Girrafe in quicksand10/27/2022 ![]() ![]() I always knew that the giraffe was up to its neck in it.The giraffe ministrations were in high spirits on his birthday.When they don’t feel well, giraffes go to the giraffe-sick park to take a rest.Why do zebras not like giraffes? Because they look down on them. ![]() How does a giraffe wish a young giraffe on his birthday? Congratulations on reaching new heights.The moment you let the giraffes get their heads in the cloud, will stop working hard enough to build their careers.Blowing out the candles has always been an issue for giraffes, since they have to really stoop low to get the job done.And these giraffe puns will make you laugh LONG enough! If your friends are having a rough day, these giraffe puns will make their stomachs hurt. Grade One children all across Canada will encounter these two animal friends this autumn as Giraffe and Bird has been chosen as the 2018 TD Grade One Book Giveaway selection.Giraffes are quite unique in the way they are. Like the earlier two books in the series, Giraffe and Bird Together Again offers subtle lessons in the dimensions of friendship. There, young readers can see the route that Giraffe will follow in his quest to find Bird as well as learn the names of the two other African animals that will make cameo experiences in Bender’s illustrations. His hooves slip on the rocky slope until he tumbles backward.īy itself, the text suggests that it is solely Giraffe’s perseverance that caused him to summit, but Bender’s illustration reveals that Giraffe had some assistance from a pair of ibexes who were pushing him from behind.īender provides foreshadowing to the contents of Giraffe and Bird Together Again via a map that occupies part of the copyright page and its facing page. For example, in the mountain scene, the text reads: Oh, and the shiny object Giraffe saw from the top of the mountain? It was the pole supporting a sign warning of QUICKSAND!.īender’s acrylic and coloured pencil artwork is an essential part of the book’s success, and, as in the previous Giraffe and Bird books, the illustrations’ contents not only reflect the characters’ emotions but add to the book’s written text. Back home, the pair strike a deal, one which will see Bird wandering a little less in the future while Giraffe will up his exploring level somewhat. ![]() Exhausted after climbing out of the quicksand, Giraffe does not have to face an arduous return journey as Bird comes up with a novel, albeit somewhat fantastical, solution. Though the situation initially appears quite dire, Giraffe’s physical attributes which had hindered him in the forest and on the mountain become assets as Giraffe’s long legs are able to touch the bottom while his long neck keeps his head above the surface. Rushing to Bird’s aid, Giraffe unwittingly steps into quicksand, sinking deeper and deeper. Giraffe considers turning back, but his concern that Bird may be in trouble causes him to continue, only to be next confronted by a hoof-challenging craggy mountain.įrom the mountain top, Giraffe spots a shiny object and “a small and beaky someone next to it” in a slumped position. Giraffe’s pursuit takes him into a dense forest where the lanky animal, who is used to the open plains’ spaciousness, finds it most difficult to manoeuver. However, when Bird hasn’t appeared by afternoon, Giraffe becomes concerned that something may have happened to Bird, and so Giraffe goes in search of Bird by following a trail of green feathers. One morning, Giraffe experiences a peaceful breakfast without having Bird perched on his head, a quiet he attributes to Bird’s “ probably just hunting for bugs”. ![]() Author/illustrator Bender then reinforces their differences by comparing their eating habits and approaches to play. Giraffe’s comfort is found in routine while Bird seeks novelty in his life. The excerpt above opens the picture-book and establishes that the animal pair differ in their approaches to life. Children will have previously met this delightful, sometimes squabbling, animal odd couple in Bender’s two earlier books, Giraffe and Bird and Don’t Laugh at Giraffe. ![]()
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