Week 11 Story: The Journey through Hibernation
There once were two Sibling bears Sasha and Jacob that
lived deep in the San Angelo National forest in the mountainous Colorado. They
were preparing for the upcoming hibernation period by collecting food to suffice
through the length of winter. Jacob the older of the siblings suggested getting
a surplus of berries and pinecones because this would last all winter. Sasha agreed,
and they split up to find as many resources as possible.
When they regrouped a week later Jacob brought enough
to last 2/3 of the hibernation period. Through this length of time Sasha was unable
to find any source of food, and when Jacob asked what she found she said enough
to last 1/3 of the hibernation period. Jacob
accepted this answer and went on with his day preparing his den where they
would stay. The elk spirit was watching
over Jacob and saw Sasha did not collect any food, and remembered what Jacob had
done for the elk community years before.
Three years earlier the elk population was under
threat by the surplus of wolves that were living in the area. The elk leader
came to him and begged for his help or their kind would go extinct. Jacob
helped and attacked the leader of the wolves and ran then away from that part
of the forest.
Fast forward 2 months into hibernation, Jacob and
Sasha were found running extremely low on food. The elk spirit saw Jacobs
struggle and spoke to him in a dream. He said believe me brother, because you
helped my kind so many years back it is my turn to return the favor. I have set
a plethora of berries and protein outside of your den. But I warn you, your
younger sibling Sasha never gathered any food when you were preparing for hibernation.
He woke up from the dream feeling blessed and looked over at his sister, and
thought I can not do wrong on her, because I am supposed to lead by example. The
next morning Jacob shared the good news with Sasha and they survived another hibernation.
(Picture is of two Bear. Picture Source: Bears)
Authors Notes:
The story
I chose to complete the reading notes over was The River Fish and the Money.
This story comes from the Eastern Stories and legends part C. In the story
there were two bothers that set out to complete a business task their deceased
father was supposed to complete. On this trip the brothers collected the money
and then stopped by the river while waiting for their boat. While they were
waiting, they decided to eat, the older brother have food left over and threw
it to the river to feed the fish. The younger brother was planning on tricking
the older, to then take all the money, but messed up his own plan and threw the
actual money into the river. The Spirit of the Ganges was looking out for the
older brother because he was grateful, and had a fish eat the money. The fish
was later caught and then sold back to the older brother where he found the
money he had lost. The spirit explained to him the meaning and sent him on his
way. What I got from this story was that if you look out for others, and keep them
in your thoughts, when the turn is yours, they will look out for you.
Hi Drew! Overall, I could definitely tell that your story looks awesome; even by just the look of it. It was very creative that you turned the original story to something unique. Something that can also describe your personality. I also love the happy ending. It was great to know that they survived the hibernation together! Keep up the great work, Drew!
ReplyDeleteHi Drew, I just read this story in your project blog. It's just as good the second time! I think the advantage that your storybook has over this version is the large banner image. The picture of the embracing bears as the first thing you see when you navigate onto the page really see the mood for the story. Again, great job on this story.
ReplyDeleteHey Drew, I just read your story quad I really enjoyed it! I also love that it was about bears because I love bears! They are so big but also somewhat scary. I love the image that you used for this story. It was so cute. I love you worked it up to a happy ending. I am looking to reading some more of your stories.
ReplyDelete