My name is Jacko, and this is the story of my most special day ever.
I woke up too early that day. It was dark, and I heard snores coming from Grandma’s bedroom. I didn’t want to wake her, so I closed my eyes and thought about the otter video we’d seen at school. It showed otters sliding down a riverbank and splashing in the water. Otters are excellent at swimming and fishing, but I know one thing for sure: otters are animals that CANNOT FLY! So here’s the weird thing—almost all the planes that fly into Nain, the town in Canada where I live, are called Twin Otters.
I get the twin part because the planes have two engines, but wouldn’t a bird name, like gull or goose, be better than otter?
Planes are super important in Nain because we don’t have roads that go to other towns. Boats can reach us in summer after the ocean ice melts, but in winter every person and every thing that comes has to come by plane. If there are too many bad weather days when planes can’t fly, the stores run out of things. It’s good my dad always keeps our freezer full of food.
That morning I was hoping and hoping for good weather because it was the day my mom was supposed to fly home. It was hard to stay in bed waiting, but Grandma was still snoring, so I snuggled down and pulled up my quilt. I thought about Mom. Maybe she was awake too, packing and getting ready to go to the airport.
I remembered when I flew down the coast to stay with my cousin in Hopedale. I’d had to fit all the things I needed into one suitcase. The plane looked big to me, but Dad said Twin Otters are small. They can hold 19 people. Some jet planes can hold hundreds! You’d need a much bigger airport than Nain’s for those jets.
Denne historien er fra November/December 2016-utgaven av Click Magazine for Kids.
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Denne historien er fra November/December 2016-utgaven av Click Magazine for Kids.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Ben, The Bubble Scientist
Ben loved bubbles.
Lost Ladybugs?
All around North America, kids and adults are looking for ladybugs. When they find a ladybug, they take its picture. Then they send the picture to scientists. Why? For the Lost Ladybug Project.
Science Magic
These activiti es may seem magical, but science is what makes them work.
The Great Scientific Cookie Caper
“There’s smoke pouring out of the oven!” Lucas yelled.
Build It High, Long, Strong
A wooden plank across a small stream makes a fun bridge.
Helping Pandas
Giant pandas once roamed throughout the bamboo forests of China.
Turtle Rescue
At first, Stella thought the turtle was a seashell. Small and round, no bigger than Stella’s ear, the tiny turtle lay motionless in the sand.
Night And Day
When the side of Earth where you live faces the sun, you have daylight, and the other side of the world is in darkness, or night.
Reaching For The Moon
The name my parents gave me was Edwin Eugene Aldrin Jr., but the name my sister gave me was the one that would stay with me all my life. She could not manage to say brother, only “Buzzer.” Later that got shortened to “Buzz,” and no one ever called me anything else.
Hello, Sunshine!
It’s me! The sun. I’m up here in the sky. But don’t look right at me.