Friday 29 June 2018

Arataki recap

 as soon as we got to arataki we sat down and saw ms bess (our old garden nto table teacher) and she told us what we were going to do.

After we sat down we got called into groups my group went into the forrest first and we went on the plant id track and the nature walk.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                       
we went into a room that had a tree with roots at the bottom & leaves at the top, a morepork eating a tui and a pile of dead leaves. we talked about the life cicle of a of a tree.
we played a game obout how much nutreince we could get in one minute our team one. Our team was team one. miss bess also talked to us about little bugs that ate the leaves and went chew chew poo poo.



we yous'ed the pootahs at the end, to catch little bugs that we leart about in the mouri room.and inspected them with care.

Thursday 28 June 2018

bug report (worms)




Image result for annelids cartoon  report about worms

Have you ever looked closely at the ground you are walking on? If you did you would see an ananild. What is this you might ask? A worm. I think they are fascinating and so did Charles darwin. He studied all kind of worms for 39 years.

Worms are easy to find. They look like pink pieces of rope (small rope), Gummy worms or a tongue. Worms are only found underground, in fruit and vegetables and under an object.

How many species of worms are there? There are 1,000,000 species of worms and still many to be discovered. There are 2,700 different earthworms.

Baby worms are not born they hatch from cocoons. By the way the worm cocoons are no bigger than a grain of rice.

hope you like my bug report


Wednesday 20 June 2018

matarik DLO

hope you enjoy my matariki Slide

Friday 8 June 2018

the brain

the deference between a bee and a wasp

While honey bees can attack when provoked, wasps are naturally and more aggressive predators.

Identifying the difference between honey bees and wasps is important in order to administer proper treatment of wounds and appropriate pest control.

Honey bees are hairy, while wasps usually have smooth  and shiny skin.

Bee hives attacked by wasps. Early in the year wasps collect meat and carrion, including dead bees, which they masticate and pass on to feed their larvae in the nest.

The protein helps the new bodies grow and the larvae in turn excrete a sugary honeydew which satisfies the wasp's sweet tooth.
Image result for bee pngImage result for wasp png
hope you engoy'ed my bee and wasp deference fact's

Wednesday 6 June 2018

my bee work

hi hope you engoy me and my friend jonty's slide

Tuesday 5 June 2018

cyber smart

12.10.14 by Jonty SHERSONand adam goodwin
 hi everyone hope you engoy my post