Saturday 15 August 2015

Wairau Intermediate Monday 10th August

On a bright but damp Monday the 10th August, a brave Forrest Hill School Year 6 community, led the charge to Wairau Intermediate. I was striding along from the bus to the main gates, not knowing what to expect, but finally having a chance to compare between schools after an intense visit to Murrays Bay Intermediate last week.

After what seemed like a family reunion with my fellow friends who graduated last year onto Wairau, I found I was in Group 3 for the day.  From a possible 5 activities, our schedule was Music, Food Tech and finally Hard tech.  I had the feeling that Hard tech would be my favourite activity and I wasn't wrong!

Entering the hard tech room was like walking into an old style garage with 4 brown, paint splattered tables crowding the room. Each table housed a strange blue mechanism that I was yet to find out what it was used for. Despite that, the thing that intrigued me the most was the wall of what seemed like tools of every shape, size and colour. The wall never seemed to end!

Getting to work, I started creating a dog tag. I used the strange mechanism to hold my dog tag while I smoothed off the edges with a rasp, and found out it was called a vice grip. By using a hammer and a brad with a raised letter on the end, I indented my metal tag resulting in the message saying, "Soccer is everything" Myself being soccer mad, wow what a perfect message!

Thanks Mr Murray and Wairau Intermediate tech staff, I had an amazing eye opening visit. Looks like you will be seeing me next year!

By Ella Dorward
 

 

 

 

 

Saturday 8 August 2015

Westlake Boys Symphonic Band Wednesday 5th August


Westlake Symphonic Band  by Daniel Ottenhof  - A personal recount

On August 5th, Forrest Hill School students quietly strode towards the hall. We were naturally quiet-ish as Mr Marwick has been working with us on our noise levels. Sometimes we can be rowdy. This was a bright day, despite the rain, well many thought that because in Arataki we were missing out on reading. But I am not the many and I myself am pretty musical; I loved hearing the jolly sounds of Westlake warming up. We arrived at the hall; sadly I didn't have time to peer for too long through the windows and look at my future. As I entered the hall my sight reached a milestone as I saw the massive symphonic band. It was a wonderful noise they were making tuning their instruments, with notes splattering out all over the place. The first piece had a stunning title, "The Temple of ..." sadly I didn't catch the rest of the name which made it all the more mystical. This piece was actually better than the name. The piece was definitely good! If you heard it on the radio you would think it was performed by professionals. The band also performed a few more pieces but none stood out as well for me as that first piece. The flutes were sparkling much more than the original silver ore they first came from. I had my eyes on all the flutes; they were far more shiny then my old spectacle of a flute. Finally I stopped staring, snapped out of my shiny flute dream as it was time to move on to be absolutely ready for the next outstanding performance.  

WBSB  by Katelyn Lyford 

Today, WBSB came to Forrest Hill School.  They played 3 songs for us: Temple, Spacewalk, Fire and September. My favourite was Fire. September was a jazz song from Earth, Wind and Fire; a band from the 70's.  The band was full of different instruments like French Horn, Crash Cymbals, Flute, Saxophones, (Tenor / Alto / Baritone) Trumpet, Marimba, Gockenspiel, Oboe, Tuba, Hi-Hat, Triangle, Trombone, Drums, Timpani, Gong, Bass Drum, Xylophone, Clarinet, Shaker, Bass Clarinet and Euphonium. That's a lot of instruments all playing together!   And 70 boys all reading music to keep in time together! 

Now back to my favourite song - Fire! Why?  This would be because of its deep then high pitch, with me imagining a fire burning. Spacewalk made me think of an astronaut in space just floating .. seriously floating! Temple was a song about a school in Hawaii living in the shadow of a huge volcano. The music was very loud and if you tried to imagine hula girls dancing, you would hear why it was a celebration ceremony song. September - JAZZ - it was fast then slow - different paces of music. Mrs Robson was grooving in her chair!  I so enjoyed WBSB entertaining me for half an hour on a wet Wednesday morning!


KAIAKO Teacher

Kaiako by Arataki Year 5 and 6 Students






GOODBYE AND GOOD LUCK MRS LEGGETT!

Friday 7th August, Arataki said goodbye and good luck to Mrs Leggett.   Baby Number 2 is due in two weeks.   There was so much food at our shared lunch!  Rumor was that Sophie and Ben are the favourite names so the two Sophie's and the two Ben's were the ones to give Mrs Leggett the card we made after we have sung Kaiako at assembly.   (next post)




 

How do flowers take in water and nutrients?

All living things need water to stay alive, and plants are living things! Plants, however, need much more water than many living things because plants use much more water than most animals. Plants also contain more water than animals - plants are about 90% water. The amount of water a plant needs depends on the type of plant, how much light the plant gets, and how old the plant is. When plants are not watered properly they wilt. This is because of something called turgor, which is water pressure inside the cells that make up the plant's skeleton. Water enters a plant through its stem and travels up to its leaves. When a plant is properly hydrated, there is enough water pressure to make the leaves strong and sturdy; when a plant doesn't get enough water, the pressure inside the stems and leaves drops and they wilt.

Our Proof ....




TERM 3

We have started Term 3!  Our Science context is Plants and Growing.  Week 1 we have planted the Grass Head Men. Watch this space over the next few weeks for the progress.



Monday 13 July 2015

The Seussical

Awatea and Arataki finished the term on Friday 3rd July with a trip to the Aotea Centre to see the Seussical.