Down by the Bay


Book Description

Raffi's hilarious version of the classic song about strange events that happen down by the bay, where the watermelons grow... Singing supports and encourages even the youngest child's speech and listening skills, which makes Down by the Bay perfect for early learning. In this friendly board book edition, irresistible art by Nadine Bernard Westcott depicts wonderfully amusing creatures such as a bear combing his hair, a goose kissing a moose, and a whale with a polka-dot tail. Very young children will find this book both entertaining and instructive in early language skills such as rhyme, rhythm, and repetition, and will delight in hearing it read or sung aloud to them.




Down By the Bay


Book Description

Read the story. Then sing the story! It isn’t a secret that using songs to teach children pre-reading skills is fun and successful. This classic song is featured as a read-along and a sing-along. And learning rhyming words has never been more fun! "Have you ever seen a snake baking a cake down by the bay?" "Have you ever seen a mouse painting his house down by the bay?" "Have you ever seen a pig doing a jig down by the bay?" Fun illustrations, rhyming text, and silly rhyming words encourage early literacy skills for young readers. This classic children’s song will become your family’s favorite story! The fun Sing A Story series includes: Five Little Monkeys Jumping On The Bed, Old MacDonald Had A Farm, Ten In The Bed, B-I-N-G-O, Down By The Bay, Humpty Dumpty & Other Nursery Rhymes, Six Little Ducks, Five Little Skunks, ABC Nursery Rhymes, The Wheels On The Bus, This Old Man, How Many Ducks?, Old MacDonald’s Letter Farm, The ABCs, Singing The Consonant Sounds, The Farmer In The Dell and It’s Silly Time!




Down by the Bay


Book Description

In this song, two children imagine their mothers asking, "Did you ever see a goose kissing a moose, a fly wearing a tie, or llamas eating their pajamas down by the bay?"




Down The Bay


Book Description

In the spring of 1978, Florence and Eddie Sherman sent their sarcastic, out-of-control thirteen-year-old daughter, Debbie, lobstering with her older brother, Reggie. In Eddie's words, at least they'd "know where in hell she is." Reggie takes on tracking down a thief while trying to teach his sister the right things in life. She learns her job as a stern person, drools over the boys that work on the bait-dock, and makes keen observations of how her family members interact with each other. Her biggest challenge, however, will quietly take her by surprise. How she deals with failure quickly becomes her next challenge. Join Reggie and Debbie as they ride the waves of Blue Hill Bay on the coast of Maine in a sincerely tender story of growing up and sibling love as they find their way Down The Bay.




Down by the Bay


Book Description

San Francisco Bay is the largest and most productive estuary on the Pacific Coast of North America. It is also home to the oldest and densest urban settlements in the American West. Focusing on human inhabitation of the Bay since Ohlone times, Down by the Bay reveals the ongoing role of nature in shaping that history. From birds to oyster pirates, from gold miners to farmers, from salt ponds to ports, this is the first history of the San Francisco Bay and Delta as both a human and natural landscape. It offers invaluable context for current discussions over the best management and use of the Bay in the face of sea level rise.




Annual Report


Book Description




Down in Bristol Bay


Book Description

The remarkable memoir of a man who abandoned the safe world of academia for the Alaskan wilderness and adventure. "Down In Bristol Bay" catapults the reader into this last frontier and onto a sea of storms and dangers and into madcap bars and drinking parties. It chronicles misadventures and follies, occasionally of burlesque proportions, on land as well as at sea. 8-page photo insert.




Every Spring A Parade Down Bay Street


Book Description

Red York has seen it all: the Maple Leafs’ forty-five consecutive Stanley Cups, Toronto’s designation as a United Nations World Heritage Site, the emergence of the Toronto Telegram as the nation’s greatest newspaper. Now, in response to at least two readers’ requests, and with the aid of a ghostwriter whose name he can’t ever remember, the award-winning columnist has penned a definitive history of the city of Toronto in the back half of the 20th century. This to-the-best-of-my-recollection memoir, is something which he if no one else believes is a Canadian treasure and the definitive account of the greatest phenomenon in sports: the sheer domination of the Toronto Maple Leafs in National Hockey League and Olympic competition.