Hi Meadowbank School
Today I went to the kiwi release on
Mataia farm up at Kaukapakapa (1 hour drive north from school). It
started with a powhiri (welcome) to welcome us onto the whenua (land).
Then after we were officially welcomed we mingled with the hosts and had
morning tea. Thanks to Mrs Masters for your delicious cheese muffins
and fruit loaf! Then we joined the hosts and did another powhiri to
welcome the kiwi onto the farm. This experience was new to lots of
Meadowbank children and families so it was fabulous to be able to be
part of it all.
After the kiwi were formally welcomed
they were taken out of their boxes and carried around to everyone so we
could get the chance to stroke them. I was imagining them to be really
soft but I found out that their feathers are actually quite rough and
prickly. The DOC workers that were carrying them had been out all last
night catching them on Moturoa Island. They only managed to get 5 kiwi
because the full moon made them hid away and hard to find.
Four
lucky Meadowbank children (2 ex students) and Nicky Elmore were asked
to go with the DOC workers in their 4x4 drive vehicles to release them
out in the protected area of the farm.
What a day! I wish you had been there to experience it too.
Mrs Cook
Saturday, 25 May 2013
Thursday, 23 May 2013
Oxfam Hot Chocolate Fundraiser
On Thursday 23rd May the School fundraised profits to go towards Oxfam who will support Fair-trade Farmers. We fundraised $614.60 by asking for a gold coin donation and in return you got a hot chocolate with homemade baking, it was so yummy. We brought our own cups to save the environment.
Here's super girl
Here are the Enviro Ferns on the junior side
Heres a hot chocolate and cupcake
Chickens
On Wednesday at lunch time we helped Mrs Masters to weed the garden and feed the hens. Fiama was scared but Darlene wasn't. She liked picking up the hen. Bananas was jealous of the other hen.
By Darlene and Fiama
Term 2 Week 3 G2T for Room 32.
This Wednesday Room 32 went to G2T. The gardeners (Groups 4,5 and 6) were given tasks like weeding the garden, picking comfrey to plant potatoes, harvesting kumara and even harvesting 3 fresh eggs! Afterwards we all had some lunch made by the cookers (Groups 1, 2 and 3) that consisted of a spouffle, a kumara salad, and soft-bread pretzels, they were all a delicious treat!
Picking the Kumara to give to the cookers. |
A dirty Kumara dug out of the ground |
A nice, warm, fresh egg straight from the chicken nest |
Old potatoes make great potato plants! |
Friday, 17 May 2013
Garden To Table
On Wendesday we were helping Mrs Silvester in the kitchen. We were making rhubarb crumble, corn fritters, runner beans with onion and tomatoes and to top it all off tomato salsa.
Caitlian and caleb are cutting the runner beans |
The others strolled of to the garden to help Mrs Masters. We weeded the garden and harvested the crops for the cookers in the garden to table room.
We are weeding the garden |
By Logan and Ben
Gully Working Bee
On Wednesday Rm 32 helped Mike shift gravel from the truck to the gully in buckets, because the gully gravel looked old and too plain, it was also getting too messy and there was hardly any left. It was hard and heavy work, so Telecom workers volunteered to help us. The gravel is brand new and it looks better down in the gully. Sometimes we had to remove small plants or sticks because they would get in the way.
Fiama, Ella, Rokas, Darlene and Holly tried to bring a cart full of full buckets down the hill, but it almost rode down by itself so it was pretty scary.
Everyone was tired by the end so we all did Topic and came back to tip buckets at the end of the day.
Stella and Ella are having lots of fun!
Mike is helping to fill up the buckets!
Here are some Telecom volunteers!
Fiama, Ella, Rokas, Darlene and Holly tried to bring a cart full of full buckets down the hill, but it almost rode down by itself so it was pretty scary.
Everyone was tired by the end so we all did Topic and came back to tip buckets at the end of the day.
Stella and Ella are having lots of fun!
Mike is helping to fill up the buckets!
Here are some Telecom volunteers!
Here comes Mikayla and Ryan with
their empty buckets!
Friday, 10 May 2013
In the Beginning
The Year 1s went for a walk with Mrs Elmore around
Meadowbank School and through the gully to look at the Pou’s. It was a very wet
day but we learnt so much.
Before
we left we first read the book “In the Beginning” so that we had some
understanding about the Pou and what they mean to us and how they represent the
guardians who look after our earth.
We first looked at the Pou outside Room 9. This Pou is called Haumia and
represents the guardian of wild foods.
We
then looked at the Pou near the path leading over the bridge this Pou is called
Rango and represents the guardian of peace and foods we eat from the garden.
Then we went into the Gully
and looked at the Pou that is so tall it can almost reach the sky.
This is called Rangi and
represents the guardian who split the earth and the sky.
Next
we went on to look at the Pou near the tennis courts. This one is called
Tawhirimatea and represents the guardian of wind. On the Pou it has little patterns
engraved so it feels and looks like the wind is
blowing.
Then
we went to one more Pou which was by the hall. This Pou is called Tangaroa and
she is the guardian of the sea and sea creatures. She has some shapes engraved
in her that look and feel like water.
After
this trip to the gully the Year 1 begun describing each of the guardians in
the story. We have learnt when writing these stories that we have not only got
the Maori guardians that look after our earth but that we can be guardians of
our enviroment too!
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