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Baxter's Island

Page history last edited by Lauren Kern 14 years, 8 months ago

Who knows anything about Pat's Island?  Salt Springs? Juniper Run? Lake George? What farmers do in summer (why there's no school)?  Who's made a fluttermill (I have)? 

I CAN HEAR AN ECHO WHEN I ASK ABOUT YOUR BACKGROUND KNOWLEDGE (or was it a cricket?).

 

                                                Lake George is part of the St. Johns River. In the book Grandma Hutto

                                       lives on the bank of the St. Johns river.

 

                                        In real life in the late 1800's my Great-great-great-great Grandpa

                                        Capt. Jacob Brock ran the first steamship line along the St. John's river,

                                        from Jacksonville to Enterprise ,Florida 

                                        So in the Yearling, maybe Oliver rode Captain Brock's steamship, the

                                        Darlington. If you want to learn more about my awesome forefather

                                        click on this link:

http://www.cowart.info/Monthly%20Features/Paddlewheel/Paddlewheelers.htm

                                                  Here is  picture of the Darlington steamship   (Austin Mitchell)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

In chapter 9, Jody offers to clean the troughs, because he was grateful that his dad is going to make him a knapsack out of the albino raccoon fur. At this part I was confused about what it meant about the troughs but the troughs are huge water buckets down at the sink hole where Penny goes to get water from everday with the Ox yolk. Jody says he think Penny does this as a kind-of punishment to himself for not digging a well and an apology to the whole family. My first required journal was about the beauty of nature that blows Jody away. If that has never happened to you, imagine what it would be like and maybe you can even journal about it. (Lauren Kern, Aug. 13th)

 

I think it's so funny when Jody asks "Granda, was Oliver borned good-lookin'?" and Penny says, "I kin answer that. I kin remenber when he was uglier'n you and me both." That's so ironic and hilarious!!! -Lauren Kern, Aug. 23 

 

 

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The Yearling, Full text

http://gutenberg.net.au/ebooks03/0301541.txt

 

 

 

                                                                                                          

 

                                                                                          Visit this link to see my visit to Cross Creek:

                                                                                      http://amweb.pbworks.com/Austin-Mitchell's-Cross-Creek-visit    

 

 

 

 

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                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   This is a florida black bear cub

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    like the ones that Jody meets in

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                    Chapt. 11. Don't you think they

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                     are cute?

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Yearling Summary | Plot Summary

 

 

Jody Baxter is a carefree boy, the only surviving child of Ezra ("Penny") and Ora Baxter. The story opens in April of Jody's twelfth year, in the early 1870's, to find him enjoying the simple life in the lush scrub country of northeast Florida. At every opportunity, Jody leaves his work to dawdle the day away, wanting for only one thing: a pet that will love him and follow him. While his father indulges his childhood urges, his mother remains cool and stern.

A clever old bear has been tormenting farmers in the area, and Penny has promised Jody that the two of them will hunt "Old Slewfoot." When the bear kills a precious brood sow, father and son track the wily thief, only to see him escape. They travel together to their nearest neighbors, the Forresters, where Penny trades a little dog for a more reliable gun and Jody is reunited with his only playmate, Fodder Wing. After a thrilling evening of hunting tales, Penny leaves Jody to spend a rare night with his friend, enjoying the boy's collection of tamed creatures. The night is marked by strange and wonderful revelry as Jody sees how the Forresters live, so differently from his own family.

Life on Baxter Island is hard by contrast, but Jody could be content, if only he had that pet. As the spring turns to summer, Penny teaches Jody to study and appreciate nature. Jody observes playful young animals, knowing he must have a loving pet. On a trading trip to Volusia, father and son visit Penny's lifetime companion, Grandma Hutto. Here Jody experiences another contrasting lifestyle, clean and comfortable, but his heart is still in the snug cabin in the clearing. A conflict arises between the Huttos and the Forresters, and Jody and Penny are drawn into a feud that will simmer on.

Shortly after, tracking their missing hogs, Penny is struck by a rattlesnake. Miraculously a doe appears, and Penny shoots her, cutting out her organs to make a drawing poultice. As Jody runs several miles to the Forresters for help, he spots a tiny, shivering fawn and recalls his need for a pet. He realizes that Penny has just killed the baby's mother.

Amazingly, Penny recovers as Buck Forrester, with Jody's help, kindly takes over much of the work. Jody is allowed to find the little fawn and bring it home. As the hot summer passes, the Baxter fortunes seesaw between hardship and plenty, but Jody has his loving pet. When Fodder Wing dies suddenly, the dead boy's mother assures Jody that her son had named the fawn "Flag," and so it shall be.

In fall a vicious storm pounds the scrub, causing miles of flooding any wildlife not drowned faces starvation, and crops are rotting. Neighbors together survey the damage, and Jody proudly shoots his first bear. Now a plague ravages the wildlife, and the family faces its most serious threat, fighting now for survival. Just as Penny falls ill with fever, Old Slewfoot returns to steal one of their hogs. Flag, moreover, has become more mischievous and a constant source of irritation to Ma.

When early winter frosts find the family around their cozy hearth, Penny recovers his strength and confidence, feeling they will prevail. Then a pack of hungry wolves invades, stealing their calf, and the clearing is no longer the secure fortress Jody imagined it to be. Father and son join with the Forresters to kill off nearly all the remaining wolves, and Jody plays a key and successful role in the hunt.

Close to Christmas, with plans for a Christmas trip to Volusia, Old Slewfoot returns to steal the newborn heifer calf. Penny grimly commits to hunting and killing the bear, Christmas or no, and Jody and Flag accompany him on a three-day journey of bone-chilling cold and deprivation. Penny shoots the bear and the family does end up at the Christmas party in town, as do the Forresters. Tragedy strikes again as Grandma Hutto's house goes up in flames. The Forresters are clearly responsible, but justice will never be served. The cautious friendship between the two neighboring families is irreparably wounded.

A mild, serene January brings father and son ever closer, and even Ma "thaws" a bit. In February, however, Penny's rheumatism strikes and Jody must take on the responsibility for the fields. Now he is constantly badgered by the annoying, sometimes destructive, behavior of Flag. March finds Penny restored to health, returning to the fields to plant. He and Jody work side by side for a happy week, and then Penny suffers a hernia and is bedridden, in constant pain, for the foreseeable future. Jody becomes the man of the house, working to exhaustion. Unfortunately, Flag has become an actual threat to their survival, destroying the corn crop repeatedly. Jody works feverishly to raise a higher fence, but Flag jumps it with ease. Finally, in exquisite anguish, Penny commands his son to tie the deer and shoot it. When Jody is unable to comply, his mother is commanded to do the deed, and she does it poorly, wounding the creature horribly. Jody must kill his pet now in order to put it out of its misery.

After firing the horrific shot, Jody runs from home, hurling epithets of hatred at his parents. He endures three terrifying days and nights in the woods and on the water, bound for Jacksonville and, ultimately, for Boston where the Huttos have relocated. Near starvation and in a faint, he is rescued, fed, and set back on his way home. When his morale sinks to its lowest, feeling as if the world has cast him off, he suddenly thinks of his loving father and knows that his place is in the clearing where he was raised. He returns to a loving and forgiving father who recognizes that Jody has passed through the "yearling" stage and is now a young man.

 

 

 

Comments (11)

Lauren Kern said

at 3:55 pm on Jul 9, 2009

Hi Everyone! Ok, so for the summer reading we read through chapter 13 of the Yearling and them come here and add anything that might help people. Is that correct?

Riley DeLucas said

at 8:24 pm on Jul 9, 2009

Yes Lauren That is correct!!!! Happy Summer! :)

Abigail Kneal said

at 9:56 pm on Jul 11, 2009

Mr. Cunningham,
Are we supposed to add our comments to the page (Edit the top part of the page) or put our say into the comments down here?
Thanks.
Abigail

Greg Cunningham said

at 7:32 am on Jul 12, 2009

How 'bout yoiu upload your content right to the page, and ask text-clarification questions / comment on others' aditions down here.
What chapter are yoiu guys on? I know you were doing some reading at school in the spring.

sierra holsbeke said

at 5:56 pm on Jul 13, 2009

i am on chapter 13 and i am working on the journals. what is your favorite part so far? i love the whole book! thanks sierra
.

Greg Cunningham said

at 7:09 pm on Jul 13, 2009

The whole thing? Everything? I'm a little scared of Ma. She's pretty strict. How many kids did she have to bury in that little graveyard by their house? Maybe she's worn out from grief... Maybe she's just grumpy...

Austin Mitchell said

at 2:13 pm on Jul 24, 2009

I haven't read the Yearling yet, but I've put in a link to my web page about my visit to Cross Creek. Make sure you (especially the teachers) take note of all of the extensive and strenous resrach that I did before reading the book:-)

Austin Mitchell said

at 8:20 pm on Jul 30, 2009

After reading the first 13 chapters of The Yearling I think the book is slow paced but thoroughly describes the beauty of the pine woods scrubs of Florida. It's not my favorite style of writing but Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings writes with a lot of details and long descriptions of everyday things like her description of smoke coming out of a chimney.(Do we really need to be reminded of what smoke looks like) I like the characters because her characters are average people and I can easily believe people would act that way. I really liked the hunting scenes because of the "thrill of the chase".

I agree that Ma is strict. Maybe , just maybe, (you will beat me Ricky Bobby..wait that's not the Yearling..that's the ballad of Ricky Bobby) she is strict because she is trying to protect her only living child.


Abigail Kneal said

at 10:33 am on Aug 11, 2009

I just edited the page and added a plot summary that helped me alot. Hope it helps you all too!

Lauren Kern said

at 1:34 pm on Aug 13, 2009

I just added the paragraph about the sink hole (chapter 9). Hope the last sentence helps!

Riley DeLucas said

at 6:28 pm on Aug 20, 2009

I just finished reading through chapter 13! So far this book is really good! I think that Ma is really strict! I also think that Penny is not really strict at all, but most of the time he does whatever Ma thinks is okay and doesn't do whatever she thinks isn't okay!
The words that they used during that time are kind of hard to understand, and the way they used to say the words is also hard to read, so it has taken some getting used to!

Ma is strict because that is her only living child so she wants to do everything she can to protect him. Alot of the time Jody says that he wants a pet....why doesn't Ma want him to, because I don't really think that ti would have to do with protecting him.?
~Riley~

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