Tuesday 3 December 2019

A Moment In Time

  The storm rider.

I heard screams and cries.
I heard my sisters yelling.
I saw the darkness in the hallway.
I felt hollow inside.
I felt like I was going to fall out.
Woosh! Zoom! Kapow! 
Would the roller coaster ever end?
I wondered what was going to happen next.
I wondered what wild ride I was going on next.

By Jayden Davies. Week 2, Feb, 2019

Dear Future Generation Perswading piece of writing

Dear future generation 
height/50 width/50
Fun fact the earth is 4.5 billion years old,  mankind about 140 thousand years old, let me put that in perspective if you condense that 24 hours which is 1 full day we would be here for, drum roll please, 3 seconds now look what we’ve done in that 3 seconds we made ourselves look like homo sapiens meaning  wise men smart yes but not so smart but it’s good to be smart but not too smart for you’re own good but they cut down trees and pollute are world technically trying to kill us by suffocation trying to make us suffer for this, Money this wouldn't make me so sad if there weren't so many pictures of leaves on it you know what cut the beat i’m not sorry this future world I do not accept it an error does not become a mistake until you refuse to correct it so hurry up people go on everybody if you cut down a tree at least plant 5 more so we will not be equally extinct. 

Eastern or Texas Diamondback rattlesnake

Eastearn or Texas diamondback   rattlesnake

Oh what’ what is that it looks like a rattlesnake of some sort?.

I know what that is, that’s a Eastern brown diamondback rattlesnake. Those things can eat small mammals such as rabbits,rats,birds and sometimes even lizards. Since large size adults can easily eat adult rabbits there have been reports on some eating turkeys.

Jayden Feedback Around Your Writing Goal

Feedback Around Your Writing Goal

What is your writing goal? My writing Goal is Vocabulary.

Where are you at the moment and how will you know when you have reached your goal? 
I think I am at stage 4 Vocabulary and how i will know that I have achieved my goal 

If you have reached your goal, can you put some evidence up on Seesaw to show have achieved it?

How are you inviting feedback from fellow students, teachers, and your own parents?

What is your next goal? How did understanding your new writing goal happen? Did you begin the conversation or did someone else. 

What reading is going to help you with your new writing goal? 


Your tasks: 

Challenge a learning partner to place their writing on SeeSaw

Share your feedback and end with a question. 

You can use the mentoring sheets to help you with great questions.

Thursday 22 August 2019

https://flipgrid.com/9771670f This my flipgrid for the story of The Brave octopus to access go into our kereru hub website then go to reading and the there will be a link to sumarizing clips then you can explore all the children in the hub flipgrids for reading

Monday 29 July 2019

About Me 2019

Recently Kereru HUB Year 5 Learners have been learning about Not inserting Copyright images and we were learning It because you should not just post any old image on to the internet because it could get copyright claimed

Monday 22 July 2019

kunai information report

A kunai (kunai) is a Japanese tool originally meant for farming in the Tensho Era of Japan (1573–1592). The two widely recognized variations of the kunai are the hand shovel used for turning up crops short kunai and the big kunai .

Although a basic tool, in the hands of a martial arts expert, the kunai could be used as a multi-functional weapon, popular before the wide spread of firearms. The kunai is commonly associated with the ninja, who used it to gouge holes in walls. By attaching a rope to the ring, the user could easily climb walls or trees, which required great accuracy when thrown. The kunai blade was unsharpened, soft iron was used for digging, prying, and smashing wood, plaster, and the like which would have likely destroyed a tool which was sharpened or heat-treated.

Many popular manga and ninjutsu characters use kunai as both their primary and secondary weapons.

The kunai that were used by farmers were a fair bit smaller than the developed kunai that the ninja used. The farming kunai was smaller and there was a small handle with a hole on top. The farmers inserted the index finger into the hole and grabbed the small handle with the other fingers. The kunai that were used by ninjas had a bigger handle to allow them to hold the kunai more efficiently. The hole on the kunai was mainly used for putting a string or a rope so that the ninja could hang it on their belt.



The kunai was conventionally wrought in lengths ranging from 20 cm to 30 cm. It was used by peasants as a multi-purpose gardening tool and by workers of stone and masonry. The kunai is akin to a crowbar. The blade is made of soft iron, and is left unsharpened because the edges are used to smash relatively soft materials such as plaster and wood, for digging holes and for prying. Normally, only the tip is sharpened.


Kunai normally had a leaf-shaped blade and a handle with a ring on the pommel for attaching a rope. The attached rope allows the kunai's handle to be wrapped to function as a grip, or to be strapped to a stick as a makeshift spear; to be tied to the body for concealment; to be used as an anchor or piton, and sometimes to be used as the Chinese Rope Dart. Contrary to popular belief, kunai were not designed to be used primarily as throwing weapons. Instead, kunai were primarily tools and, when used as weapons, were stabbing and thrusting implements.

Varieties of kunai include short, long, narrow-bladed, saw-toothed, and wide-bladed. In some cases, the kunai and the shikoro, a wide-bladed saw with a dagger-type handle, are difficult to distinguish.

Many ninja weapons were adapted from farming tools, not unlike those used by Shaolin monks in China. Since kunai were cheaply produced farming tools of a useful size and weight and could be easily sharpened, they were readily available to be converted into simple weapons. As a weapon, the kunai is larger and heavier than a shurikenand with the grip could also be used in hand to hand combat more readily than a shuriken.
In addition, it could be used for climbing, either as a kind of grappling hook or as a piton.




As with ninjutsu, the exaggeration persistent in ninja myths played a large role in creating the popular culture image of kunai. In fictional depictions of ninjas, the kunai is commonly portrayed as a steel knife that is used for stabbing or particularly throwing, sometimes confusing it with the shuriken. It is also used by popular Mortal Kombat character Scorpion, who uses it to pull his opponents across the battlefield.

By Jayden Davies