The Big Field Trip

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Speaking in Foreign Languages

October 28th, 2009 2 Comments

One of the most difficult things about traveling is learning different languages. It’s uncomfortable when I am sitting next to strangers on an airplane and I want to speak with them, but I don’t know if they speak the same language as I do. Sometimes I get nervous when I walk down the street and [...]

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The Zip Line

October 27th, 2009 No Comments

Zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzip! Splash! Uh, oh, my turn. I walk to the edge of the cliff, then jump.
We had been going on a tour all day. We were somewhere outside of Lencois, Brazil. We had been to Devil’s Hole, a pool so deep that its water looked black. If you held the water in your hands, it [...]

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THE BIG CHILI TRIP

October 13th, 2009 3 Comments

Chili peppers and their cousins the sweet or bell peppers are almost everywhere. From Eastern China to Mexico, there are peppers. Peppers play an important role in many cuisines world-wide.
Chili peppers were being cultivated in Peru more than 6,000 years ago. From the coast birds brought the seeds inland. Chilis are not spicy to birds, slugs, snails, [...]

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Slideshows

August 28th, 2009 No Comments

Since our video camera was stolen in Brazil, we only have pictures and audio so we made slideshows. Here they are from Peru, Brazil and Tunisia.

Tunisia slideshow from Jason Kirkman on Vimeo.

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Cyrus’s BIG project

June 30th, 2009 6 Comments

Our planet has lots of different biomes, the fresh water biome, marine biome, desert biome, tundra biome, forest biome and grassland biome. A biome is an area with similar climate and species. For instance, both the Sahara desert and the Gobi desert are part of the desert biome. They are different continents and some different [...]

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African Culture in Brazil

February 19th, 2009 No Comments

Brazil was “discovered” in 1500 by a Portuguese explorer named Pedro Alvares Cabral. The Brazilian coast has perfect climate for growing sugarcane. The native “Indians” of Brazil were not suitable for work in the sugarcane plantations because there were not many of them. They died from European diseases,   often refused to work and fought against [...]

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Bella and the Beautiful Butterflies

February 12th, 2009 5 Comments

               Butterflies are beautiful flying insects that suck nectar and pollinate flowers. Butterflies have proboscises which are straw-like tongues that they use for sipping nectar. Butterflies have three body parts, which are the head, the thorax (the chest), and the abdomen (the tail end). Butterflies have an exoskeleton, which is a skeleton in the outside [...]

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The Mangrove Forest

February 5th, 2009 3 Comments

From The Big Field Trip – Brazil, January/February, 2009

 
MANGROVE JOURNAL
Brackish water, mangroves all around. Mud under foot. Crabs scuttle away as I wade towards them. “Click.”  A picture taken.
Stilt-like roots rise out of water. Squish, squish, rise out of water. Hundreds of centimeter long crabs dart into their sand caves. “Click.” Another picture taken.
Light shines [...]

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Arraial D’Ajuda Journal

January 21st, 2009 2 Comments

 

From The Big Field Trip – Brazil, December, 2008

Bella’s Journal
January 14th, 2009
My house in Arraial D’Ajuda has two hammocks and one sitting chair that rocks. It rains like five times a day or more. I am planning to buy a baby iguana or two, but I haven’t found a pet store. My favorite thing to [...]

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Chipada Diamantina

January 21st, 2009 1 Comment

From Salvador we went on a bus to a small town called Lencois. Lencois is a town in Chipada Diamantina. Chipada Diamantina is a place where diamonds were mined. We arrived in Lencois on the night of December 29th. We met someone named Andres and went to his house. He was renting his house so [...]

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