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Tommy Thompson Park Butterfly Festival

8/25/2013

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PictureKyle and the prairie falcon
Toronto Butterfly Festival at Tommy Thompson Park

By: Dea Yu (8 years old) and William Yang (12 years old)

We went to the fifth annual Butterfly Festival at Tommy Thompson Park on Saturday,
August 24, 2013 in the afternoon. The park is located at Leslie Street and Lakeshore
Boulevard in Toronto.

It took about three months to plan the festival and there were 12 booths that we could
check out.The butterfly festival is meant to teach people about butterflies and to teach
us how to help them.

After we arrived at the park, we went on a nature walk. On the way to the trail, we stopped at the “Wild Ontario” booth. Kyle, a volunteer, had a brownish Prairie falcon resting on his hand. The bird was 15 months old and had beige and white feathers with beautiful black spots on it. At the display table, among a skull of a prairie falcon and a claw, an egg-shaped pill caught our eye. “What is that?” we asked Kyle. It looked like a tiny freckled clay egg. Kyle explained that it was a pellet; falcons can’t digest everything that they eat, so they compact it into small pellets, then cough them out. Very interesting.

Afterwards, we walked on a sandy trail right by Lake Ontario. On the way, we spotted crickets, an orange sulphur butterfly, a Monarch butterfly, milkweeds, a white cabbage butterfly, and cattail weeds. From the scavenger hunt sheet we got from the park entrance, we learned that milkweeds attract Monarch butterflies.

PictureDon with some Monarchs
When we came back from the walk, we interviewed the event organizer, Natalie Racette. We asked, “How long does a Monarch butterfly live?”

“It depends on how long it migrates, so probably three to four weeks,” she replied. We
asked Racette how many species we can find at the park, and she said, “There are 55 species of butterflies around the park.” When we asked what kind of butterfly she would be, if she could be one, she pointed to a poster with a large colourful butterfly and said, “I would be a Swallowtail.”

We continued our walk to other display booths. We saw a man attaching tiny stickers on a Monarch butterfly’s wing, and then he released it. We were fascinated and walked over to his booth. His name was Mr. Don Davis. He’s a naturalist and is from an organization called “Monarch Butterfly Journey North.” He explained that the butterflies he just released will migrate south, all the way to Mexico. Numbers from 1-800 are printed on the stickers he attached so that people down in Mexico will know that the butterflies came from Canada. So far, Mr. Davis has received four phone calls from Mexico since he started tagging the butterflies. He also showed us Monarch butterfly eggs; they were so tiny and transparent! You can hardly see them on the back of a leaf. He hatched all of the Monarch butterflies he released; they are his babies!

Last but not least, we went to a booth with lots of snakes. The volunteers let us hold a
large yellow snake. Its skin was smooth, cool, and slimy. We even had it around our
neck! It felt AMAZING!

Some other things we learned from the booths were that butterflies taste with their feet and use their antennae to communicate with each other, and that some butterfly
collectors preserve butterflies by drying them up.

We had so much fun at the Butterfly Festival, and learned a lot about butterflies! We
hope to come back next year.


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Dea makes a slimy friend!
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Dea Yu
Hi everyone, my name is Dea, I am 8 years old. My name is not popular, I only knew one girl whose name sounded the same but she spelled it differently. Guess how I got this name; my Mom told me she found it on a website called babynames.com. It is a Greek Goddess name who was in charge of beauty. I go to Sommerville Manor School which is really close to Voice K. My favourite classes at school are Drama and Music, I love playing acting games with my Drama teacher. I live in Mississauga, Ontario. I like reading and all kinds of arts. I am a Ballet dancer; I had my fourth recital this year. I really enjoy putting on new costumes each year and dancing on the stage.
That is it, so far
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William Yang
Hi, I am William Yang. I'm a Chinese born in Senegal, Africa. I can speak 4 different languages. I'm 12 years old and I am in grade 7 and go to Hazel McCallion French Immersion Senior Public School. My favourite subjects in school are math, gym, and French. I like video games, making videos, and a board game called "Go". I enjoy playing Go because there are infinite possibilities, and it is challenging. My hobbies are Kung Fu, basketball, soccer, skating, and skiing. I am Tae Kwon Do black belt 2nd Dan and Kung Fu level 3. I also love to read and write. I also love to watch Kung Fu movies, especially Jackie Chan movies. I also love music; I can't stand a day without listening to music of some sort. 
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Family Day at Habourfront Centre

2/18/2013

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By William Yang & Sunni Zhou
On Sunday, February 17th, 2013, there was an event at Harbourfront Centre located in Downtown Toronto. There were lots of family and kids’ activities, and all of them were free to the public. Almost everyone was there and, it was one of the biggest events we have ever seen.
Kids were crowded at every single booth. We were glad that we went early, so we didn’t need to wait in long lines to participate in any activities. The activities were all different and unique. It went from milk testing, (decide which milk brand tastes better) to snow castle building (I really admire the staff who were standing there for hours in the freezing weather).

The most awesome and fantastic thing was... FREE COTTON CANDY! Listen up kids! That was a once in a lifetime chance, I mean who gives FREE cotton candy out? We usually beg our parents to buy us a bag in a Disney show, or we have to exchange it with our hours of hard play and collection of tickets we gained through Chuck E. Cheese games. See the picture; we had a rack of cotton candy marked FREE.
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Sunni and William enjoying free cotton candy

Some events were:

• Skating/skating performances/Le Patin Libre at 12:30 pm and 3:00 pm.
• Snow castle building at 11:00 am-5:00 pm.
• Street Dance Canada Competitions at 12:00 pm, 2:00 pm and 5:00 pm.
• Vibrating toothbrush painting at 11:00 am-5:00 pm.
• Gelatin art engraving (they called it magical painting) at 11:00 am-5:00 pm.
• Lego playing and building at 11:00 am-5:00 pm. There is also a feature LEGO® building class by the LEGOLAND Discovery Centre Toronto’s Master Model Builder!
• Museums: A showcase of work created by some of the youngest – and most talented artists around.

There were many more free activities available all day long. The one that I paid most attention to was the street dancing.

Street Dancing

The Canadian Street Dance Championships (CSDC) is an annual competition that qualifies dancers to compete at the world street dance championships. It features categories for kids, youth and adults in solo, duo, crew, as well as battle competitions in hip hop, popping, locking, break-in’, crump and house. There were many professional dancers that practiced before the competition, but there were also many audience members who volunteered to show their wacky and cool moves. During the performance, there was a DJ, who was playing awesome tunes and pop music to match the style of dance the dancers were doing. In the middle of the dance, the MC asked, “Are there any children in the audience who want to show their break dancing moves?” After that little speech, everyone started calling each other’s names, but only two little kids went up. One of them was a girl that looked about 7-9 years old and the other one looked like he was around 3-5 years old. After that, the MC called all the adults to come up. The winner got one free ticket to the national street dance competition.
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Gelatin Art Engraving:

The gelatin art engraving was really fun. There was a medium sized plastic box that was filled with gelatin, toothbrush-like paintbrushes, cups of different colours of paint, white paper, and an object that looked like a comb. The instructor said, “That is the most important thing in all of these tools.” It was something they used to spread the paint in the gelatin. The instructions are simple. 


First, take a paintbrush and dip it in paint.


Next, shake/wiggle the paintbrush over the gelatin so the drops of paint could fall in the gelatin and make little dots. Now, repeat step 1 and use a different colour.


After, repeat all of these steps until the box is filled with different coloured dots. Then, take the comb-like thing and spread (only using the tip with the spikes) the gelatin any way you want.

Now, take a piece of paper, and gently place it on the gelatin. After a few seconds, gently lift it off.


Finally, take your picture and hang it somewhere to dry. You can definitely make a new one after the first one. When you’ve dried it and it’s hard, it will look something like this. The fun part about this art is that you can design the gelatin any way you want with any colours you want. You can even make a smiley face on the gelatin.

LEGOLAND Discovery Centre

There was another wonderful place called LEGOLAND Discovery  Centre. This wasn’t just any Lego centre; it was a centre with building classes by the LEGOLAND Discovery Centre’s Toronto’s Master Model Builder!
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Rhyme Timez

At around 4:00 p.m. we went to watch a show called RhymeTimez. At the show there was a really crazy man
who kept on dancing with flashing lights everywhere in the background. The show was about random characters having rap battles. The first round was a cat vs. a dog. In the end the dog won the match because the cat barely ever rhymed. The second round was Sunny Sunshine against Old Man Winter. This battle was the weirdest because Old Man Winter looks like a huge hairball and he thinks he is a little kid. Old Man Winter totally owned Sunny Sunshine. The last fight was the turtle vs. the hare.This round was really close but the turtle won.


“My favourite battle at RhymeTimez was the turtle vs. the hare. I voted for the turtle because I love Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtle,” said a young boy named Josh, who claimed to have gone to every single event at the Harbourfront Centre.
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