Sunday, July 19, 2015

7th Grade Class - Ukranian Egg Decorating - Pysanky - May 7, 2014

pysanka (Ukrainianписанка, plural: pysanky) is a Ukrainian Easter egg, decorated with traditional Ukrainian folk designs using a wax-resist (batik) method. The word pysankacomes from the verb pysaty, "to write", as the designs are not painted on, but written with beeswax.
Many other eastern European ethnic groups decorate eggs using wax resist for Easter. These include the Belarusians (пісанка, pisanka), Bulgarians (писано яйце, pisano yaytse), Croats (pisanica), Czechs (kraslice), Hungarians (hímestojás), Lithuanians (margutis), Poles (pisanka), Romanians (ouă vopsiteincondeiate or impistrite), Russians(расписанное яйцо "rаspisannoe yaitsо"), Serbs (pisanica), Slovaks (kraslica), Slovenes (pisanica, pirhi or remenke) and Sorbs (jejka pisać).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pysanka









Friday, April 18, 2014

7th Grade Social - Triple O Lazer Tag - April 8, 2014

http://tripleolazertag.com/

Went with our MAS group, 9 boys, and had an Amazing Laser Tag experience.





7th Grade Class - Nature Class - April 16, 2014







7th Grade Field Trip - Olympic Training Center Chula Vista - April 17, 2014

http://www.teamusa.org/About-the-USOC/Training-Centers-and-Sites/Chula-Vista.asp








We got to meet the Under 20 Women's National Soccer Team



Notes - 

- Acres 155 
- Archery
- Track and field
- Rowing 
- Under 20 women's soccer team 
- Resident athletes / don't live here but train 
- Majority live here when then r training 
- Interns live here
- Bmx track- athletes use for practice 
- Soccer field - us mans para soccer
- England's paraolympic soccer 
- Brain surgery - paraolympic 
- Men's and women's rugby - rugby 7 new sport for 2016 Olympics 
- Only come if u are invited - track - top 10 in country or world - post collegiate 
- Indoor archery complex 44,000 sq ft largest in the world 
- Sept - feb competition is indoors archery 
- Rowing at Otay lake 
- Hunger games - the girl who trained Jennifer Lawrence named Katuna trains here for archery. 
- 70 meters or 230 ft  is Olympic distance in Olympics for archery . 
- Archery people Going to china 
- Under 20 woman's national soccer team 
- United States Olympic committee  pays for all of it if they are invited here and live here


7th Grade Field Trip - Deering Banjo Manufacturing - April 17, 2014

http://www.deeringbanjos.com/











Notes - 

- Banjo - 4-12 strings 
- 4 string standard scale 
- Strings are fatter
- 5 string is easier to play - strings lighter. More popular because of throttles of music like classic, rock folk gospel.
- 6-12 strings are tuned and played like a guitar. Can use guitar cords. Musicians use. Banjo weighs 9 lbs
Open back banjo can see on the inside 
- Pot assembly - round part 
- Stick - neck - made from hard rock maple. Don't want it to absorb any energy. U want the energy to pass to the bridge to the pot assembly. 
- Wooden rim on pot assembly - made of red maple 
- Each piece vibrates to make each sound. Vibrate freely. 
- Could be made from walnut 
- Banjo head - drum head - front part of banjo. 
- Bridge - base of bridge is made from maple. More grain lines the better the sound will be. 
Saddle - made of ebony (doesn't use anymore) or ridge light
- Tail piece - hold the strings to keep it firm and be able to tone. 
- Coordinator rod on back - hold in place 

- Field trips - contact 
- Remo - Covina 
- Taylor guitar - gives tours 

- If u want to change the sound just change the banjo head. Don't need a new banjo. 
- Soften the tension and has warmer sound.
- Tighten tension peppy sound. 
- Resonator back banjo - made of wood
- Held in place by flange - metal 
- The sound is louder bc sound that travels back bounces against hard surface so it's louder. 
- Blue grass music, or blues music 
- Expensive banjo - $4700 - golden era 
- Made from curly maple, cromona stain hand done. Polyester finish. Each one is unique none look alike. 
- Fingerboard - ebony
- Mother of pearl 
- Pre war style - vintage style model 
- Bell bronze tone ring, strong and like a church bell highs and lows. 
- Banjos Reach the soul of an individual. All different and tuned differently. Get something different after each if them. 
- Deerung is #1 manufacturing  
- 10,000 banjos a year 
- Janet and Greg Deering - 1975 founded 
- Lots are made in China and sell here and say made here. 
- Famous musicians own their banjos-  Steve Martin, Winston Marshall, Taylor swift, Elton John
- How long does it take to make - 3-5 man hours, 15 hr more extensive, about a year for custom made. 
- Luthier - person who makes aucotsic guitar 

7th Grade Field Trip - Bancroft Ranch House Museum - April 17, 2014

http://www.sandiegohistory.org/societies/springvalley/ranchhouse.htm















THE BANCROFT RANCH HOUSE MUSEUM

Bancroft Ranch House Museum
The adobe house and surrounding grounds have a long history, mostly due to the presence of a nearby spring. This water source attracted people thousands of years ago to use the area. These people, the Indians presently known as Kumeyaay, left evidence of their encampments in the vicinity. The location name was transcribed by the Spanish as "Meti" or "Neti" and later changed to "San Jorge" in 1775 by the Spanish padres. The spring became known as "El aguaje de San Jorge" (Anglicized into "St. George's spring"). By the late 1830s the Indians had been removed from the area and herds of cattle and sheep grazed in the valley.
In May of 1863, Judge Augustus S. Ensworth, of San Diego, filed claim to 160 acres of land that included the spring. He built a two room adobe on the property, the first house erected by a white man in the eastern part of San Diego County. The wood used for beams and doorways was salvaged from the ship Clarissa Andrews, which had gone aground in San Diego Harbor.
Just before Ensworth's death, the ranch was sold to Rufus King Porter of San Pedro for $400. Capt. Porter, his wife Sophia, and daughter Rufina moved to the property on July 31, 1865. Rufus King Porter was the son of Rufus Porter, the founder of the Scientific American magazine, and he led a very colorful life holding numerous jobs and taking on various enterprises. He became well known for his columns about daily life, that appeared in several newspapers.
Rufus King PorterIn 1866, at the urging of his daughter, Rufus renamed the area Spring Valley. In 1872, after the discovery by a scientist of a European snail (Helix aspersa) living on a nearby small mountain, Rufus named the prominent peak Mt. Helix. When, in 1885, the U.S. Post Office Department disallowed the use of two words for a post office name, Rufus submitted the name Helix and became the first postmaster in Spring Valley; the Helix Post Office operated out of his home.
In this same year, Hubert Howe Bancroft came to the area in search of a place to retire. He bought the Porter's ranch and also acquired neighboring ranches, accumulating around 500 acres. He called his property "Helix Farms." Over the next ten years, Bancroft hired workers to develop Helix Farms, planting orchards and building structures to run a ranch. A wide variety of trees and shrubs were planted including guavas, palms, olives, citrus, almonds, raspberries, blackberries, and currants. The adobe was too small to suit his family's needs when they visited the property in the summer months, so a house, known as "Cactus Cottage," was built on top of a nearby (cactus-covered) hill in 1889. Masons also constructed a "rock house" near the spring, where the children were taught. By the early 1900s, Helix Farms had become one of the largest olive ranches in southern California (many of the original olive trees can still be found in the surrounding area). Bancroft's son Griffing managed the farm since Hubert lived in San Francisco much of the time. Bancroft died in 1918 and after several years, his heirs sold the property. Much of it was subdivided into La Mesa Country Estates.
The adobe and 3.5 acres of land were purchased by the Spring Valley Chamber of Commerce in 1940. A wooden annex was built on the north side of the adobe and the building was used as a community meeting place. The Chamber was instrumental in getting the adobe designated California State Historic Landmark No. 626 in 1958, and it became known as the Bancroft Ranch House. By 1962, the deteriorating condition of the adobe required major restoration. Volunteers worked to reinforce it by bracing the walls, adding more support beams to the porch, filling in the cellar, and laying a concrete floor.
On March, 24, 1963 - just short of one hundred years after being built - the adobe was opened as a museum displaying artifacts of Spring Valley. The Spring Valley Historical Societywas founded in April of that year and became the manager of the property, later purchasing the adobe and a portion of the land in 1967.