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BEAVER LODGE
Shay was born with a big imagination. Big enough to do anything
and everything. Her imagination could move the biggest mountain and
fly to the highest star.
Shay lived beside a river bed of marshland, where a beaver family
had its lodge. Mama and Papa beaver had three kits, Billy, Randy,
and Lizzie. Billy was the reckless one, always getting into trouble.
Randy was cautious and considerate and never once got in trouble.
Lizzie was very ambitious and always helpful to her parents. You
might say she was a busy little beaver.
Mama
and Papa beaver were very proud of their lodge. Papa beaver liked to
brag about their lodge to anyone who would listen. Of course, there
was always a lot of repair work to be done because the logs would
often shift in the water.
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And then there was Billy. He helped with the repairs but
often as not he ended up playing with the building materials and
things would be worse after than before he began to help. Randy was
usually there to stop him before things got really out of hand.
The turtles living near by always kept a wary eye open for
Billy’s presence. Nothing the turtles loved better than to sun
tan on a log. A bunch of them would line up on a log for a bit
of rest and sun tanning. Billy would sneak up quietly and twist the
log, laughing his head off when they all plopped into the water.
They
wondered how they could ever repay him with a trick of their own.
One day they had an idea; they tied the end of Billy’s favourite
balancing log to a tree. When Billy showed up to drag his log to the
river, the turtles were all there to watch him.
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“Let us see how strong you are, Billy,” they called out to him.
“You are strong enough to tilt our log and make us plunge into the
water. Are you strong enough to pull your log out to the
stream?”
”Nothing to it,” said Billy. He began to pull on the log.
He moaned and groaned but the log did not budge.
”What
is the matter, Billy, didn’t have your breakfast this morning?” The
turtles enjoyed the scene. After a lot of pulling and tugging, Billy
discovered the rope. He blushed and must have turned red as a beet.
After that the turtles were left to suntan in peace.
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One day the beaver living up stream came rushing over, he was all
excited. “A big, huge log is drifting down the river heading
straight toward your lodge,” he yelled. Everybody panicked.
Papa beaver said “everybody out of the lodge.” The only thing
going through Billy’s head was just how big a crash it would be.
Randy had a lot of study material that he wanted to save and Lizzie
gathered up all her valuable ornaments. The big log was getting very
close.
”Time
to leave!” Papa Beaver shouted. It wasn’t the big crash that
Billy was expecting, but the tail end of the big log damaged the
lodge.
”What will we do now,” said Mama beaver. “There isn’t
enough time to do the repairs before dark.”
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Papa beaver said "We have to try. Everybody get to work."
Shay had seen the big log drift against the lodge and all the damage
it caused. She felt really sorry for the beavers.
"I know you can do it," she shouted to the beavers as she watched
them repair their lodge. But things didn't look so good because it
would soon be dark.
It
was getting dark and the lodge was not yet finished. There was a
full moon but the dark clouds didn't let the moon's rays shine
through. The beavers asked Shay for help. "Can you move the
clouds for us?" they pleaded.
Shay said she would ask her imagination. Shay's imagination flew
up to the clouds.
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"Please
help us," she said. "The beavers need to finish their lodge
but it's too dark because you are not letting the moon shine
through."
"We can't go anywhere without the wind," the clouds said. "You
can talk to the wind but remember the wind understands only poetry
language." Shay's imagination then talked to the wind:
"Wind, you can be very gentle and calm,
and not blow a feather from our palm. Some days we are not
even aware of you
Because nothing shows what you can do. But other days you
really blow and howl, Birds are tossed about, even the mighty
owl. It is then that we see leaves and dust arise, And all
clouds disappear from the skies.
So please, wind, do show me your power,
because it is getting dark this very hour.
Make all the clouds disappear from the sky, so the beavers
can fix the lodge they occupy."
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After that, the imagination went back to Shay at the beaver
lodge. Nothing was happening and it was getting dark. "I
tried," Shay said, "sorry I couldn't help."
It was time for her to go home, but as she was about to leave the
wind picked up and the clouds started to roll away. "Whoopee!" the
beavers shouted in unison. "Now we can finish our lodge."
Shay
went home very happy that her imagination worked hard to help the
beavers finish repairing their lodge. And every day after when she
passed by the beaver's lodge, they would make a point of thanking
her for all the help.
The End
Author Erwin Schalm
Illustrations Shayla Schalm
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