able of Contents

  River 94.9 Award - 5-7 Years

  Ipswich District Teacher Librarian Network Award - 8-10 Years

  The Queensland Times Award - 11-13 Year

  The Broderick Family Award - 14-15 Years

  Ipswich City Council Award – 16-17 Years

  River 94.9 Award - 5-7 Years

  1st Place: The Under Water City by Mya Smith from St Joseph’s Primary School, North Ipswich, Qld

  The sea is clear and blue

  So many baby fish in the underwater zoo

  l see yellow angel fish swimming too.

  Mermaids passing in the sea weed.

  Here come jellyfish to feed and feed.

  Coloured coral make a little door.

  Starfish are lying on the bottom floor

  The sun is shining on the sandy shore.

  Deep below, the under water city,

  fishes swim and swim by the score.

  2nd Place: The Frilled Neck Lizard by Henry Blackledge from Ipswich Grammar School, Ipswich, Qld

  The frilled Neck Lizards are so frightening

  And they can run like lightning.

  But when they choose, they stay quite still

  And then they open up their frill.

  3rd Place: Summer by Ella Tronc from Rosewood State School, Rosewood, Qld

  Summer is a season of fun -

  Sleep-ins, holidays and time in the sun.

  lce-cream sundaes and pools and the beach,

  Christmas, togs, drinking lemonade with peach.

  My birthday, with presents and friends. It's hot!

  Summery summer, I love you a lot!

  Highly Commended: I want to be a Palaeontologist by Ethan Peno from Walkervale State School, Bundaberg, Qld

  If l was a palaeontologist l would look for fossils all day long.

  It wouldn't really matter if I got the skeleton wrong.

  I would travel around the world looking for new breeds,

  Learning about how a dinosaur lays eggs, lives and feeds.

  What made the dinosaurs all die?

  No-one really wonders why.

  Maybe an explosion or lack of food?

  If l find out I’ll be a cool dude.

  I hope one day my wishes come true,

  Being a palaeontologist is what I want to do.

  Highly Commended: When I Grow Up by Chloe Goodingham from Tivoli State School, Tivoli, Qld

  When I grow up,

  I will be a Princess,

  And have a princess dress.

  With sparkles and Diamonds

  And also big hi heels.

  I will wear red lipstick,

  To kiss all the princes!

  Highly Commended: Koalas by Carmen Oxenford from Citipointe Christian College, Carindale, Qld

  Koalas like to climb up trees

  So they can eat some green gum leaves

  They carry babies on their backs

  And let them play to share their snacks

  The babies always have a rest

  In their very special nest.

  Highly Commended: Tim Tams by Jessica Gray from Citipointe Christian College, Carindale, Qld

  Chocolate Tim Tams are the best

  They are better than the rest

  They are always very yummy

  They can’t wait to get in my tummy

  Melting quickly in the sun

  They’re the food for on the run

  They are not a healthy treat

  But they’re very hard to beat.

  Highly Commended: The Platypus and the Croc by Harrison Rapmund from Ipswich Grammar School, Ipswich, Qld

  The platypus was eating his lunch.

  He was eating weeds with a crunch.

  Then he saw a freshwater croc,

  So he quickly hid behind a rock.

  Highly Commended: Our Trip to Girraween by Kailani Clifton from Urangan, Qld

  On our trip to Girraween,

  there were many kangaroos to be seen.

  The Pyramid and granite rocks so high,

  I felt they could almost touch the sky.

  And in our camper trailer at night,

  we were very snug and tight.

  Back to contents

  Ipswich District Teacher Librarian Network Award - 8-10 Years

  1st Place: Tiny Seed by Sarah Bown from West Moreton Anglican College, Karrabin, Qld

  Tiny seed, still, round and flat

  Everything quiet, everything black

  No light, no noise, no sun or breeze

  No petals, or roots, no smell or leaves.

  I need to be free, I need to get out

  I need to push up, I need to sprout

  Up, up, up I go

  Into the world, hello, hello.

  Now in spring there's freedom, flowers and bees

  There’s light, there's noise, there's sun and breeze

  Going up and up into the air I grow

  I can feel the breeze and wind blow.

  My petals are bright with colour and glow,

  My petals flow high and low

  I’m now a flower I'm beautiful in every way

  The kids will play and I will sway.

  2nd Place: The Wolves are Howling by Hannah Johnston from Cooloola Christian College, Gympie, Qld

  I stand in front of the moonlight.

  I hear the wolves howl.

  I wonder where they are.

  I wonder where they are now.

  When I look up in the sky,

  I see the twinkling stars

  So I think of you.

  But when I do that I begin to cry

  So I just walk away,

  Into the darkness and close my eyes,

  And, and, and....

  I begin to get scared,

  So I run through the scary woods.

  Then I tripped on a branch,

  And I hurt my knee.

  I think I’m having a heart attack.

  That’s when I think of you.

  I stand in front of the moonlight.

  I hear the wolves howl.

  I wonder where they are.

  I wonder where they are now.

  The end.

  “You may get scared sometimes if you have a heart condition.

  That is when you look up to God Your Lord.”

  3rd Place: Little Brothers by Grace Finlay from Bethany Lutheran College, Raceview, Qld

  Little brothers pinch

  Little brothers scratch

  Pinch scratch

  Pinch scratch

  Look out I’ll get you back!

  Little brothers bite

  Little brothers punch

  Bite punch

  Bite punch

  Look out I’ll get you after lunch!

  Big sisters scheme

  Big sisters scare

  Scheme scare

  Scheme scare

  Look out if you go in there!

  MUM!

  Highly Commended: Aussie Nature by William Rea from Mount Marrow State School, Mount Marrow, Qld

  Crimson rocks stand there watching time go by.

  Dingoes roam the bush catching wallaby, koala, emu and other things they can savage or hunt.

  Kangaroos jump too fast to avoid the predators of the bush.

  Uluru holds remarkable secrets; spirits of the Aboriginals come out of the earth.

  Tears from the sky fall down and washes the dry desert and the core of Australia.

  Aboriginals do their traditional dances and slowly the land grows thicker, happiness floats through the land.

  Goanna lie in the sun lazily and eat the delicious insects that go past.

  Crocs float over the surface of the clear crystal riv
ers and the mother ferociously protects her eggs.

  Cries and the songs of the Aboriginals echo through the trees and the birds squawk noisily.

  Stories of the Dreamtime told by the elders flow through the air and I stand there listening, and now I say goodbye.

  Highly Commended: Family Tree by Astrid Cahill from West Moreton Anglican College, Karrabin, Qld

  Grow family tree grow

  Big ones, small ones,

  Skinny ones and cuddly ones

  Grow family tree grow

  Hairy ones, bald ones

  Curly ones and straight ones

  Grow family tree grow

  Wrinkly ones, pimply ones

  Soft ones and whiskery ones

  Grow family tree grow

  Funny ones, grumpy ones

  Kind ones and annoying ones

  Grow family tree grow

  Arty ones, sporty ones

  Fishing ones and cooking ones

  Grow family tree grow

  Every one my loved ones

  Grow family tree grow

  Highly Commended: The Turtle Race by Aedyn Duffy from West Moreton Anglican College, Karrabin, Qld

  Deep in the sand

  White eggs hatch.

  Awakened from

  a growing sleep.

  Tiny turtle hatchlings

  stampede to the top.

  Life has begun

  there is growing to be done.

  A race to the waters

  wet and wild.

  Some make it here

  so many not.

  A chance to survive

  to grow old.

  A hardened shell

  to protect from the swell.

  Go turtle, grow turtle

  Live long and happy.

  Go turtle, grow turtle

  Your life has just begun.

  Highly Commended: Painting Peace by Grace Finlay from West Moreton Anglican College, Karrabin, Qld

  In the silence

  The images bloom

  Peace is found

  Within my room

  Worries fly

  As bristles spread

  Painting flowers

  From my head

  Flooding the paper

  With colour and passion

  Everything else is

  Just a distraction

  Purple for peace

  And red for love

  Yellow for happiness

  And white for a dove

  Brushing colours

  Warm and cool

  Every stroke

  Elegant and graceful

  You’re in a world

  Of your own

  Where happiness and peace

  Are forever grown

  Highly Commended: Lucas by Riley Granzien from West Moreton Anglican College, Karrabin, Qld

  l went to see my little brother

  On the day he was born

  l held him for the first time

  And he was nice and warm

  He had tiny little fingers

  And tiny little toes

  He had a tiny little bed

  And a tiny little nose

  He never ate any food

  All he drank was milk

  He slept most of the
Ipswich Library's Novels