“Autumn Leaves” by Kerry Gittins

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Big leaf, small leaf

Green leaf, brown leaf,

Red leaf, yellow leaf,

So many leaves.

Cat-shaped, dog-shaped

Bird-shaped, fish-shaped

Mouse-shaped, house-shaped,

So many leaves.

Pile high, jump in

Pile low, jump out

Throw up, throw down,

So many leaves.

Wind blows, leaves fall

Ram comes, leaf puddles

Sun’s out, leaves sparkle,

Autumn is here.

Kerry Gittins

“Modern Natural Historians” by Celia Berrell

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A Victorian subject
returns to our schools.
Exams will be written –
you know that’s the rule.

Students will start to
go out “in the field”,
like Dame Jane Goodall
whose studies revealed
so much about chimpanzees
in the wild.  Let’s
get back to nature
with every child!

Those woodlands hold therapy,
beauty, fragility.
Discover your love for
our world’s Natural History.

Celebrating the return of Natural History in school education.
https://teach.ocr.org.uk/naturalhistory

“Turn over a new leaf” by James Aitchison

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Run out of paper?
Never fear!
There are plenty of leaves
now autumn's here!

Paint a face today,
what a joke,
on a leaf from an elm,
maple or oak.

What leaf will you paint?
Go in search
of a leaf from a beech
or silver birch.

Want to paint leaves?
Never fuss!
Plenty of trees are
deciduous!

“Listening to the Leaves” by Katherine Gallagher

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Hello, my friends. Are we sitting comfortably, 
nice and comfortably, after all that blowing
out in the forest? It’s good to see you: oak,
maple, elm, larch, sycamore, beech –
bright in your autumn colours . . . And
there’s room on the carpet for all of us.


It’ll be good to share our stories. We can tell
those humans how we like to live and breathe
on our beautiful planet, just like them --
drink lots of water and get food from the soil too,
talk to the birds and other creatures -- just like humans . . .
indeed. . . Bring on the stories, the music – Hooray . . .




Katherine Gallagher

“I started the wind” by Marcus Ten Low

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I started the windy weather,

blowing my sister’s hair

with all my might.

But SHE started the rains,

when she cried and cried,

storming off in a fright.

I was the radiant sun,

shining, smiling bright;

inviting my sister to come back in

and dine.

And then I was a tree, a pond,

a plant, a stone, a scrap of thing –

And then, like a pretty bird,

she left me there,

with my imaginings,

tingling …

“The tomb of the Unknown Warrior” by James Aitchison

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We know not his name or rank.

we know not where he was born.

We know he is Australian,

and his life by war was torn.

He went to fight on the Western Front,

And in the heat of battle died.

His remains were found and honoured,

but were never identified.

Known to God, and God alone,

he sleeps in sacred peace.

The Great War is well over,

but our debt will never cease.

“DABBLE IN SCRABBLE” by James Aitchison

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Is it H.I.S.T.O.R.Y
or M.Y.S.T.E.R.Y?
Could be either,
could be neither.
Makes you think,
that in a wink,
you can win the game
with such P.I.Z.Z.A.Z.Z!

“Bunnyland” by Celia Berrell

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Have you wondered from where rabbits came?

Well, one answer is found in a name.

Carthaginians claimed

“Land of rabbits” was Spain.

And “Ispania”, their word, is to blame.

http://www.ctspanish.com/rabbits.htm