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Showing posts with label Explanation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Explanation. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 April 2013

Easter Eggs


Chocolate Easter eggs are special treats often received during Easter Sunday. Some people buy these eggs while others make them themselves. Here is a way to make your own Easter eggs.


The only ingredient you’ll need is melted chocolate. You could have white chocolate, milk or dark depending on what you fancy. To melt this ingredient you’ll need to break the block of chocolate into different pieces and place it in a bowl in steaming water. The heat from the water will warm up the bowl which will melt the chocolate.

Secondly you’ll need a mould to shape the melted chocolate. This mould could be any shape including, an egg or rabbit. To make a hollow egg you would need to shift and tilt the melted chocolate of your choice around the sides of the mould to make a scoop sort of shape.

Once both sides are set, carefully take them out of the mould and use melted chocolate to secure them together. Making a hard egg filled with chocolate is the same as creating a hollow egg except you would have to fill the mould with chocolate up to the brim of the mould so the inside isn’t empty and hollow.

After the eggs have are attached together you can wrap them up in coloured foil and decorate them to give to your loved ones this Easter.

Monday, 10 September 2012

Swimming is essential


Made on http://www.wordle.net/
Learning Intention: To use the features of explanation writing to inform our audience.   
Swimming isn’t just a great sport, it’s also an important skill to know. The number of children drowning in New Zealand has increased over in years. One reason why kids like us, drown is because they don’t know how to swim.

If you know how to swim you have a higher chance of surviving if you get caught in a rip or a dangerous disaster that includes water like floods. You would have a higher chance of surviving because with your ability to swim and your water safe knowledge you would know what to do in a situation like this.

Swimming is also a great way to keep fit because you’re working out your whole body. Maybe in a few generations we’ll be living in an underwater world. If you don’t know how to swim, you should learn now because you’re not only saving yourself you could be saving the life of someone else.

Thursday, 30 August 2012

The Mary Celeste


The Mystery of the brigantine, The Mary Celeste


Learning Intention: Read forwards and backwards across the text to connect information



The mystery of the brigantine (a two masted sailing ship), the Mary Celeste may  perhaps never be solved. There are many theories on this case that have been presented over time.  After researching several of  these, I believe the  information  presented in the Court Enquiry provided  the strongest evidence  because it  included eyewitness testimony, and proof to support their  theory about what happened back in 1872.

On December, 4, 1872 the Mary Celeste was found in seaworthy condition in the middle of the Atlantic ocean, without any crew floating 600 miles off Gibraltar. The ships paper, it’s chronometer and everyone on board were the only things missing on the Mary Celeste. They had all inexplicably and completely vanished. Records presented in the Court  Inquiry from Autumn of 1872, showed that the Mary Celeste was sailing to Europe with a cargo of 1700 barrels of alcohol below her decks. The Captain, Benjamin Briggs was accompanied by his wife Sarah, their two year old daughter Sophia Matilda and the crew of seven men.

The Mary Celeste was observed by another ship The Dei Gratia. When her crew boarded the vessel under full sail its wheel was creaking and cabin doors were slamming open. Their reports at the inquiry included statements of  finding weapons with stains that looked like blood. According to Oliver Deveau (the Chief Mate of the ‘Dei Gratia’) the likelihood of these weapons being used for violence was very remote, as no other blood was found on the ship.  Stains underwent scientific testing which verified that they were iron nitrate not real blood.

Stormy weather recorded at the time of the time the crew of the Mary Celeste disappeared link to the most likely theory, that suggests that the the crew including the captain and his family possibly abandoned ship  in a small lifeboat for fear that the ship was sinking.  Again this is qualified by the fact that the only dry clothing  found on the ship was found  in a watertight seaman’s chest. Everything else was wet.   In the event of a captain abandoning his ship, it is likely that he would have taken ship’s records  and his chronometer.