| Sherwood Historical Society President June Reynolds doesn't just teach at Sherwood. She teaches everywhere. On a trip through the State of Oregon, the lesson will be about the people, the flora and the fauna of the Pacific Northwest. Every turn along the highway, it seems, will take you to a place she's already visited years ago. She will introduce you to folks as genuine and down home as the people we see in this video. | GET EXTRA POINTS! Identify the critter JR is wrestling with here. |
The Oregon Trail Interpretation Center at Baker is a true work of art. However, I don't buy the total lack of joy expressed in the manikins' faces. From certain angles, you'd think you were watching the Bataan death march.
ReplyDeleteIf they had stayed at home on their 19th century farms, the work could have been almost as difficult. (Or so goes the argument.)
ReplyDeleteI do believe that is my Beaver!!Yes!
ReplyDeleteIt is the beaver in my story!!It is a story that is a metaphor for the forming of the Oregon Country!!
I think it was a beaver. How did that beaver die?
ReplyDeletei that it was a duck. thats really cool that youre holding a bever? how did it dye
ReplyDeleteLauren Held
I think that it's a beaver yes i know that is. Say what did you do to that beaver? How did it die?
ReplyDelete-Brenna
what did you do to that beaver? J
ReplyDeletewhen and how did the beaver die?
ReplyDeleteits a beaver
ReplyDeletehow did you catch the beaver?
ReplyDeletehow did the beaver die?
ReplyDeletehow did the beaver die
ReplyDeletewhat did you do with the beaver after it was dead?
ReplyDeleteIt looks like a beaver
ReplyDeletereally everybodys asking how did it die?
ReplyDeletewhat do you mean by extra points?
ReplyDeleteWow it looked like a duck but its a beaver! ~brynn mastersper
ReplyDeleteIt's a beaver! What did you do with it after it died?
ReplyDeleteI heard it was a beaver. How did it die?
ReplyDeleteIt is a beaver because of the brown.
ReplyDeleteWhere did you find the beaver?
ReplyDeleteWell, Mr. List, I guess I will tell this "tail." There was a State Park
ReplyDeleteRanger at the camp with many wonderful skins of animals, all killed by cars on the highway. I am hoping to get some from the state wildlife office in Salem to use to teach about animals. My critter was a Beaver and he had a leather-like fish scale tail that was very interesting. Did you know that when Beavers are out of the water, they sit on their tail?
Yes i was right!!
ReplyDelete-Brenna
SHE IS HOLDING A BEAVER!
ReplyDeleteKATHRINE
i like the puppet you were pretending to wrestle...PS.PS.PS I LIKE UR HAIR!!!!!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeletehow did you do that???
ReplyDeletehow did you do that
ReplyDeletewhere did you get the beaver?
ReplyDeleteIt is a bever.
ReplyDeletethat is waerd
ReplyDeletehow did you do that.
ReplyDeletei can not believe Mrs.reynolds was wrestling a beaver................it's hilarious
ReplyDeletewas it alive?
ReplyDeleteWell, Mrs. Reynolds? When shall we confess that the beaver was not alive when you wrestled with him. That beaver was dead as a door nail already when she borrowed it from a Park Ranger.
ReplyDeleteits abeaver! June even said so.
ReplyDelete