chain because they are good at killing things but other animals can eat them, like road runners, raccoons and hawks.

Snakes are powerful but don’t be afraid!

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

The Princess and the Pea

The Pea Princess
From Abbie-gail


One day a princess went knock, knock at the door. Then a king opened the door and a beautiful princess said that her hair was all wet and her shoes were all wet and her dress was wet and all torn from the rain. The queen put a little, little pea and a lot of covers right into a bed for the princess. Then they said, “Here is a bed for you.” She stayed awake because her feeled something really tough. Then everyone said, “Why it’s a princess!” Then she married the prince.

Friday, November 9, 2007

The Bears on Hemlock Mountain

The Bears on Hemlock Mountain
By Alice Dalgliesh
Report by Jonathan Hinrichs

Once there was a boy named Jonathan. His momma told him to go over this mountain named Hemlock mountain to get a pot. So one day he did go to his aunt’s to get this big iron pot.

Some people said there were bears on Hemlock mountain, but his mother didn’t really think there were any bears.

His mother, when he was out of sight, started worrying and started baking cookies. She found herself saying a pattern in her mind: There are no bears on Hemlock mountain, no bears at all. No bears. No bears. No bears at all.

Jonathan got to the top of Hemlock mountain and he started munching on a cookie and threw out a carrot and bread crumbs for the rabbits and birds. And he threw out nuts for the squirrels. Then he started saying the same pattern as his mom: There are no bears on Hemlock mountain, no bears at all. No bears. No bears. No bears at all.

Then it started getting later and he started trudging down the mountain. Then he got to his Aunt Emma’s house and rang the brass door knocker. His Aunt Emma started coming to the door and then she opened it and said, “Goodness sakes Jonathan, why did you come here?” Then she let Jonathan in and she wondered why Jonathan had come. Then she asked if Jonathan would like some cookies. Jonathan started eating cookies and drinking milk and then fell fast asleep.

When he woke up he said goodbye and put on his muffler. When he had gone quite a ways he felt quite silly about himself because he had forgotten the iron pot. He started back and rang the brass door knocker again and his Aunt Emma opened the door and asked him what he had come here for. “My mother wants to use the iron pot.” Then she gave him the iron pot.

He started going home and when he got to the top of Hemlock mountain he got tired and sat on the big iron pot. Then he heard a big heavy Crunch, crunch, crunch. He started saying to himself right now, which was quite silly to say right now: There are no bears on Hemlock mountain, no bears at all. No bears. No bears. No bears at all.

Then the bears got closer and closer and he got under the pot so he had a little hide out. He started wondering if anyone was looking for him. He heard a crunch, crunch, crunch. He heard his father say, “Jonathan” he said, “Hello Pa!” Then he heard a voice say “Hello Jonathan!!!” The bears got tired of this and trudged away.

His father and uncles got to him and Jonahtan said, “There ARE bears on Hemlock mountain. There ARE bears on Hemlock mountain.” His father said, “Nonsense”. Then they saw the footprints in the snow. All the rest of his uncles went to look for the bears. Jonathan and his father heard a bang and Jonathan felt like they were going to have bear meat for dinner.

Germs

Germs, Germs, Germs
Report by Jonathan Hinrichs

Germs live everywhere. They are mean little things. You can only see them with a microscope. Flies are one of their big helpers.

They are so mean they give you colds and more sicknesses. And they are so mean that they are like these little people who sting you with colds.

They live in trashcans, warm-moist places like your mouth, and a lot of other places.

You spread germs by putting your hand in your nose to get yucky things out of your nose; and by chewing on your pencil; by not covering your mouth when you sneeze or cough; when you don’t wash your hands when you go to the bathroom or forget to flush the toilet.

You can kill germs by putting them in hot water with soap and when you are in the sun. When you eat good food, like spinach, it makes it so the germs have a hard time getting to you. Germs, germs, germs.