Showing posts with label Guest Speaker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Guest Speaker. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 3, 2014

Community Experts Help Us With Our Pest Animal Inquiry


Anna Baine works for the Auckland City Council. 
                   

Ms Baine talking to us today
Yr 4 students asking questions...
   




Ms Baine works in our community to help people take care of their neighbourhoods in lots of ways:

  • helping people to plant native trees so that we encourage native birds
  • teaching people all about animals that have become pests since they were introduced into New Zealand
  • teaching people about ways we can work out what pest animals are in our neighbourhood
  • recommending ways to get rid of unwanted pest animals

Look at some of the awful animal pests that we now have in New Zealand...
Stoat (one of the animals in the mustelid family)


Possum

Many pests were introduced into New Zealand for their fur.  But once the animals were here and were released into the wild their numbers exploded and we had a terrible problem. 

We also learned that:
  •  we now have 70 million possums in New Zealand
  •  possums eat native trees and this affects our native birds
  •  possums also eat native birds' eggs and baby chicks
  • they can give tuberculosis (TB) to cattle on farms near the bush                          
Ms Baine told us how we can get rid of unwanted animal pests in New Zealand
  • by trapping with special plastic traps
  • by poisoning with 1080 poison
  • by hunting


Ms Baine showing a trap
Trap, poison trap, and monitoring tunnel called a tracker tunnel
   
 We read all about the pest animals:

  • feral cats
  • rats
  • hedgehogs
  • stoats
  • weasels
  • ferrets
  • possums


 



At the end of the talk some children helped Ms Baine set 5 tracker tunnels on the Reserve and on our back field.  Read the related blog post to see how pest animals are attracted to the tracker tunnels.

Ms Baine holding the ink pad that helps us know what pest animals we have in our area...

 We learned heaps today... Thank you Ms Baine.  We will tell you what we find next week!

Community Inquiry: Learning About Animal Pests in our Neighbourhood

Anna Baine came to talk to the students in 3 Yr 4 classes about animal pests. Animal pests are unwanted animals. There are hedgehogs, possums, feral cats, stoats ferrets, weasels, rats and mice. These are unwanted as they harm our native birds and trees. 

To help us find what pests are around Elm Park School we set up tracker tunnels in Elm Park and within the school. These tracker tunnels will let us identify the footprints of pests in our neighbourhood. The tunnel has an ink pad within it so we are able to identify the footprints when we check the tunnels every few days. 


To lure the pest into the tunnels we placed a leaf with peanut butter on top within the tunnel as bait to attract the pest.


Richelle holding one of the tracker tunnels
 
Anna Baine and students deciding where to put the tracker tunnels

Next week we will check on the tunnels and record what we  find.  Then we can decide on what action we need to take to control pest animals in our school and on the Elm Park Reserve.


Saturday, April 26, 2014

Mr Dreyer Shares his Armed Forces Experiences


Many classes have been studying the ANZAC campaign leading up to ANZAC Day on 25 April. 2014 is the 99th year after the campaign at Gallipoli in which just over 11, 000 Australian and New Zealand soldiers (ANZACs) lost their lives.  2721 New Zealand soldiers were killed.

The Senior classes had invited a guest speaker to talk about his experiences and the Year 4 classes were very fortunate to listen to his talk as well.

Mr Dreyer was in the NZ army for 20 years before he retired and took up a business career. 


Mr Dreyer

Mr Dreyer's talk was very interesting and thought provoking.  He described all the wars New Zealand soldiers had fought in to support Britain:
  • Anglo-Egyptian War, 1882
  • The Boer War,  1899 -1902
  • World War 1, in Europe and Africa, 1914 -1918 (at Gallipoli 1915)
  • World War 2,  1939 -1945
  • Korean War,  1950 - 1953
  • Vietnam War, 1956 - 1975 (NZ's involvement was in the years 1965-1971)
  • Conflict in Afghanistan, 2001 - present
He spoke to us about his experiences in the Vietnam War in the mid-1960s.  Life was very difficult during the war, for people on both sides.  Mr Dreyer lost many good friends in that conflict.

He answered many questions and we came away with the following insights:
  • war is not a glorious adventure - it takes a huge toll on people, during and after the conflict
  • soldiers and their support personnel have to work hard as a team
  • the armed forces have changed over time - women are now able to take combat roles if they choose
  • New Zealand soldiers have a major role in peace-keeping around the world
  • much of war can be boring - a lot of waiting around before there is action
  • when in a war, you are only concerned with what you are doing and your small area, rather than thinking about where everyone else is and what they are doing
  • war brings people together so you form very close relationships with the people around you - they are like family, you rely on them, you trust them, you form strong friendships

Mr Dreyer
Outline map of  the Bosphorus area in Turkey

Map showing the peninsula and where the ANZAC came ashore at Gallipoli
This map was interesting because it shows a rectangle which represents the area on the Turkish mainland that was successfully taken and held by the French soldiers during this war.  This was the only successful action in the whole of this campaign.  All the troops that landed on the peninsula, to the left of the map, suffered huge loss of life and heavy casualties.

  • NZ lost 2701 soldiers
  • Australia lost 8,709 men
  • Turkey had 251, 000 casualties of whom more than 86, 000 soldiers were killed.
See these websites for background:     NZ History Online
For an Australian perspective see:      Australian Govt ANZAC site

Each year, at the Dawn Services throughout New Zealand, the sacrifice made by all soldiers lost in war are remembered.

 Lest We Forget