Today we had an assembly and not any sort of assembly, a cultural one. We were asked by the teachers to dress culturaly. I dressed as a French person celebrating the Fete de Dax, which is a tradition where I came from. This is what I look like.
What we do at the Fete de Dax, we fight bulls. That's right, from the age of 11, children fight bulls.
Thursday, November 24, 2016
Thursday, November 17, 2016
What to do in an Earthquake
Just incase you haven't seen my writing about my experience in the 7.8 earthquake, I was rudely awoken by a big one. This is a tutorial about, what to do in an earthquake.
Just to start off with the smallest magnitude is 1 and the highest ever recorded is 9.5. The bigger the magnitude, the bigger the earthquake. My one was 7.8 so quite big and destructive and the biggest one in New Zealand history. In an earthquake you Drop Cover and hold. Just like this.
Drop
Cover
Hold
If there is no space do as Shown. Either go in a nice big space out of reach for windows and doors and cover your neck and head like this.
Cover your head and neck
Or stand in a nice and firm doorway.
Doorway
Now that you know what to do in an earthquake, when one strikes........ Actually I am not going to tell you. Leave in the comments below what you think you should do.
Just to start off with the smallest magnitude is 1 and the highest ever recorded is 9.5. The bigger the magnitude, the bigger the earthquake. My one was 7.8 so quite big and destructive and the biggest one in New Zealand history. In an earthquake you Drop Cover and hold. Just like this.
Drop
Cover
HoldIf there is no space do as Shown. Either go in a nice big space out of reach for windows and doors and cover your neck and head like this.
Cover your head and neckOr stand in a nice and firm doorway.
Doorway
Now that you know what to do in an earthquake, when one strikes........ Actually I am not going to tell you. Leave in the comments below what you think you should do.
Wednesday, November 16, 2016
My experience in the 7.8 earthquake in New Zealand
Just a little reminder that in the story 7.5 is used but the quake was upgraded about 1 day after the 7.5 to a 7.8.
As I woke up from a dream I was planning to fall back asleep when suddenly the ground started shaking. I just assumed that it was just a small one but, this one started off on a big shake. I told myself, just wait and see, I then thought, are you dumb Camille? This one is big! So I listened to my brain and went with it. I hid under my desk and Hyacinthe still sleeping. I screamed out Hyacinthe! Hyacinthe! He couldn’t wake up so, I decided to get out and grab him.
After it stopped shaking (for 45 seconds), I got out of the room and my mum appeared in the corridor.
“Are you alright boys?” She said, “Yes, thanks mum!” I said. My sister came out smiling. I thought that that was a big earthquake so you could have died.
“Who felt it?!” My sister said, after that I screamed to Dad, “Magnitude report dad please.”
“7.5” He said. I was so afraid. I had survived a huge earthquake, the biggest in my life for sure.
Now, as I wake up in the morning I turn the TV on for the News Report. Of course it was breaking news. They said it had struck near Kaikoura and that it was 7.5 at 15 kms depth which from my knowledge is pretty shallow for 7.5.
“Schools from Canterbury all the way up to Wellington are closed and that 2 people had died.
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