Read Ebook {PDF EPUB} Pirate Gear Cannons Swords and the Jolly Roger by Liam O'Donnell Knudson. If you have information about this name , share it in the comments area below! Numerology information Knudson: Name Number: 8. Meaning: Outer, Body, Physical, Ambition, Power, Progress, Career, Success, Respect, Fame, Means, Karma. Definition funny of Knudson: She has a tiny knudson. Oh! Look at her knudson! Make sure her knudson is clean. Songs about Knudson: Chasing Sunshine (feat. Erik E. Knudson) by The Lightning Hall from the Album Secrets and Ruins Honorable Citizen (feat. Deborah Katz, Aaron Knudson & Celestial Concubine) by Mark Iris from the Album The Other Side of Evolution Oblivious - Gary Knudson by 60x60 from the Album 2004-2005 The Wanderer's Guide to Loving & Leaving (feat. Jimmy Pardo, Aaron Knudson & Elliot King) by Mark Iris from the Album The Other Side of Evolution. 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Born and raised in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Knudson learned. The Knudson hypothesis is the hypothesis that cancer is the result of accumulated mutations to a cell's DNA. It was first proposed by Carl O. Nordling in 1953, and later formulated by Alfred G. Knudson in 1971. Knudson's work led indirectly to the. Dave Knudson plays with Seattle based indie band , and was previously the guitarist for mathcore band Botch. Other credits include additional on ' album Oxeneers or The Lion Sleeps When Its Antelope. Robert Knudson (September 29, 1925 – January 21, 2006) was an American sound engineer. He won three Academy Awards for Best Sound and was nominated for seven more in the same category. He worked on over 100 films between 1963 and 1995. Knudson won. Alfred George Knudson, Jr. M.D., Ph.D. is a geneticist specializing in cancer genetics. Among his many contributions to the field was the formulation of the Knudson hypothesis in 1971, which explains the effects of mutation on carcinogenesis. Born in. Mark Richard Knudson is a former right-handed professional baseball pitcher. He played all or part of eight seasons in Major League Baseball, between 1985 and 1993, primarily for the Milwaukee Brewers. David L. "Dave" Knudson is an American lawyer, former Majority Leader of the South Dakota Senate, and a member of the Republican Party. Dean Knudson is a Wisconsin State Assemblyman for the 30th district. He is also the former Mayor of Hudson, Wisconsin. He was elected to his first term as mayor of Hudson on April 1, 2008, with 87% of the vote. On April 15, 2008 he took office as the. Danielle Knudson is a model. Barbara Ann Knudson is an actress. Peter Charles Knudson is an American politician. A Republican, he is a member of the Utah State Senate, representing the state's 17th senate district in Box Elder, Cache and Tooele Counties including Brigham City. Albert Cornelius Knudson was a Christian theologian in the Methodist tradition, associated with Boston University and the school of liberal theology known as Boston personalism. USS Knudson (APD-101), ex-DE-591, later LPR-101, was a United States Navy high-speed transport in commission from 1944 to 1946 and from 1953 to 1958. Hayden Knudson is an American Football defensive back for the New Hampshire Wildcats football. Chris Knudson is a film score contributor. Olaf Knudson was a Norwegian politician for the Conservative Party. He was elected to the Norwegian Parliament from Buskerud in 1954, and was re-elected on five occasions. Knudson was born in Sigdal and was deputy mayor of Sigdal municipality in the. ISBN 13: 9780736864251. Pirate Gear: Cannons, Swords, and the Jolly Roger (The Real World of Pirates) O'Donnell, Liam. This specific ISBN edition is currently not available. Describes the tools and equipment pirates used for daily life at sea, as well as the weapons used for their deadly raids on merchant ships. "synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title. Liam O'Donnell was born in Northern Ireland and grew up in Canada. He's lived in Toronto, Canada and is the author of several graphic novels, including the Max Finder Mystery series of you-solve-it comics. He's never met a pirate and not sure if he ever wants to. When he's not writing stories, he loves playing video games and going camping, but not at the same time. Real World of Pirates. One of the best things about writing a book (besides the worldwide celebrity it brings) is seeing the artwork and covers for the first time. When you​re writing a book or an article or anything really, you only see it as a plain old boring word processing document. There​s no colour, no images to make your words come alive and no cover with your name emblazoned in huge flashing letters (okay, so you don​t get that anyway, but a writer can dream.) Last week, my editor at Capstone Press sent me the covers for my upcoming books in the series The Real World of Pirates (that​s them at the top of this post.) I also had a look at all the interior art work, layout, etc and I have to say that I​m very happy with how it​s looking and I​m very excited to see the real papery version. With a new Pirates of the Caribbean movie out this summer and recent rumours that pirates are the new wizards in kids publishing, I​m confident that these pirate books will be a big hit with readers across North America. The books come out this fall and will be sold directly to schools, so if you​re a teacher or school librarian make sure you add them to your school​s piratey book collection! Follow these links to see larger versions of each cover with their back page descriptions: Pirate Gear: Cannons Swords and the Jolly Roger by Liam O'Donnell. Bayley, Thomas. Sailing Ships: A Lift-the-Flap Discovery . NewYork: Orchard Books, 1998. Print. Beahm, George. Caribbean Pirates: A Treasure Chest of Fact, Fiction, and Folklore . Charlottesville, Virginia: Hampton. Roads Publishing Company, 2007. Print. Butterfield, Moira. Pirates and Smugglers . London: Kingfisher, 2005. Print. Choundas, George. The Pirate Primer . Cincinnati: Writer's Digest Books, 2007. Print. Feder, Joshua B. Pirates . New York: Michael Friedman Publishing Group, 1992. Print. Garwood, Val. The World of the Pirate . New York: Peter Bedrick Books, 1997. Print. Greenberg, Daniel A. Whales . New York : Marshall Cavendish, 2001. Print. Hamilton, John. Pirates: A History of Pirates . Edina, Minnesota: ABDO Publishing Company, 2007. Print. Hamilton, John. Pirates: Pirates in the Media . Edina, Minnesota: ABDO Publishing Company, 2007. Print. Hamilton, John. Pirates: A Pirate’s Life . Edina, Minnesota: ABDO Publishing Company, 2007. Print. Hamilton, John. Pirates: Pirate Ships and Weapons . Edina, Minnesota: ABDO Publishing Company, 2007. Print. Hamilton, Sue. Pirates: Blackbeard . Edina, Minnesota: ABDO Publishing Company, 2007. Print. Hamilton, Sue. Pirates: Captain Kidd . Edina, Minnesota: ABDO Publishing Company, 2007. Print. Harward, Barnaby. The Best Book of Pirates . New York: Kingfisher Publications, 2002. Print. Hoekstra, Jonathan M. The atlas of global conservation : changes, challenges and opportunities to make a difference. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010. Print. Lassieur, Allison. The History of Pirates : From Privateers to Outlaws. Mankato, Minnesota: Capstone Press, 2007. Print. Lassieur, Allison. Pirate Hideouts: Secret Spots and Shelters . Mankato, Minnesota: Capstone Press, 2007. Print. Laurence, Daniel. Captain and Matey Set Sail . Harper Collins, 2001. Print. Lethbridge, Lucy. True Story of Pirates . London: Usborne Publishing Ltd., 2004. Print. Lewis, J. Patrick. Blackbeard the Pirate Kin g. Washington D.C.: National Geographic, 2006. Print. Mc Dougal Littell. Earth Science . Evanston, IL : McDougal Littell, 2006. Print. O’Donnell, Liam. The Pirate Code: Life of a Pirate . Mankato, Minnesota: Capstone Press, 2007. Print. O’Donnell, Liam. Pirate Gear: Cannons, Swords, and the Jolly Roger . Mankato, Minnesota: Capstone Press, 2007. Print. O’Donnell, Liam. Pirate Ships: Sailing the High Seas . Mankato, Minnesota: Capstoes Press, 2007. Print. O’Donnell, Liam. Pirate Treasure: Stolen Treasures . Mankato, Minnesota: Capstone Press, 2007. Print. Osborne, Mary Pope. Magic Tree House: Pirates Past Noon . New York: Random House, Inc., 1994. Print . Osborne, Will and Mary Pope. Magic Tree House Research Guide: Pirates . New York: Random House, Inc., 1994. Print. Pringle, Laurence P. Whales! : Strange and Wonderful . Honesdale, Pa. : Boyds Mills Press, 2003. Print Sattler, Helen Roney. Whales, Nomads of the Sea . New York : Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Books, 1987. Print. Seidler, Ned. Whales : Mighty Giants of the Sea . Washington, D.C. : National Geographic Society, 1990. Print. Sharp, Anne Wallace. Daring Pirate Women . Minneapolis: Lerner Publications Company, 2002. Print. Sheldon, Dyan. The Whale’s Song . New York : Dial Books for Young Readers, 1990. Print. Teitelbaum, Michael. Pirate Life . Mankato, Minnesota: The Child’s World, 2008. Print. Weller, Frances Ward. I Wonder if We’ll See a Whale . New York : Philomel Books, 1991. Print. Pirate Gear: Cannons Swords and the Jolly Roger by Liam O'Donnell. Pirates of Caribbean 7yr - Crafts & Games. Myra in Ontario, Canada. June 2004 Winner. Pirates of the Caribbean. My son LOVES pirates, and Disney's Pirates of the Caribbean (POTC) movie was just the ticket for him. Thus this was his 7th birthday party theme. The party was in June 2004, and fortunately, we were able to have it outdoors as the weather cooperated for us. Seven boys were invited. INVITATIONS: They were a 2-sheet invite. Page 1 was a sepia-toned POTC movie poster of Depp looking quite menacing. I wrote on the bottom of this page, "Make sail and haste mateys, cursed pirates roam these waters…" I used Scurlock font in sepia-colour, which I thought was quite "piratey" looking. Page 2 had a sepia-toned background of a pirates treasure map which I found on the internet. In the same font & colour, I wrote, "There are pirates lurking in Tavistock and we need you to help us find the Aztec gold before they do! Join us for some yo-ho-ho fun and to also wish Christopher a happy 7th birthday." Then I listed the date, address, time. Next paragraph said, "To get into the pirating spirit, please try to wear a striped t-shirt or other pirate-type shirt. We’ll take care of the rest!" Then a note to parents: "Weather permitting, we will be outside for the duration of the party. Please make sure your son has sun-protection! The pages were soaked in tea, dried in the oven, and edges burned. Page 2 had small Aztec coins glued on afterwards--the "cursed coin" from POTC movie. Pages were taped at top and rolled up with black bands to keep secure. I put sand, shells, and skull confetti in dried out water bottles and sealed with black electrical tape. I then made jolly roger flags using clipart and black construction paper, and each boy was given a pirate name, such as Mad Dog Mitchell, Left-Eye Liam, Jolly Roger Jesse, etc. DECORATIONS: We have a 6-foot wooden gate that leads to our fenced-in patio. It is propped open, and I made a 5 foot skeleton pirate that stood to the side of the gate. I printed off the skeleton head from POTC to the appropriate size, glued him onto cardboard, and taped him to a coat hanger. This hanger held a red pirate coat---like Dustin Hoffman's in "Hook"--this was part of my son's Halloween costume from last year. I only made the parts of the skeleton that showed: his ribs, part of his lower arms & hands; legs from the knee down (he was wearing pirate pants to the knee) and he had black Hook-like shoe covers. I made a ship steering wheel from cardboard, which turned, and propped his hands on it so it looked like he was steering the ship. Black streams filled the entrance-way, and I made a sign using the POTC skull head and the phrase, "If ye be pirates, ye can enter…at yer own risk". Tea-dyed, baked, and burned like the invites. On the patio table, where the kids ate and crafted, I used 2 ceramic skull heads I had in my Halloween decorations, and made them eye patches, bandanas, and beaded dangly things (like Jack Sparrow in POTC). The "unpatched" eye, I sticky-tacked an emerald craft stone. Then I put a bunch of costume jewellery, around (pearl necklaces). All areas had the antiqued signs, example, here it said "ye can craft & eat here". Games were also with signs--see the games part for names of games. The patio umbrella had black streamers with skull and crossbones at the end--clipart I printed off. The table had a black tablecloth. We have a lampost on our boulevard & I made a jolly roger flag and taped on a couple of black balloons to help guest find our house. MUSIC: At the entranceway, I ran a 30-minute tape of the POTC soundtrack--nice & loud---the first 3 scores on the CD over and over to provide "mood". In the backyard, I played the movie soundtrack for the entire time. Upon leaving, I had taped the last track "he's a pirate" and had that going at the gate. CRAFT: I bought a 100-pack of plain & coloured tongue depressors (wider than popsicle sticks) and made each child a picture frame using 8 depressors each (4 plain, 4 coloured). Upon arrival, each boy had to decorate his frame, and then we took their photos near the end of the party in their pirate gear, and right now I'm in the process of printing them from my PC; gluing them in the frames with 'A pirate's life for me" under their photo, and magnetic strips on the back so it can go on the fridge. For decorations, I provided skull confetti, small shells, "diamonds" and "rubies" (craft stones), pennies I spray-painted gold so they stay nice & shiny, and swizzel-stick swords in which I painted the blade silver and the handle gold as they were originally pastel in colour. This made them look more authentic. GAMES: After craft we started the games (ideas I got from this website!). I made 2 pirate teams: the yellow pirates and the blue pirates. We had an odd # (I have 2 boys) so the smaller team had to have a "pirate" go twice. I had a little tikes easel up to "keep score" for fun--no prizes were awarded. First game was "Dead Man's Tunnel" in which I had 4 metres (approx. 4 yards) of black knit material in a tube. Jolly rogers with coloured bandanas to represent the teams at each end of the tube. A yellow pirate & blue pirate had to crawl through the tube at opposite ends and at one point go past each other. First team to finish first, won. It became a tangled giggly mess. It was fun for them. PIRATE ATTIRE: After this game, I did the pirate attire. I waited as I knew with the tunnel game, most of the stuff would come off in the tunnel. Each "pirate" received an eye patch (I made using black craft foam & some black sewing elastic), a few tattoos wherever they wanted them; a gold earring (shower curtain rings spray-painted gold, although the gold started to flake off during the course of the afternoon), and a skull and crossbones bandana which I made from scarves I cut into strips and hemmed. I attached 2 bead danglers (like Jack sparrow from POTC) onto the bandana using yellow wood and gold metal beads for the yellow pirates and blue wood and gold metal beads for the blue pirates. I found some coins at WalMart to put at the end of each dangly. GAMES (cont'd) Second game was the traditional 3-legged race. The sign hanging from our small maple said, "Arrgh, only 3 legs, swab!" A 3- dimensional resin skeleton hung from the same tree--another Halloween item--with his black eye patch as well. We had a few posts in the ground to keep people off some newly laid sod, so I used that as a turning point for the race. Hung a jolly roger flag there (made of construction paper and clipart. The kids had to go down and around these posts and back. Most had never done this before, and they had a hoot. Third game was on our deck, which only has 2 stairs, called "Arghh, ye can swab the deck, matey!". Using coloured electrical tape to divide the deck in half, each pirate team had a bucket of 6 plastic golf balls and a dish mop which looks just like the full-sized floor mop---a wooden handle and white rope bunched at the bottom. Approximately 8 feet away from the start line was the 1 first step where another small pail was leaning against the top step. Each team had to get their 6 balls into the end pail by sweeping the ball with their mop. Seemed easy when I "tested" it, but many of the boys had trouble keeping the ball on the deck! If they swept it off the deck, they had to start again. This got a lot of cheering going on. Fourth game was "Cannonball battle". My husband constructed 2 ship facades propped up with wood strapping, complete with cannon holes and ropes off the posts (sorry, don't know ship terminology) where the sails were--using white pillowcases. Made construction paper and clipart jolly roger flags--skull had bandana that I could colour yellow and blue for the respective teams. Made 100 cannonballs from scrunched up newpaper and a couple of strips of coloured electrical tape--2 colours so we could count the balls easier. Told the kids it was not a race but an accuracy game--the team who throws the most cannonballs into the other team's ship wins. If any pirate went past the ship façade to get closer, they were deemed "man overboard" and out of the game--that didn't happen. We did 2 rounds of that, and it was hilarious to watch this "sea" of cannonballs go flying across the yard. We were going to then do the same thing with water balloons, but I ran out of preparation time to blow 100 up and fill them. That or wet sponges would be another great idea on a hot day. Last game before cake was "Arghh, ye can walk the plank, matey!", We used an 8 foot 2x4 and most were able to walk it w/o falling. 1 point per pirate for their team if they made it; minus 1 point if any pirate fell. Did it twice--2nd time I blindfolded them, but they lightly held onto my arm. Two boys did it w/o my help at all--they were given 2 points for instead of 1 for bravery. The "pirates" from opposite team were chanting, "fall off, fall off". FOOD: Chips, cheesies, pretzels, cake. Very simple. The cake I made from a mix and made a slab cake decorating it as a jolly roger flag using black & white icing. Drinks were clear pop in clear plastic glasses (but flavoured such as grape, raspberry, etc) and I put in red Koolaid ice cubes so in a few minutes they "bled" into their pop. We called it pirate's blood. They were quite impressed with that. After cake, Christopher opened his gifts. Then my husband took each boy's photo on the digital camcorder for the craft, and while others waited to have their photo done, I decorated them with more tattoos. FINAL EVENT: was the treasure hunt, of course! I had a map sitting under a sign on our deck that said "the hunt for aztec gold". The map was just a rectangle cut of old white cotton I had lying around. I dyed it in tea and baked it, too. I drew the map with brown pencil crayon. I tried to trick them a bit. The hunt was in my yard and my 2 adjoining neighbours. So I drew 3 islands, represeting each yard, ours had a ship, since we had the facades, one neighbour had the pirate flag as they had a flag pole in their yard, and the other I just drew some trees. The "x" was near the flag. One of the boys figured my trick out, but had the map upside down, and immediately went to the wrong neighbour's yard. I had to call them back and said, "You must follow the clues". The first clue was rolled up with the map, and I did it in riddle form. Example, the 1st clue read, "I stand tall and proud; I flap in the wind; Even though I have a maple leaf, I am not a tree" (Canadian flag). I had 7 clues that lead them through all three yards and the front yard, and the last one read, "You are almost done; You have 1 more trip to go; Look for a bridge, and you will find your Aztec gold". The neighbour with the flagpole also has this wooden bridge in their yard that goes over a wet area,and I hid the treasure chest (which looked like a real one--out of cardboard; got at a party place a couple of years ago) under one of the large spruce trees surrounding the bridge. Their "booty" was in the chest and I had to put icepacks in the chest as I was afraid the chocolate was going to melt! LOOT BAGS: I made each bag from scrap black material I had. Made a drawstring on it and made tea-dyed name tags on it, example "Jay's Booty". In each bag was: candy necklace, ring "pop", chocolate coins, sea shell, jolly roger stickers, more pirate-themed tattoos, jolly roger pencil, and a necklace that I made from black macrame cord. I attached fasteners, and was able to find & buy the same Aztec medallion that "curses" the crew of The Black Pearl in POTC. They are made of metal and quite heavy. They kids were thrilled as many had seen the movie and knew what it was. I put a tag on the necklace that read, "Aye, ye be the owner of Aztec gold. Guard it well." We finished 1/2 hour early, so the boys rooted through their "booty", put on more tattoos, checked out the gifts, and played the cannonball game again. Oh--I forgot. I dressed up as well. I had the same bandanas the boys wore; found skull & crossbone earrings, bought a white ruffly shirt at a 2nd-hand shop; wore a brown suede vest with a stuff parrot on my shoulder; put on some tattoos; tied a black sash around my wrist and a long red on around my waist. Heavy eye-liner and there ye be. TIME TO DO: Hard to say as I work in spurts. Invites went out 1 1/2 weeks before the party. The tea-dying and burning of edges was time- consuming. I'd say 2 to 3 weeks before the date is a good time to start. Some was last-minute, such as the ship facades because if they were calling for heavy rain, we would've scrapped that game--couldn't do that indoors. BUYING SUPPLIES: Dollar stores are awesome! Examples of what I bought there: streamers, tablecloth, beads, shells, swizzel sticks, skull and crossbone scarves, construction paper, dish mop, golf balls, candy for booty bags. I also internet-ordered pirate-specific goods (pencils, stickers, parrot, aztec medallions, my earrings, etc.) from a GREAT website deadmentellnotales.com Service was fabulous. There was no way I could've located those items around here. COST: Hmmm. probably around $100 Cdn.--ballpark. I've become known as the mom who does "those parties". One girl down the street said, "you give the most awesome parties". It appears that very few go through this trouble, but I thoroughly enjoy it, and my kids absolutely love it. I've also done dinosaur, medieval, thomas, and peter pan/captn hook. When I get time, I'll post those here too!