How to Make Moose Tracks

You can make Moose Tracks to eat!  First, you get two boxes of chex mix, chocolate chips, peanut butter, coconut oil, and powdered sugar.  Second, you get the measuring cups and measure the powdered sugar.  Then you combine the peanut butter, chocolate chips, and coconut oil and put it in a big bowl and microwave it for a minute and stir after thirty seconds.  Finally, pour the chocolate mixture in over the chex and carefully mix.  Add the powdered sugar and stir the mix until all the cereal is covered.  Then you can eat it all up!

This entry was posted on April 6, 2017. 3 Comments

Iditarod!

I picked Zoya Denure as my musher to follow during the Iditarod.  Zoya is forty years old.  She was born in Wisconsin.  She is married to John Schamdelmeirei.  I like this musher because she looks like a nice person.

 

It was just wonderful to meet our musher, Mrs. Guertin.  I like the dogs because they look like they’re having fun with us.  You get to learn a lot from them, lie if they have a blue or a brown eye, you know what part they are.  I like about them how they get all different colors of fur.  Mrs. Guertin taught us a lot about sled dogs!

This entry was posted on March 28, 2017. 1 Comment

The Powerful Lead Dog

I scatter at the beginning of the race.

I rush to the end.

I sleep at night, and then in the morning I pull the rope

And I howl!

I have fluffy fur,

And that’s how I stay warm from the biting wind.

I skid around curves while I’m running almost every time.

I run.

I see the northern lights.

I gobble down food.

I am the lead dog.

 

This entry was posted on March 21, 2017. 1 Comment

Wild Reading Rumpus!

These are the strong word choices by the author that I noticed as I read tonight.

kingdom

argue

magic

palace

storm

huge

worries

afraid

listen

mad

blast

guards

blocks

sword

freezes

melt

saved

friend

This entry was posted on February 17, 2017. 2 Comments

Ice Cube Keeper Engineering Challenge

Ice Cube Keeper Engineering Challenge

Ask: How will my ice cube stay cold?

Next, we imagined what our ice cube keeper would look like, planned, and created it.

I predict that my ice cube will stay frozen 3 hours.

My table:

Time: Measurement: Observations:
9:30 4 cm. Jagged, rectangular
10:11 4 cm. More like a circle now.
12:08 2 cm.  
1:00 2 cm.  
2:30 A puddle  
     

 

I might try this to keep my ice cube from melting as soon as it did. My reflections: I think on one of the designs that worked really well, the person put this special foam together with snow under it. It had a hole for the ice cube, and it stayed cold for a long time. It was like a freezer.

 

To improve my design, I noticed my ice cube didn’t stay cold because there were a lot of holes that let the heat come in, so I would fix that.

 

 

This entry was posted on February 17, 2017. 1 Comment

My Wonder: Dino!

After reading The Seven Wonders of Sassafras Springs, a folk tale where a young boy searches for seven wonders in his own ordinary little country town, we went hunting for wonders in our own lives.

My wonder is my dog Dino.  He makes me wonder, and he is a wonder.  I wonder where Dino used to live.  I wonder if the people who used to have Dino were nice to him.  I wonder who rescued Dino.  I wonder what Dino’s brothers and sisters are like.  I wonder who cared for him before us.  I wonder why the other people didn’t care for him.  I wonder why Dino chews through every stuffy or kid toy he sees.  I wonder why he turned so big before he turned one.  I wonder where his brother and sister are because they got separated.  I wonder why Dino likes my mom more than everybody else.  I wonder why the first time it rained when we had him, he was scared.

Book Review: Life in the Desert

Three facts I learned while I was reading:

It rains a few inches a year.

It can snow in the desert!

Cactuses store water inside them.

 

Two questions I have for the author:

How do cactuses grow with thorns?

Is the water in the cactus good to drink?

 

One thing that I thought was the most interesting:

I didn’t know that it sometimes snows in the desert.

How to Play Red Light Green Light

So how you play Red Light Green Light is where first you pick a person to be It.  Then the person that you picked turns around.  Next, the person that is It says, “Red light!” or “Green light!”  Third, you get into a line before the person says red light or green light.  Finally, if a person moves that is not It, they are out.  That is how you play Red Light Green Light.

Action Verbs at the Beach

moving clouds

blazing sun

blowing wind

swimming person

dozing stingray

snooping shark

flowing water

swimming fish

falling coconuts

resting girl

standing umbrella

playing music