Showing posts with label Curious and Interesting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Curious and Interesting. Show all posts

Friday, February 22, 2013

A trip to the North Pole!

Strange things happen in the North Pole... Almost magic things!
It's very-very cold! ΟK, we all knew that...
But up there in the north everything is different...
Day and night... The sun and the sky...


So, we boarded our Websail and travelled very far away!!
We met the Eskimoes and they told us how they build their igloos, their ice houses.


We arrived there in summertime. During a day that lasts for...6 months!
Even at night, the sun doesn't set... It never hides...



But when it DOES set, it is for good!.
The night there lasts for six months... Yet, it is not always dark...




Original post by Dimitris Alexakis

Wednesday, February 20, 2013

Do you know all the truth about tomatoes?

WE know EVERYTHING about tomatoes! First off, we know they are fruit and not vegetables! Didn't you know? Read this: http://10dim-tsesmes-en.blogspot.gr/2012/02/our-salad-days.html
Now we know how tomatoes took their red colour! Read the story as it was written by the D'2 class student, Nektaria Kiose.

"Once upon a time there was a tomato. She thought it would be nice to go to the sea and she did. She sat a little till she had set up the umbrella and taken off her clothes. She finally got into the sea and swam. After a short while she got out, ate and after some time she got in again. Later she got out, took out her mobile phone, put on her earphones and lay down.She put on her sunglasses and thought of sleeping a bit! But that "bit" turned into a full four hours! How could she have imagined when she lay down that she had put on everything except of the most important: her sunscreen!!!
When she realised, she saw she had messed up. And so she had got sunburn. She had turned all red! Everybody loved her new look since then!
All the tomatoes of the world decided to imitate that look and since then all the tomatoes of the world turned red!"

Original post by Maria Priniotaki