Te Kura o nga Raupareparenga

Te Kura o nga Raupareparenga

Saturday, September 17, 2016

Night Zookeeper- Writing post Term 3

Kitty the Tiger
So is it a wolf? No it's a cat but a bigger cat like a lion but with no mane.

Paragraph 1: So it lives in a forest or jungle. Also it could be seen in the bush around New Zealand, the areas it could be seen in mostly is around the north island but could be seen in the south.

Paragraph 2: It has two big eyes and the eye colour is mostly brown black. If you're lucky enough then the colour would be blue. It is also big, wide, long and tall. The ears are pointy and long and stand up. The legs are short but wide and the tail is small just hanging over the bum. The skin colour is unusual, as it could be any colour at all just the colour you want or the colour you find.

Paragraph 3: It eats fruit berries so it eats blue, red and black berries. The fruit they eat are bananas, oranges, apples and kiwi fruit but some are kind of hard to for the tiger to find. So if they cannot find any of those it will just eat leaves or grass.

Paragraph 4: Do you know where the tiger was born and where it comes from? The tiger could be born every minute but it really takes at less around 3 to 4 months. They could have around 8 to 9 cubs but if the mum has not been eating then she could lose at less two or three of her cubs. The areas the mums like to have their cubs are in dry warm spaces and they like to have food ready for the birth. The first ever tigers born were from a lion because the lion had eaten some different than it normally does.  At the birth it had 3 tiger cubs and they treated them like their own until they turned on them that is why they don't like each other from that day on. The tigers come from all over the world but the place they were first born is where they're from. They are from Africa and they got sent over to New Zealand now there are not many left in Africa any more.

Paragraph 5: All the tiger does is climb and jump like a normal animal and that is mostly all.
By Awatea

No comments:

Post a Comment

Thank you for your comment. A3 students appreciate you visiting our blog. Come back soon.