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Some seahorses facts since we are called sparkling seahorses!
Seahorses gained international protection on May 15, 2004-What do South American Spider Monkeys, Ringtail Opossums and seahorses have in common? They all have prehensile tails.
-Seahorses are members of the Teleost suborder, or bony fish.
-Seahorses usually live in the tropics or along temperate coasts.
-The average height of a full-grown sea horse is 2-8 inches.
Seahorses also vary in color, including orange, red, yellows, grey, and greens.
-Seahorses can come in patterns like “zebra stripes” and spots.
-Seahorses change color to blend in with their surroundings.
-Seahorses feed on small living animals such as daphnia, cyclops, larvae of water insects, or mysids.
-Seahorses like to swim in pairs linked by their tales.
-Seahorses cannot curl their tails backwards.
-Seahorses belong to the vertabra group, meaning they have an interior skeleton.
-The small dorsal fins propel it through the water in an upright position, while it beats them back and forth, almost as fast as a humming bird flapping its wings.
-Seahorses usually mate under a full moon.
-The pectoral fins control turning and steering. When resting, the seahorse curls its tail around seaweed, to keep it from floating away…
-Seahorse natural predators are crabs, tuna, skates and rays.
-Seahorses are loyal and mate for life.
-During mating, the Seahorses utter musical sounds.
-The female deposits eggs into the male’s small pouch, and then leaves. Out of the entire animal kingdom, these are the only animals in which the male has babies!
-Twenty-five million seahorses a year are now being traded around the world – 64 percent more than in the mid-1990s – and environmentalists are increasingly concerned that the booming trade in seahorses is putting the creatures at risk.
We had a planning meeting and have planned a rough and moveable schedule:
- 28th Feb – T-shirts, boxes, name, identity
- 4th March – about our animal – Cath to tell us our Woodcraft names in French and maybe numbers – we’re going to put a tent up in the garden and maybe do some knots – World Book Day – story of Sky Food
- 11th March – National Science and Engineering Week- Volcano model / maps for treasure hunt
- 18th March – *** OUT AND ABOUT*** egg rolling on playing fields or St Andrews Park, choc egg hunt, St Patrick’s Day – Irish story, BBQ or toasted marshmallows over candle in jar! Rabbit masks to colour
- 24th March – make chocolate egg nests and choc tiffin with seeds – talk about seeds (show inside fruit and veg) and planting** CLOCKS FORWARD – lighter evenings
- 1st April – plant seeds, sprout or cress heads, nut tree rhyme, willow
summer term
- 22nd April – poo!: animal poos, books on, clay modelling of poo, make song about
- 29th April – who I am – salt dough or large pics of ourselves
- 6th May – bear hunt act out with sounds recorded and listen listen
- 13th May – *** OUT AND ABOUT*** – Boiling Wells or orchard or city farm? (someone to lead?) tracking, footprints, foraging?
- 20th May – Vegetarian Week, Herb the Vegetarian Dragon story
half term
- 3rd June – butterfly facepaint, paintings, hungry caterpillar story – hand drill insect logs
- 10th June
- 17th June – comic strip?
- 24th June – space?
- 1st July – *** OUT AND ABOUT*** – Boiling Wells or orchard or city farm? (someone to lead?) tracking, footprints, foraging?
- 8th July
- 15th July *** OUT AND ABOUT***
- 22nd July – no group or *** OUT AND ABOUT*** – Boiling Wells or orchard or city farm? (someone to lead?) tracking, footprints, foraging?
Woodcraft Folk District Dates
- Sat April 26th - Merrymoot – all groups acrossBristol
Bristol Merrymoot and Ceilidh
May Park School, Coombe Road, Eastville, Bristol, BS5 6LE
Groups to prepare a “performance” of up to 10 minutes – could be skit, play, dance, song, anything
Provisional format as previously..
Timetable: 3pm Doors open
3.30pm Games
4.15pm Performance preparation
4.30pm Merry moot (squash to be served)
5.30pm Finish with songs
6.00pm Ploughmans supper (and Raffle?)
7pm Ceilidh.
9pm Final Circle
10pm Doors Close
sat 29th March – SWAN – South West Area Network meeting – for groups in SW, I will go for a bit of it with the boys but probably not all, contact me for more info
sun 30th March Watercatch farm – Woodies have a Scout Hut type affair on a farm near Bakewell with a fire pit outside and woodland – notice to Woodies groups that there will be Woodies folk there from 1pm. Trails and activities in the woods. Campfire. Help with hut maintenance and clearing. – NOTE this date is subject to change as the SWAN day is immediately before it
Sun 8th June – another Watercatch day scheduled
Other interesting dates where we could meet or FYI
- Weds 27th Feb, Folk Tales at the Scout Hut, also Weds 26th March & Weds 30th April – folk music and storytelling evening, all welcome
16th March 10am-4pm – Volcanoes
Volcanic Activity! Is actually on: Saturday 8 & Sunday 9 March, 10am-4pm, Saturday 16 & Sunday 16 March, 10am-4pm but was going to say that the group could meet on Sunday 16th March in the morning say from 10.30am?
National Science and Engineering Week 2008
National Science and Engineering Week (formerly National Science Week) is an opportunity for people of all ages, areas and organisations to take part in science, engineering and technology activities. Events will take place across the country between 7-16 March.
This year, Bristol’s City Museum & Art Gallery will be running two weekends of themed family activities to celebrate the explosive world of Volcanoes and the legacy of Professor George Walker (1926-2005), one of Britain’s greatest field geologists and one of the World’s leading volcanologists of the 20th Century.
Discover the explosive world of volcanoes. An action packed day with craft and hands-on activities and displays dedicated to these natural forces. While you are at the event check out our permanent galleries dedicated to scientific discovery from rocks and minerals to bugs and butterflies! Click here to be inspired!
Activities will include: hands-on activities and experiments, erupting volcano model, educational displays, volcanic rocks and minerals, opportunities to try out equipment used to monitor volcanoes
16th March, 2pm, family is £4, Cube Kid’s Nanoplex presents: (we went to something similar there recently and it was fab!
KIDS GIG with KID CARPET & GO DUTCH! Sunday 16th/ 2pm/ 2 youth + carers; £4 general admission at the Cube Cinema
Youth and their families are invited to this high-energy gig that get you out of your seats and rocking out! KID’S CARPET makes, in his own words, ‘Kiddy Disco Punk’ using samplers, casio keyboards, and various sellotape
bound second hand toys like Fisher-Price guitars, and tamagotchi innards.
GO DUTCH! are a young Bristol-based trio whose catchy lyrics, creative guitar riffs and vibrant drum beats make them an up & coming sensation. They’re also skillfully balancing their burgeoning musical career with studying for their GCSE’s. Great for all ages, but particularly enjoyable for 9 years and up. www.myspace.com/kidcarpet www.myspace.com/godutchmusic
- March, April and May – Mr Brown’s Pig doing animal puppet shows at the Zoo every weekend
- S
16th March 10am-4pm – Volcanoes
Volcanic Activity! Is actually on: Saturday 8 & Sunday 9 March, 10am-4pm, Saturday 16 & Sunday 16 March, 10am-4pm but was going to say that the group could meet on Sunday 16th March in the morning say from 10.30am?
National Science and Engineering Week 2008
National Science and Engineering Week (formerly National Science Week) is an opportunity for people of all ages, areas and organisations to take part in science, engineering and technology activities. Events will take place across the country between 7-16 March.
This year, Bristol’s City Museum & Art Gallery will be running two weekends of themed family activities to celebrate the explosive world of Volcanoes and the legacy of Professor George Walker (1926-2005), one of Britain’s greatest field geologists and one of the World’s leading volcanologists of the 20th Century.Discover the explosive world of volcanoes. An action packed day with craft and hands-on activities and displays dedicated to these natural forces. While you are at the event check out our permanent galleries dedicated to scientific discovery from rocks and minerals to bugs and butterflies! Click here to be inspired!
Activities will include: hands-on activities and experiments, erupting volcano model, educational displays, volcanic rocks and minerals, opportunities to try out equipment used to monitor volcanoes
16th March, 2pm, family is £4, Cube Kid’s Nanoplex presents: (we went to something similar there recently and it was fab!
KIDS GIG with KID CARPET & GO DUTCH! Sunday 16th/ 2pm/ 2 youth + carers; £4 general admission at the Cube Cinema
Youth and their families are invited to this high-energy gig that get you out of your seats and rocking out! KID’S CARPET makes, in his own words, ‘Kiddy Disco Punk’ using samplers, casio keyboards, and various sellotape
bound second hand toys like Fisher-Price guitars, and tamagotchi innards.GO DUTCH! are a young Bristol-based trio whose catchy lyrics, creative guitar riffs and vibrant drum beats make them an up & coming sensation. They’re also skillfully balancing their burgeoning musical career with studying for their GCSE’s. Great for all ages, but particularly enjoyable for 9 years and up.
www.myspace.com/kidcarpet www.myspace.com/godutchmusic aturday 3rd May Jack in the Green morris dancers etc 4pm on Horfield Common - Mon 5th May – Redland May Fair
- 7th & 8th June – Festival of Nature
- 26th July – Trowbridge Pump Festival – whole weekend but day tickets available
- 26th July – Boogie for Brizzle at the Zoo
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29th-31st August - Ragged Hedge Fair – on Abbey Home Farm organic farm with woods to explore and lots of nice stuff for kids – very small and friendly festival
- 8th September - Doors Open Day
- 19th Sept - International Talk Like a Pirate Day – involved in possible children’s pirate shenanigans for this but also adult pirate pandomonium at the legendary Llandoger Trow around this date
We gave out the died T-shirts today which looked great and stuck pictures of animals, plants and Power Rangers (?!) on our shoe boxes (which we’ll use to bring things in from home and take stuff home we make).
We came up with our name – Sparkling Seahorses and a song- will type the words for next time and even a tune (thanks Pete!).

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