April 1 - 30, 2025: Issue 641

Sunday Cartoons

Sunday cartoons and animations returns this year. This Issue: Paddington goes on Holidays

Abner the Invisible Dog - Full Family Adventure Movie by Family Central

The sydney Royal Easter Show showbag Began as an Australian sample Bag 

Sydney Royal Easter Show - children with their Show Bags, circa 1938.
The 2025 Royal Easter Show opened on Friday April 11 and will run until April 22 - a great fun day out over this Autumn School Holidays and a means to see what all our agricultural producers have been up to in the past year. 
You can see what's available and when at: www.eastershow.com.au

Our favourite part is getting our hands on some showbags, especially those that have items you can't normally buy in the shops - the Bertie Beetle being a personal favourite. 

Bertie Beetle is a small chocolate bar now manufactured by Nestlé. It's a chocolate coated bar containing small pieces of honeycomb that is shaped like an anthropomorphised beetle. It was originally created as a way to use up honeycomb left over from the production of Violet Crumble bars. Originally manufactured in Australia, today they are manufactured in a factory in New Zealand.

For many years, Bertie Beetles were generally only available to the public in showbags sold at Australian agricultural shows.
The Bertie Beetle was first produced in 1963 by Hoadley's Chocolates, who were later taken over by the Rowntree Company and became Rowntree Hoadley Ltd (the company was later acquired by Nestlé in 1988). Intended to rival MacRobertson's (later Cadbury's) Freddo Frog, it was launched with advertisements featuring VFL footballer Ron Barassi, and was sold in shops until the 1970s. 

Anyone who looks forward to collecting some great bags filled with goodies at the Royal Easter Show each year may be interested to know that the showbag is yet another brilliant Australian idea that began as a 'sample bag'.

Sydney's Royal Easter Show is the nation's largest annual event, currently attracting more than 900,000 visitors to its site at Homebush Bay. Historically the Show was a way to showcase for New South Wales's primary and secondary industries, and for the promotion of agricultural education and improvement. The products of agriculture has been making good and strong Australians for years. The way to introduce people to what was and is on offer commenced as tastings at the various booths in pavilions or outside of them and progressed to become 'samples' you could take home.

For generations, the Show has brought 'the country to the city', and it continues to be important, especially for children in Sydney. The showbag is one of the great ways to learn more about Australian products, as well as a once a year chance to overload on treats that may not form part of your everyday diet.

Originating at the Sydney Royal Easter Show sometime between 1909 and 1914, possibly by kiddie-favourites Gravox, the bags were originally given away by brands hoping to launch their wares by providing free samples of products. Food samples were handed out, and these were to evolve into 'sample bags'. By the late 1920s (1927), as the cost of producing bags became too much for companies, they began being sold;

At the show
By N. J. Myers.
'Ready, Con?' 
'Righto! Just a minute, while I borrow Laura's powder. Duuno what's happened to mine !' 
'Shake it up, then — we-haven't much time.' 
Five minutes later Connie emerged from her bedroom, and we hurried off to the Royal Easter Show. It was two o'clock on Friday afternoon. ? Need I 
mention it was Good Friday, and my young sister and I decided we were fed up of Mah Jongg and the wireless. Hence the visit to the Show. 
'Gee ! Still raining. Nothing but rain, rain, rain ! Wish it would be fine for once,' gasped Con., as we hurried along under the folds of dad's sixteenribber umbrella.

We hopped on a tram, alighted at Regent-street, and hurried down to the Show. Sounds quick, doesn't it? but it was a quarter to three before we were actually there. I like going out with Con. She likes the things I do, and we have a jolly good muck-up. Do everything we shouldn't do ! We passed through one or two pig and cow pavilions. They weren't together, by the way ; but Con. didn't like them much; nor did I. 
'Let's go and look round,' she suggested, .thinking, no doubt, of scent sprays and silk stockings. 
'Let's.' 
We strolled along past the machinery and small stalls. . ' -
'Oh ! look at those funny little buckets with the porridge or coffee or something in them?' cried Con. 
'Do 'get me one.' 
'Only one-and-sixpcnce,' lisped a sweet little voice. 
I paid. We meandered round a store, stopped to hear 'On the Riviera,' in the gramophone shop, and politely inquired after some globes. We were soon mouth deep in buckets of ice cream, and munching biscuits.

Con. tried everything she could lay hands on, and even wanted to feel how bonax would taste after a glass of skimmed milk. I told her she really draw tho line somewhere. Soon the better part of a ten shilling note had gone west. Con. is expensive. Showbags full of samples, and chocolates and books, soon piled up in our hands as we visitod the various stalls. 
Con. got disgusted when we came to an exhibit of woollen and silk goods. The apparel exhibited should have suited her, for it was feminine, but seven-eighths of the crowd around were men. I supposed the exhibitors were the draw — some nice, good-looking girls —but Con. didn't reply. 
'Who'll sample a sandwich of peanut butter?' came from our right. 
'Too right, I will!' 
Con. was into that sandwich in a minute, and our show bags came away groaning a little more with jars of the old butter, and books telling how peanut butter saved the lives of two little boys from cannibals. 

After an hour or two, during which Con. bought about six sets of powder and scents, and shaving-cream— sorry girls- don't shave yet — we adjourned to the park, at the side. Not without purchasing a few meat pies — Con. was hungry. 
When we had polished off the pies we went round to see the Californian Giantess, the Snakologist, and the circus, and by then the evening was setting in. 
We left by the Moore Park exit, when I remembered, to our sorrow, that I had only the bare sixpence for our tram fares home. After missing the right direction three times, we found our way down to Green's-rond, and eventually arrived home to find tea over, and the family gone to see a show.
At the SHOW (1927, April 24). Sunday Times (Sydney, NSW : 1895 - 1930), p. 3 (PRANKS THE CHILDREN'S NEWSPAPER). Retrieved from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article128511367


Crowds and pavilions, Royal Easter Show 1930s, State Library of New South Wales, Image No.: a359030h

IN SYDNEY AT EASTER THE ROYAL SHOW.
(From Our Own Representative.)

Sydney's leading weekly journal, 'The Sydney Mail,' is devoting three issues to illustrating and describing the great Easter Show, so that my readers will appreciate that, within the limits of the space available to me, I cannot do more than give some impressions of the big function from the point of view of a visitor from Riverina. The day on which I spent the greatest amount of time there was Good Friday, which is one of the days upon which the greatest attendances are registered. This year, so far, the records of the attendances do not seem to have been disclosed to the press. Regular habitues say they have not been as great as usual owing to the depression, and the consequent absence of visitors from the Inland. Be that as it may, it was difficult to move about on Good Friday. It was still more difficult to get a seat in any of the stands. 

However, there was a consensus of opinion that the crowd was not as big as it had been in some previous years. In addition to the depression, there was the counter attraction of the wreck of the Malabar. This latter was something unique. There have been many wrecks along the coast of New South Wales, but not since the wreck of the Dunbar has there been one so close to Sydney, and one that could be. reached so readily as the catastrophe at Long Bay. I heard a gentleman at the hotel say, 'I went to the wreck. I 'can see a show any day, but I am 'nearly sixty and have never had a 'chance of seeing a good wreck be'fore.' Although this gentleman called it a 'good' wreck, most people allude to it as a 'bad' wreck, but — No more can be said on such a point as pending the inquiry the matter is sub judice. For years past visitors to Sydney have been taken to The Gap, and shown the place where the Dunbar was wrecked. Henry Lawson, in one of his short stories, tells humorously how the attention of passengers on out-going steamers was persistently directed to the place 'where the Dunbar was wrecked.' But that took place half a century ago, and the number of people who were living in Sydney at that time and still survive is relatively few. The wreck of the Malabar will oust the wreck of the Dunbar, as a topic of coastal catastrophe, just as Sir Clirystopher, The Dimmer, and Phar Lap have ousted The Barb, Grand Flaueur, and Carbine as a theme of discussion in sporting circles. Cargo from the wreckage has been strewn all along the coast about Sydney, even as far from the scene as Manly. And the police have not been able to stove in all the liquor kegs which have been rescued from the waves. 

But to get back to the showground. In very many respects, the Royal Show is a country show, magnified a few times. The ring events are the same. The same sort of horses jump — some cleverly, some brilliantly, and many only at the third time of asking. 
...
Quite half the show is not competitive, but a mere business display. All the same it is most interesting, even more so than the ring to many. Nearly all the big retailers have building of their own in which goods are displayed — practically shops away from the streets. In the second big pavilion, various firms have well appointed stalls, some of them showing attractive novel features. One of these which attracted a lot of attention was a miniature cisrarette factory. There was the machine which made cigs. working at full capacity. The cut-up tobacco was heaped in one huge funnel, the paper was placed in another receptacle, and the cigaretts were turned out of a big slot faster than one could count them. Girls, with agile fingers, were placing the cigarettes into packets. It was difficult to get near this stand at any time, even to buy the finished product. And there were plenty of buyers for the freshly made cigs. Another similar stand was one in which Minties were being made.' Here also machinery played the chief part. There was a man handling a great lump of Mintie toffee and pulling it out into white ropes, but he was merely a draw to catch the eye. The Minties were made and wrapped by machinery. The chocolate firms also had stands which attracted a lot of notice. At all these stands one could buy the products at a concession price, and get a paper basket bag to carry them away in. Similar bags were available for free samples, and many children thought the object of the show was to enable them to fill free basket bags with gratuitous samples, sweets preferred....
IN SYDNEY AT EASTER (1931, April 10). The Riverine Grazier (Hay, NSW : 1873 - 1954), p. 2. Retrieved from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article140658401


Minties 1938 advertisement - sourced from TROVE

Over the years, showbags have contained both the weird and the wonderful. The first ones mainly contained delicious food products with confectionery being particularly popular. Products, such as coal and laxatives, were once included. 

With 1.2 million people visiting the show in 1947, the 'sample bags' became big business. In 1962, the Royal Agricultural Society “thoroughly investigate[d] the matter of sample bag prices” in order to keep vendors scrupulous. Since then, they’ve become one of the ongoing highlights of everyone’s visit to the show.

In the 1950s, toys made their way into the bags, although they were still called 'sample bags' then, as they are today in many cases. The market was flooded by big-name brands Violet Crumble, Weet-Bix, Giant Brand Licorice, and Rosella in the ’40s, Minties, and Lifesavers in the ’50s, and Sunny-Boy in the ’60s. 

SAMPLE BAGS FOR THE ROYAL SHOW

Mrs. Alice Brown unloading sample bags at the Showground yesterday, in readiness for the opening of the Royal Easter Show to-day.
SAMPLE BAGS FOR THE ROYAL SHOW (1951, March 16). The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), p. 1. Retrieved from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article18204222

A celebrity revolution took hold in the 1980s with Madonna and Michael Jackson bags introduced into the Showbag Hall.

By the mid-twentieth century, specialised showbags were available for purchase and have remained an important aspect of the Show experience, especially for children.

While topping off three dagwood dogs and a small raincloud of fairy floss with 25 Minties, a good handful of Bertie Beetles, all washed down with a Sunnyboy pyramidal didn't get time to get frozen ice-block while trooping home with half a dozen showbags, there’s more to the show than that once you mature past the iggle-oggle chocolate froggle years, or even if you choose not to mature past way too much 'sampling' - at least admit you are a tad older and your oggles may boggle in a wider range.  

The Show has many entertainments nowadays but for many of us it's all the country displays, wonderful animals and central arena parade or other ringside events that will bring us back time and again to the RAS Royal Easter Show...oh, and the showbags...there's  pages of them listed on the Sydney Royal Easter Show website...so you may come home with one, or two.... Berties!

Have a great rest and some fun time this Autumn school holidays, whether you get to the Show or not - we hope to see you out and about and enjoying yourselves before the colder months kick in.

We'll be back, after spending time with our own youngsters, on Sunday April 27.
People at the "Show" circa 1925 to 1955, from album: Hood Collection part II : [Royal Agricultural Society Showground: Easter Shows, Sheep Shows, Highland gatherings, etc. (and including other agricultural industry scenes)] courtesy State Library of NSW, the Mitchell Library. Image No.: a359016h

Curious Kids: why is the Sun orange when white stars are the hottest?

It’s true the Sun often looks orange, but it isn’t really orange. It is white. Flickr/Eyesplash, CC BY
Belinda Nicholson, University of Southern Queensland

Curious Kids is a series for children. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskids@theconversation.edu.au You might also like the podcast Imagine This, a co-production between ABC KIDS listen and The Conversation, based on Curious Kids.


Why is the Sun orange when white stars are hottest? – Rain, age 6, Toowoomba.


Hi Rain. Thanks for sending in your excellent question.

The reason the Sun shines so bright is that it’s hot. And the colour it glows depends on how hot it is.

You are right that a star that glows white is hotter than one that glows orange.

And it’s true the Sun often looks orange. But it isn’t really orange. It is white. Well, it’s a bit on the yellow side but it’s mostly white.

But even white stars aren’t the hottest.

The blue giants that burn bright and briefly

The very hottest stars actually glow blue. We call them blue giant stars.

These blue giants are around 80 times larger than our Sun – so they are really, really big. They live and die very quickly. They are so hot and so big they burn through their fuel very quickly and last just a few million years.

That might sound like a long time but it’s not much compared to how long our Sun will live.

When our Sun was a million years old, it was still just a child. It’s about 5 billion years old now and will live to about 10 billion years. So you could say the Sun is now middle-aged. It’s about halfway through its life.

So blue giants are hottest, white stars are very hot, but there are also orange stars that burn less hot. There are even red stars, which are a bit cooler again. They are a half or even a quarter the size of our Sun and while they are still burning hot, they are nowhere near as hot as our lovely Sun.

The hottest stars are actually blue. Shutterstock

So why does the Sun look orange, then?

A lot of the pictures we take of the Sun make it look orange because of special filters we use to take the photo. The Sun is putting out so much light that we would not be able to photograph the detail on its surface unless we cut some of the brightness out. That’s what the filters do.

NASA uses filters to take photos of the Sun and the filters make it look orange. NASA

At sunrise and sunset, the Sun can look especially orange to our eyes. That’s because, at those times of day, its light has to travel through a lot of the Earth’s atmosphere (the layer of swirling air that surrounds our planet). And all the dust and stuff in the atmosphere makes the light scatter and change so it looks less blue and more orangey-red.

Only Bored Astronomers Find Gratification Knowing Mnemonics

In the olden days, astronomers used letters to try to sort different types of stars. As we learned more about stars, the order changed, and labels became quite mixed up! Today we still use this naming system to remember the order of stars from hottest to least hot. It goes like this: O, B, A, F, G, K, M. (Some versions have more letters at the end).

The O-stars are the blue giants, while our Sun is a “G-class” star. That means it’s not the hottest but it’s not the coolest either.

Those letters are hard to remember, so astronomers came up with different tricks to remember it. One memory trick is called a “mnemonic” where you pretend each letter stands for a word. It’s easier to remember a sentence instead of a bunch of letters.

One student in my class came up with this mnemonic: “Only Bored Astronomers Find Gratification Knowing Mnemonics” (gratification means something like happiness).

Another one I like is: “Orange Butterflies And Frogs Get Knitted Mittens”.

Hello, curious kids! Have you got a question you’d like an expert to answer? Ask an adult to send your question to curiouskids@theconversation.edu.au Please tell us your name, age and which city you live in. We won’t be able to answer every question but we will do our best.The Conversation

Belinda Nicholson, Lecturer, University of Southern Queensland

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Curious Kids: why are there waves?

Nina Maile Gordon/The Conversation, CC BY-NC-ND
Mark Hemer, CSIRO

Curious Kids is a series for children. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskids@theconversation.edu.au You might also like the podcast Imagine This, a co-production between ABC KIDS listen and The Conversation, based on Curious Kids.


Why are there waves? - Evie, age 5.


Thanks for a great question, Evie.

When you look at the waves breaking at the beach, those waves might be at the end of a long journey. The waves might have been created thousands of kilometres away, or they could have been created near you.

There are lots of types of waves in the ocean, but the waves you usually see at a beach are created by the wind. When the wind blows over a smooth ocean, it creates little waves or ripples on the surface. If the wind continues to blow, the waves grow bigger.

A big wave lands at Dee Why Beach in Sydney. Taro Taylor/Flickr, CC BY

Faster, bigger, longer

The faster the wind blows (like in a strong storm out at sea), the bigger the waves will grow.

The further the wind blows (or the bigger the area of the storm), the bigger the waves will grow.

And the longer the wind blows (like in a storm that lasts a long time), the bigger the waves will grow.

If the wind stops, or changes direction, the waves will stop growing, but they won’t stop travelling.

They will keep travelling away from where they were created in a straight line, sometimes for days, until they run into something like a beach where they are stopped because they break. That’s why there are still waves at the beach, even when it is not windy.

Waves trip over themselves

Imagine you were running really quickly. But then suddenly, you ran into thick gloopy mud. Your feet would slow down, but the top half of your body would still be going fast. You’d trip over.

Waves do the same thing and that is when they break.

As waves approach the shore, the water is shallower, and the bottom of the wave starts to feel the sand and rocks and seaweed. The bottom of the wave slows down, and soon, the top of the wave is going faster than the bottom part of the wave, so the top spills forward and topples over in a big splash.

This wave is breaking over the top of the surfer because the top half of the wave is travelling faster than the bottom half. Flickr/Duncan Rawlinson - Duncan.co - @thelastminute, CC BY

Waves can travel a long way

Scientists who study the ocean (called oceanographers) have measured waves created in the Southern Ocean, and seen them travel all the way across the Pacific Ocean and break on the beaches of North America more than a week later.

Try counting the seconds between waves breaking on the beach. If the time between waves is 10 seconds or more, the waves have come from a long way away. If the waves were created nearby, the time between waves will be short, perhaps five seconds or fewer.

Sometimes when we look at the sea we might see different waves (some big, some small) all happening at the same time. These waves were created at different places, perhaps by different storms, but ended up in the same spot at the same time.

Freak waves

During big storms, waves can get very big. If big waves from two different storms meet together, that can create enormous waves that we call “freak waves”. The largest waves measured are around 25 metres high (that’s five giraffes standing on top of each other!) and they can tip over ships.

Hello, curious kids! Have you got a question you’d like an expert to answer? Ask an adult to send your question to curiouskids@theconversation.edu.au

CC BY-ND

Please tell us your name, age and which city you live in. We won’t be able to answer every question but we will do our best.The Conversation

Mark Hemer, Senior Research Scientist, Oceans and Atmosphere, CSIRO

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Curious Kids: Where are all the other galaxies hidden?

The other galaxies are there, but they are hiding a very long way away. www.shutterstock.com
Lisa Harvey-Smith, CSIRO

This is an article from Curious Kids, a series for children. The Conversation is asking kids to send in questions they’d like an expert to answer. All questions are welcome – serious, weird or wacky! You might also like the podcast Imagine This, a co-production between ABC KIDS listen and The Conversation, based on Curious Kids.


Where are all the other galaxies hidden? – Sasha, age 7, Sydney.


Hi Sasha,

Thanks for sending in your question.

Almost everything in our universe is high above the clouds, even higher than an aeroplane. If you keep going up, up, up… you get to outer space. There is a lot of empty space up there, as well as some fascinating things like planets, stars and beautiful clouds of gas.

Imagine that you could launch yourself on a very fast spaceship — travelling as fast as lightning — the first place you would reach would be the planets in our solar system: Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus and Neptune. At that speed, you could travel to the planets in a few minutes. Which would you visit first?

If you went even further, travelling for almost five years on your spaceship you would reach the nearest stars. Many of these stars live in twos or threes, and have their very own planets too. We don’t know whether there are any animals, plants, birds or fish on these planets, or perhaps creatures that we don’t have here on Earth. Maybe that’s a mission for astronaut Sasha. Can you imagine what life on other planets might be like?

If you zoom even further on your spaceship, travelling for thousands of years, you will start to see that we live in a huge spiral galaxy containing two hundred billion stars. It’s called the Milky Way and you can see it glowing in the night sky as a band of light. Have you ever seen the Milky Way?

An artist’s impression of the Milky Way galaxy, which is where you find our solar system. Shutterstock

Now, keep travelling out of our Milky Way, for more than two million years (you’ll be very old by then). You will finally reach the nearest spiral galaxy, called the Andromeda galaxy. It’s hard to believe, but all the other galaxies are even further away than this. Some galaxies are so far away they would take thousands of millions of years to reach.

So to answer your question Sasha, the other galaxies are there, but they are hiding a very long way away. That’s why we can’t easily see them when we look up at the night sky. Luckily, we don’t have to fly in a spaceship for millions of years to find other galaxies. Scientists like me, astronomers who study space, can use huge telescopes to study the light coming from galaxies and see what they are up to.

Galaxies are fascinating. Like people, some are young and others are old. Some galaxies are made up of hot stars that have only recently been born, like baby stars. Other galaxies are colder and contain mostly older stars. Galaxies can be active too. As gravity pulls them towards one another, they can merge together and collide. This will eventually happen to the Milky Way, which will collide with the Andromeda galaxy in about four billion years’ time. When that happens, the Sun will keep shining but our night sky will look very different.

I hope you will keep looking up at the stars, astronaut Sasha. It’s a fascinating place out there. Let me know if you find life on those planets!


Hello, curious kids! Have you got a question you’d like an expert to answer? Ask an adult to send your question to us. They can:

* Email your question to curiouskids@theconversation.edu.au
* Tell us on Twitter

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Please tell us your name, age and which city you live in. You can send an audio recording of your question too, if you want. Send as many questions as you like! We won’t be able to answer every question but we will do our best.The Conversation

Lisa Harvey-Smith, Astronomer, CSIRO

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Curious Kids: why do eggs have a yolk?

Yolks are a great source of vitamins, minerals, fats and proteins packaged up by the female animal for an embryo. Emily Nunell/The Conversation CC-NY-BD, CC BY
Maggie J. Watson, Charles Sturt University

Curious Kids is a series for children. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskids@theconversation.edu.au You might also like the podcast Imagine This, a co-production between ABC KIDS listen and The Conversation, based on Curious Kids.


Why do eggs have orange stuff inside? – Rafael, age 7.


This is a very interesting question. That orange stuff is called a yolk. It’s a great source of vitamins, minerals, fats and proteins packaged up by the female animal for an embryo (the developing cells that turn into a baby).

You probably know that the yellow bit inside a chicken’s egg is the yolk, but in fact a lot of animals lay eggs that have yolks in them. However, not all animal eggs have a yolk!

Having a yolk in the egg allows the developing animal to stay inside the egg a bit longer, which may boost its chances of survival. The downside is the mother will need to work harder to find food to get the nutrients needed to create a nutritious, fatty yolk. Flickr/Kai C. Schwarzer, CC BY

A contest called evolution

To understand why different animal species have different types of eggs, you need to know that all living things change slowly over time, through a process called evolution.

When a living thing is born with a special difference – what we would call a “trait” – sometimes this trait helps them live and survive better than someone who doesn’t have that trait. This trait may help them live longer and have more babies.

Because of these differences in survival, eventually, the trait that lets one individual living thing live and prosper will become quite common and be found all throughout a species.

Lots of animals lay eggs. Flickr/Alias 0591, CC BY

Back to eggs

Imagine you are a worm living millions of years ago. You produce heaps and heaps of eggs that develop quickly into little worms. But most of the babies die because they are small and have to find food straight after hatching. They can’t go far because they are very little and so most starve to death (or are eaten by bigger creatures).

But what if some of those eggs happened to contain a little bit of fat from the mother? Compared to its brothers and sisters, the fat will allow the worm to spend just a little bit more time growing inside the egg and less time looking for food after hatching.

The worms that were lucky enough to have that fat inside the egg are more likely to survive long enough to have their own babies. And they pass on the fatty-egg trait to their own worm kids. Soon this fatty-egg trait becomes quite common.

So the worm who was able to feed its babies when they’re still inside the egg had more babies survive, and a yolk evolved.

Which eggs have a yolk and why?

Eggs with tiny bits of yolk are found in animals such as earthworms, leeches, clams, mussels, starfish, sea urchins, and marine arthropods (shrimp, lobsters, crabs) and some insects. These animals produce huge numbers of eggs.

Shrimps/prawns lay a large number of eggs. if you look closely, you can see a lot of small, light pink eggs inside this prawn’s body. Flickr/Klaus Stiefel, CC BY

Most of the babies that grow in these sorts of eggs have to go through a lot of steps before they reach the adult stage. First they have to grow into a larvae (which is what we call a junior body, and often looks a bit like worm).

The babies have to change into a larvae so they can eat, and after having eaten a bit they develop into an adult (think of caterpillars that eventually turn into butterflies).

Animals that produce eggs with a bit more yolk have babies that can fully develop and skip the larvae step, such as in hagfish and snails.

Big yolks for big babies

Eggs with really large yolks are found in animals that produce very few eggs, and the offspring can use the yolk to develop completely. These sorts of eggs are found only in cephalopods (squid, octopus and nautilus) and some vertebrates (animals with backbones).

Here are some squid eggs. Flickr/Elias Levy, CC BY

Vertebrates that produce eggs with large yolks include bony fish, cartilaginous fish (sharks and rays), reptiles, birds and egg-laying mammals (platypus and echidnas).

The rest of the mammals (animals that don’t lay eggs) have found a different system. They have a placenta, which is a kind of a feeding sack linking mother to embryo inside the mother’s body. This system allows the developing embryo or fetus to get nutrients straight from the mother. That’s how you were grown!

Hello, curious kids! Have you got a question you’d like an expert to answer? Ask an adult to send your question to curiouskids@theconversation.edu.au

CC BY-ND

Please tell us your name, age and which city you live in. We won’t be able to answer every question but we will do our best.The Conversation

Maggie J. Watson, Lecturer in Ornithology, Ecology, Conservation and Parasitology, Charles Sturt University

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Jim and the Beanstalk

Published by Toadstools and Fairy Dust - more stories at the link

'Getting to Know Ruben Plotnick' read by Zach Braff

More stories at: Storyline online

Archive of millions of Historical Children’s Books All Digitised: Free to download or Read Online

Enter the 1: Baldwin Library of Historical Children’s Literature here, where you can browse several categories, search for subjects, authors, titles, etc, see full-screen, zoomable images of book covers, download XML versions, and read all of the 2: over 6,000 books in the collection with comfortable reader views. 

Find 3: more classics in the collection, 800 Free eBooks for iPad, Kindle & Other Devices.


WilderQuest online fun

The NSW National Parks and Wildlife Service is pleased to present the WilderQuest program for teachers, students and children.

The WilderQuest program includes a website and apps with game and video content, Ranger led tours and activities in national parks across NSW. It provides opportunities for families to experience nature, science and Aboriginal culture in classrooms, online, at events and in national parks. The Teacher portal and free primary school resources have been produced with support from our Environmental Trust partners.

Profile: Ingleside Riders Group

Ingleside Riders Group Inc. (IRG) is a not for profit incorporated association and is run solely by volunteers. It was formed in 2003 and provides a facility known as “Ingleside Equestrian Park” which is approximately 9 acres of land between Wattle St and McLean St, Ingleside. 
IRG has a licence agreement with the Minister of Education to use this land. This facility is very valuable as it is the only designated area solely for equestrian use in the Pittwater District.  IRG promotes equal rights and the respect of one another and our list of rules that all members must sign reflect this.
Profile: Pittwater Baseball Club

Their Mission: Share a community spirit through the joy of our children engaging in baseball.

National Geographic for Australian Kids

Find amazing facts about animals, science, history and geography, along with fun competitions, games and more. Visit National Geographic Kids today!

This week the National Geographic for Kids has launched a new free digital resource platform called NatGeo@Home to entertain and educate children affected by school closures.

The three main categories of content on the NatGeo@Home site aim to educate, inspire and entertain. For parents and teachers, there are also separate resources and lesson plans covering everything from getting to grips with Google Earth to learning to label the geological features of the ocean.

For the main Australian National Geographic for Kids, visit: www.natgeokids.com/au

For the National Geographic at Home site, visit:

LEGO AT THE LIBRARY

Mona Vale Library runs a Lego club on the first Sunday of each month from 2pm to 4pm. The club is open to children aged between seven and twelve years of age, with younger children welcome with parental supervision. If you are interested in attending a Lego at the Library session contact the library on 9970 1622 or book in person at the library, 1 Park Street, Mona Vale.

Children's Storytime at Mona Vale LibraryMona Vale Library offers storytime for pre-school children every week during school terms. Children and their carers come and participate in a fun sing-a-long with our story teller as well as listen to several stories in each session, followed by some craft.  

Storytime is held in the Pelican Room of the library in front of the service desk. Storytime is free and no bookings are required. 

Storytime Sessions: Tuesdays  10.00am - 11.00am - Wednesdays  10.00am - 11.00am  - Thursdays  10.00am - 11.00am

Profile: Avalon Soccer Club
Avalon Soccer Club is an amateur club situated at the northern end of Sydney’s Northern Beaches. As a club we pride ourselves on our friendly, family club environment. The club is comprised of over a thousand players aged from 5  who enjoy playing the beautiful game at a variety of levels and is entirely run by a group of dedicated volunteers. 
Avalon Bilgola Amateur Swimming Club Profile

We swim at Bilgola rock pool on Saturday mornings (8:45am till 11:30am). Our season runs between October and March

Profile Bayview Yacht Racing Association (BYRA)

Website: www.byra.org.au

BYRA has a passion for sharing the great waters of Pittwater and a love of sailing with everyone aged 8 to 80 or over!

 Mona Vale Mountain Cub Scouts



Find out more about all the fun you can have at Mona Vale Mountain Cub Scouts Profile
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our Profile pages aren’t just about those who can tell you about Pittwater before you were born, they’re also about great clubs and activities that you too can get involved in!