Friday, November 4, 2011

Da Pumas

So the only comment was Lily's, which I think everyone can see.
In u-prep, we will be having an open house on the 17th and that will be fun. In English we just finished our "I Have A Dream" unit. Is it true that a teacher found a rat in there class? Do you ever get scared when the 8th grade boys are pushing each other? Have you met any nice 7th graders? Finally, what are your favorite and least favorite classes?





PUMAS!

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

Me, and the Dating High-schoolers

Hi everyone who is listening. At U-prep we did something neat enough for me to post about. We ran Greenlake. The slowest people in my group got about 30 min. I have to say that I have a friend who ran it in 19 min. But he is the kid who did the plank for 8 मिनुतेस।I got exactly 22 मं. and 30 sec. To answer your question Lily, U-prep is fun. It is so small. 66 6th graders and middle school plus high school has about 800 kids. My smallest class is just me and my largest has 18 people. I gave up the violin for the time being to doge homework and to get in to the great art program. Today I had the last soccer game of the U-prep season, 1-1 vs. Seattle academe. That is the school that Sam goes to. Now everyone who is an Eagle tell me: what is your favorite class, why, are you on sports teams, which one, and do you take an instrument, which one, and have you made new friends and if so who? I will post again on Halloween with your answers, email me with them, and I will answer them to!

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

A new beginning

First I would enjoy to congratulate you for finding out about this post. Than I would like to tell you that this blog will take a new turn. It will be the blog that I use to tell you about U-Prep, the middle school that I am going to. You can click on the link above to find out more. If it doesn't work, or if you are an old-school lover than you can write out: univirsityprep.org. Check the blog to find out more!

Next: Me, and the dating high-schoolers.

Tuesday, August 16, 2011

Big Montana Post

We went on a hike. A very long hike. I will tell you about it: It is hard to go on a hike when you cannot find the trail. So we went on the no-trail for a 24th of a mile. We went through some empty bison wallows. This is James and Kirsten's (I talked about them in our last post) daughter, Annika (that's the real spelling) with
some bison hair she found in a mud wallow.




We dubbed our next hike the grunting bison hike. The reason is, when I found some moose bones, I put on the scull (see above picture) when a bison we had never seen let out a huge grunt at us so we went around him. Oh, I almost forgot, we also found some petrified trees











Annika and I did this jump move. The Lucas input is not planned.
on the other side we have a view from a couple min walk from our campsite.









We went to an dino thing where we found dino bones. I also found a Clamanite.

Than we went to Glacier national park. Than we had a long day of west driving.

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Yellowstone

Oh, it's you again. Five people have not made comments telling me about fun towns in Montana so I can't tell who the 'favorite town' winners are.

In Yellowstone we stayed (for nights 1,2,3) At a crowded campground. The reason that we thought the campground was crowded is that a hot spring is a one min walk from our tent with ten feet of elevation.

Two posts ago I said that I would tell about me meting my godparents for the first time in almost eleven years.
I keep my word
On the left is James, with my Dad. James writes neat articles for a newspaper. He also showed me some cool photography tricks. On the right is Kirsten, who has neat camping ideas like when putting chocolate on s'mores you put it on both sides and in bear country using empty yogurt cups to spit into.
They are cool godparents.

Next: Adventures in Yellowstone!

Wednesday, August 10, 2011

Birthday


Hi everyone, I am making this post in a break of Montana, about the fact that today is my birthday!

Everyone make comments about there favorite town in Montana, I will randomly select 5 to post in my next post.

My favorite was Haugen, host of the silver bar!

Sunday, August 7, 2011

Town of Ghosts

Bannack, Montana was an old gold mining town. We happened to go there. The coolest thing about it is that we stayed in a tepee.

That was real fun. The best part was when me and Lucas climbed up a big hill. I got poked by a cactus.
We also saw a bull mouse with no other people in sight!




Montana day one was fun.


A must visit is the 50,000 silver $ bar.


The best part is the gift shop, they have real, metal swords and claws and chain-balls, and spartan helmets and stuff like that. You might also want to know that there are wildly inappropriate things. I will not list them because of the well being of people younger than 10 years of age. If you want to know please speak to me privately. I purchased a bow and arrow set with a tiger head coming out of the part that you hold.

Next: the first time I meet my god parents.

Bye!

Monday, July 25, 2011

Orkila

My summer camp was so fun! We played all these games and I jumped into the freezing cold water at 6:30, We did a swim test, I passed, we played life and death in the forest. In that there are 3 different groups, red, yellow, and green. Red eats everything, yellow eats green but runs away from red. Green runs away from everything. If you want to see the website I have posted a link to it at the bottom of the page.
Here is a story from Day 2 at camp: We were doing archery, I had shot three out of four of my arrows. I was on my last arrow. I had shot all misses. Then I shot and the arrow hit the ground. But the reason that I am telling this is that the arrow bounced of the ground and hit the target. I am still shaking my head about that.

this is of my cabin




this is a skit that I did. I am the one pointing



as you may see Orkila was fun



I will probably not post for 2 weeks because I will go on the Dino dig/camping trip

I will tell you all about it! Bye!


Friday, July 15, 2011

Back to D.C.




Ok, now we are going back to D.C and we are living in a mansion. There are two sets of stairs. One is all fancy and the other is steep. The steep one was for slaves back in the old days, the other for masters. This is so the slaves are not seen.
The mansion we were staying at was actually the marshal islands embassy. Here
is something cool, when you go in the gates of an embassy you are officially in that country's soil. Here are some photos of me and Lucas traveling.





But anyway, we went to the museums next. Lucas's favorite one was the
natural history. I think you can see that :) .


We also went to the Bureau of Engraving and Printing. That is where they make dollar bills. It was super cool. There where official signs and in the center of them one said: "Think of how I feel, I printed my lifetime salary in a few minutes."





We looked inside the national history Museum which had a super cool U.S. wartime display. We took a tour of the capital building. That one was fun because we went inside the room for the Washington senators to work. It had Boeing photos and stuff.


Now I reveal that the real me is in Seattle right now and is leaving tomorrow for overnight camp. Wish me Luck!

Bye!

Friday, July 8, 2011

Day 3


Day 3 of Gettysburg started as general Picket and general Stuart arrived in town. General Lee chose to send Longstreet's remaining 10,000 solders to march with Picket's 5,000. But before that Lee sent Stuart's men around Culp's Hill and attack the Union from the back. But than Meade saw the coming attack and counted with his own cavalry. His cavalry deflected Stuart's. Meade knew something. Lee had attacked from the back, and both sides. Next he would attack the Union's center. General Lee sent 15,000 men directly up the Union's center. The Union cannons fired. The Confederate solders continued walking. The Confederate solders where blasted, than they got into musket
range. Both sides fought with a rocky wall between them. Soon the confederates retreated. There was 1,000 left. Lee said,"it's all my fault" Lee went into a defensive position but Meade did not attack.

I think you might have seen that this post has different colors, this is showing Union (Blue) and confederate(Butternut). This video below is me and Lucas acting out Piket's charge.

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Day 2

When we left off we had what looked like a Confederate victory. But the Union did not give up! General Meade (Union General) worked hard and enforced the idea that if the Union reinforced the tired cavalry and infantry they might have a chance to turn the tide. So after a night of heavy reinforcements on the Union side, Day two began.



Lee ordered General Longstreet to attack on the Union's left flank. Longstreet attacked. A Union General moved his core up to meet the attack. He put his men in the very peach orchard where Reynolds' men had a snack. Longstreet dogged around him and took the devil's den, and then Big Round Top.

Union General Sickels took Joshua Chamberlain by the scruff of his neck and told him to hold the hill at all costs. Chamberlain took the hill. Chamberlain gave his regimental flag to a huge man named Towzer. Towzer was 6'4"! The confederate soldiers charged up the hill. Even though Chamberlain was outnumbered, his regiment, the 20th Maine, held strong. They fought, 5 charges, 5 deflections. Then the 20th Maine ran out of bullets. Then Chamberlain said" Bayonets, Bayonets," a nearby Lieutenant heard him and said" BAYONETS!!!" so loudly that the nearby 23d Michigan also placed there bayonets on their guns. Then they charged. The Confederates retreated. A Confederate soldier came up to Chamberlain and Joshua pointed his sword at the man's neck and said"Surrender." The soldier pulled out his pistol and shot Chamberlain. Or, he meant to. The bullet whizzed over Joshua's ear. Then the solder said "okay I surrender but can I have some water?" Then Chamberlain was really polite to him even though that person almost killed him.

Lee saw what happened and sent soldiers to Culp's Hill and those soldiers were deflected. Now they have a big tower on Culp's Hill so you can see everything and I really enjoyed that.

Next, Day three!

Tuesday, July 5, 2011

The Story of Gettysburg

When we left off last time our tour guide had begun telling the story of Gettysburg. For you I will tell everything but the story of Gettysburg, I will save that for the end so don't worry. So he told the first day of Gettysburg. Than we biked across the southern line. We saw a huge Virginia monument that had Lee at the top.



Then we saw the peach orchard and the devil's den (a rocky terrain that is named after a 9 ft snake that was impossible to catch hereby thought to be possessed by the devil). And we saw Little round top, a hill smaller than big round top and the center of the Union line with a Meade (Union Commander) statue in sight of the Lee statue.

Gettysburg, day 1:
The first soldiers into Gettysburg was General Hill's Corps. They had orders that they shouldn't fight the enemy. Then General Buford's cavalry came and engaged the enemy. Hill fell back so they could have Lee's entire army before they began fighting. Buford knew the values of terrain, he saw that this must be where the Battle should be. He sent desperate letters to General Reynolds, the head of the First Corps, wanting infantry to back them up. Buford got nothing back as Reynolds thought that Lee was much farther north. Buford's men, therefore, had to spend two hours until Reynolds came loping up to Buford's command post and said "What's wrong?" Buford said that they were engaging the enemy. Reynolds galloped off to his troops, two miles away. The solders charged up and came just in time to make sure that Buford's cavalry did not retreat. Within a short amount of time Reynolds was shot.

Tomorrow, the real story of Little Round Top!

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Saturday, July 2, 2011

The Turning Point

I woke up to my dad doing an imitation of the trumpet charge sound. I said, "Daaad," but got dressed anyway. We went down to breakfast. We went into a building owned by our hotel that serves free breakfast to the people who stay at the hotel. First there was a small stand that has apples and bananas on it for us. Then a clear cabinet that hosted blueberry muffins and scones and there was bread and coffee and stuff.

After breakfast we drove over to where the bike tour area was and worked on fitting our bikes. We had fun getting the most perfect bike possible. In the end I got a bike that is called "Devil's Den" Lucas's was called "Phantom" and mom and dad's were anonymous.

Our tour guide came and we enabled headsets that allowed him to narrate for us - He has a transmitter that connected to ear phones that we were wearing. We biked through Gettysburg and our tour guide was droning about exact dates that aren't that exciting. Then we stopped by some smelly dumpsters and we wondered if this would be worth it.

Will the tour be saved? Tune in next time for the next part!

Ad: Why not the Gettysburg song to go with this? Watch the movie today!

Friday, July 1, 2011


Now our story in the District of Columbia will turn to a war that happened 150 years ago...

First Before I explain the car ride to Gettysburg I will point out that in the last post Frank mentioned the story of Lee's Mansion. Of those that do not know the story here it is: Lee married a woman that happened to be a direct descendant of Washington. She inherited a house that is described in the post below. Lee lived there until Virginia seceded from the states. Than he left it and moved farther into the south. After the war he went back to the old house. An angry mother that had her son killed by one of Lee's solders buried her son in the Lee's property to irritate the Lees. Than another mother followed suite. than another. soon that place became the Arlington Cemetery with tons of graves.





Now back to the car ride. We stopped at Antietam, the major battle that let Lincoln sine the emancipation proclamation. It was also the place that we saw our first real civil war cannon. (I enjoyed this because I love artillery) me and Lukie also chased each other around the gift shop with wooden muskets and hats. We saw the bloody lane, a sunken road that was used as a pre-dug trench at Antietam. We saw Burnside's bridge. (A bridge that had a lot of death tied into it) And a battlefield full corn pach that was filled with construction workers that recked the moment. At the end of the day we drove into downtown Gettysburg which had stores with names like: Turning Point and Pickett's Buffet. I will tell the story of Gettysburg tomorrow. Goodbye everyone!

Thursday, June 30, 2011

DC part 2





Hi everyone! Sorry I left a big gap in the posts. Here is my second day in D.C.

We started at the Lincoln memorial. It had a huge-way-larger-than-life-sized statue of Lincoln. On one side of the wall there is the Gettysburg address, the other, the second inaugural address. If you climb up the stairs it is actually really high. Underneath the Monument there is a museum about Lincoln.

After Lincoln we walked into the Arlington Cemetery and saw a field of white, almost identical graves. There was some 250 graves. We kept walking. soon we got to the top, which had Lee's mansion. from there we must have seen 50,000 graves.

Lee's house was Fancy. there is no other word to describe it. it had pillars like Lincoln Memorial but with a more pleasant, sort of sandstone color. Inside they put Lee's old Union uniform and than His Civil War Confederate outfit. All and all that day was amazing.

Sunday, June 26, 2011

D.C.


Hi everyone! Thank's for all the comments. The comments are very fun to read. later today I will give you some photos. It is soooo hot here. Shorts and T- shirts every day! I think that D.C. is fun and get back soon. 75 degrees out. Bye!

Saturday, June 25, 2011

Airport



Hi everyone! Sea-Tac airport has free wi-fi! Check out the video below. We just had breakfast at Starbucks. I had cinnamon coffee cake! If you have ever walked through Sea-Tac airport you probably saw the fish on the ground. But not many of you saw the fact that some fish are shaped like planes. Also some little guys with bags.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Civil War

Here is a Steve Earle song About a Gettysburg soldier. They use minor swearing. If I where you I would turn the song down to a quarter of Maximum.







I enjoy this song because it is about Kilrain of the 20th Maine. (even though Kilrain is Irish, because the Union has lots of different kinds of people in this example, Irish) Whenever we used to play this song Lucas would pull a chair up to the speaker so he could hear it better. (Even though the song is loud enough!)

Kilrain was in the 20th Maine, led by Joshua Chamberlain. In a time that the 20th Maine ran out of ammunition, at Gettysburg, Joshua had all of his soldiers attach bayonets (sharp steel) to the ends of there guns and charge down the hill. The effect was amazing. The enemy, (South, Confederates) were destroyed. Sadly Kilrain lost his life at Gettysburg.

This song is based on the book The Killer Angels or in movie form, Gettysburg. They are long and rated the same as the movie up there. Both of them are fantastic. Amazing. Worth your time. The minimal age for both in my opinion is seven.

Book Recommendation

Do you like reading? Do you enjoy learning about the Civil War? If you answered yes to all these questions try Rifles for Watie by Harold Keith. I rate it 5 stars. It is about Jeff, a boy that signs up to fight for the Union in the western part of the war. Please post a comment about how much you liked it or tell me other Civil War books. There is a photo of it underground. ;)

Thursday, June 23, 2011

School

schoooool's out for summer! Schools out, can you tell? So if you have a google account than you can follow this blog. That would be fun! Our first Washington D.C post will be on Saturday (that's when we will fly to D.C.). It will be really hot. Check the paper! Bye!

Sunday, June 19, 2011

Summer

Are you looking forward to the summer? If not than I am! In this blog we will cover WA D.C, Gettysburg,Rhode Island, and a paleontology/dino dig trip also with small, in between posts with what I'm thinking about. We will do D.C/Gettysburg first.