As the boys are getting older and we are getting busier I find I am posting less about our journey but will continue to update occasionally.
Wednesday, February 2, 2011
Maclean Floods January 2011
Tuesday, February 1, 2011
Yaegl significant Aboriginal cultural sites
The boys and I have started our new year of homeschooling.
Mr12 is starting high school level work at home and Mr7 is doing year 2-ish work. We are using some wonderful curriculum materials and the boys are very keen to use it.
One of the topics we are doing is Australian History and using 2 different spines-
Our Sunburnt Country from Downunder Literature
and
Australia, the wide brown land for me! from Adnil Press
we are starting out with Aboriginal history and headed off today on a tour of our local Aboriginal Peoples Significant sites. Our local mob are the Yaegl people around the lower Clarence but we might also look at Bundgalung people who traditionally occupied land north of the mighty mighty Clarence Rv and spend some time with some Gumbaynggirr people who have a wonderful cultural centre at Arrawarra and a yummy bush tucker cafe.
Our tour today was a self drive one
and we picked up a little pamphlet from the Maclean tourist info at Ferry Park
We learned so much
this is Ulugundahi Island behind the boys
it was an aboriginal mission in the early 1900s and Ulugundahi means ear in the local Yaegl language because the island is shaped like an ear.
This is Reedy Creek, the first Goorie camping area in Yamba
Mr7 thinks the semi permanent structures on the beach would be much nicer to live in back then than the big brick residences that dominate this lovely area today.
walking through our magnificent coastal bushland
we ended up on some magnificent beaches
and the boys found some sticks!
Mr12 had to test out his strength, picking up huge logs and rocks and pushing and pulling at everything he thought might budge.
So this was our wonderful homeschool classroom this afternoon
2 Healthy Babies
Tuesday, October 12, 2010
Miss Emerald has an Egg!
Sapphire has been very vocal and active all over the neighborhood this morning , we think he must be telling everyone. Our birds have free access in and out of their cage, so he really can share his good news all over the neighborhood.
Mr7 also observed the kookaburra couple we have been watching in one of our trees and noticed the gentleman kooka feeding his lady this morning, just like Saph has been feeding Em this morning, so he has surmised they might have laid their first egg this morning as well.
This has of course interrupted our day and our chocolate study, we simply had to research every thing about lorikeet breeding and there are endless questions about kookaburra breeding still to be answered, but I have manged to lure the boys back to the table with a bowl of chocolate salad, this is a bit of a Rockpool tradition, and is basically a bowl with mixed pieces of block chocolate in it and it did the trick nicely and they are now writing up and drawing food webs.
Monday, October 11, 2010
Chocolate
I found a 12 lesson study guide at the Chocolate Exhibition at the Field Museum in Chicago complete with history, recipes and quotes.
We have been getting some lovely visitors from the rainforest as well
This friendly lady King Parrot, or Queen Parrot as the boys call her is almost eating out of my hand and she gets right into Emeralds cage, but only when our rowdy lorikeets are not home. I wonder if she might be an escaped pet she is so quiet and friendly.
I am having a lot of trouble getting to update this blog living here, the only internet connection I have is a very very slow dial up and it doesn't cope very well with pictures. So I am sorry but blogging will be very erratic here at the moment and so will visiting everyone elses blogs.
Saturday, September 11, 2010
Rainforest Unit study planning stage
In this post I am going to store information for an upcoming unit study we will be doing, we are going to learn about rainforests- particularly Australian rainforests and flying foxes.
Rainforest Explorer contains a wealth of activities and resources about the Wet Tropics rainforests and their plants and animals. The library is packed with resources including rainforest videos, wildlife photos and activity sheets.
The many different activities are designed for use by both students and teachers. All activities are tailored to suit the Queensland school curriculum. There are also lots of great activities for after school or if your family plan to visit the rainforest.
You can browse through three different sections:
- Preparatory to Year 3
- Year 4 to Year 7
- Year 8 to Year 9.
Homeschool Share have a lovely unit on The Great Kapok Tree
Drawing lessons rainforest animals
Gondwana Rainforest types of Australia
Enchanted learning
Rainforest
Bats
Bats- creatures of the night
Loads of Bat links
Stellaluna resources
In search of Stellalunas family
Homeschool share unit