Competition closed Friday 29th June 2001

WEBQUEST
Two major prizes of digital cameras for the best answers to the Webquest Webquest runner-up prizes of 8 wireless keyboards and mice (kindly donated by Protech Australasia) Competition closed Friday 29th June 2001

MAXMAZE
Over 100 copies of 'South Australia - H orizons Beyond' a beautiful pictorial history of SA in hard cover (kindly donated by Information SA). Minor prizes including books, Tshirts, CDs for each Maxmaze Quiz. Competition closed Friday 29th June 2001


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Then As Now: Lost In Bush


Todd and his wife Alice

TEACHER NOTES:

BAND: Primary Years

LEARNING AREA(S): English

TOPIC / CONCEPT: Then As Now - Lost In The Bush

TIMELINE: 1 week

SACSA information

STUDENT TASK:

Hardly a year goes by even now without some people becoming lost in the Australian outback, often with tragic consequences. Always the same warnings are again publicised. Stay where you are, and let the searchers find you. Light a fire if practicable. This is sound bushmanship.

But it's not new.

Charles Todd, in 1870 sending parties of men to work in a strange, harsh, unexplored land, gave explicit instructions on what a man was to do if he became lost.
"Most recorded cases of persons being lost in the bush show that they lose their presence of mind and frequently wander round, often coming back to the same place, so that their own tracks further confuse them," he said. "The safest plan for a person to pursue, who is lost from a party, is, as soon as he finds that he is uncertain in which direction to go, to stop still, as he may be sure that people will be sent to look for him". "If he has a match, he should light a fire on the highest place, near him and keep it blazing until found".

QUESTIONS:

1. Write a poem or a piece of prose about what it might like to be "lost in the bush".

2. Consider this scenerio -

  • You are lost in the bush.
  • The closest community/town/station is 15 hours walk away.
  • You are stranded on a road that only has a car/ute/truck come over it three - four times a week.
  • You have minimal liquid and no food.
  • It is extremely HOT.

What are the strategies that you would put into place to SURVIVE.
(Be creative in your presentation and structure. Share your survival techniques with others in your class. Who do you think would actually survive? Does it rely just on where you are stranded and what supplies you have?)

Todd's Cup of Tea
Charles Todd was a man who liked a good cup of tea. So it was praise indeed when he said of his cook,

"He was a splendid fellow, that cook of mine, never put out with trifles such as water of the consistency of cream, with which he still managed to brew most glorious tea." And he went on, "His few and far between Sunday duff, out of which every third man was rewarded with a single plum, was, like his yarns over the camp fire, not easily forgotten". "And special mention should be made of his rich and rare plum pudding of 16 ingredients - plums, currants, marmalade jams and I know not what - made as a final treat when we got into what he called crystallised society".

QUESTIONS

  1. How do think Todd liked his cup of tea to be made?
  2. What is Todd referring to when he says " …his few and far between Sunday duff, out of which every third man was rewarded with a single plum…"
  3. What does Todd mean when he speaks of a " crystallised society".
  4. Write a telegram with a message of 20 words or less. This cost 10 pounds - equal to 5 weeks' wages for a working person in the 1870s. Develop a telegram with a message for future generations which focuses on the dreams and aspirations of telecommunication and technology of school students. Remember this message must be in 20 words or less. Consider the language that may have been used in the 1870s.

Todd's Wardrobe
Todd was a methodical man. He kept detailed diaries covering each day's business and records of his dealings with party leaders. And, as other things came to his mind, he often jotted them down at the back of the diary.

One such reminder (October 1871) is headed List of Things for Journey.

The list is :- 4 trousers, 3 waistcoats, 4 Crimean shirts, 8 pairs drawers, 12 pair socks, 3 doz collars, 9 pocket handkerchiefs, 3 pyjamas, 5 jerseys, 1 belt, 3 alpaca coats, 3 scarves, 1 clothes brush, 1 green scarf, 2 pairs boots, 1 pair slippers, 10 towels, 3 puggarees.

QUESTIONS:

  1. What does a 'crimean shirt' look like - would you recognise one if they were back in fashion today?
  2. What is todays word for "drawers"?
  3. What are "puggarees"? What part of the body do you wear a puggaree?
  4. If you went out in the bush today what would you wear? Why?

Created by Kate Dibben, Open Access College, South Australia, Australia
email: kdibben@oac.sa.edu.au

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