Lesson summary (with presentation) on literary reading on the topic “Stories about animals. G. Skrebitsky “Fluff”

  • Summary
  • Skrebitsky
  • Fluff

One boy had a hedgehog at home. The animal knew how to press the thorns to its back when someone stroked it. That's why the hedgehog was nicknamed Fluff. Also, when the animal felt hungry, it would run after its owner and bite his legs. The boy loved his pet very much.

In the summer they walked together in the garden. Fluff stomped along the paths and ate frogs and insects. In winter, the boy stopped taking the animal outside. The hedgehog was happy at home too. He slept for days, and at night he got out of his shelter and ran around the rooms.

One day the boy couldn’t find companions for a winter walk and decided to take Pushka with him. The boy put the hedgehog in a box on the sled and ran with him for a walk. But the child met friends on the street, played with them and went home in the evening, forgetting the animal on the street. Only in the morning did the boy remember about poor Pushka and ran to look for him. He found the pet dead and buried him in the garden. When spring came, the boy discovered Cannon in the garden. It turns out that the animal spent the winter safely in the ground, and when it became warm, it got out into the wild.

The story “Fluff” by Georgy Alekseevich Skrebitsky teaches readers to treat pets with love.

You can use this text for a reader's diary

Skrebitsky's stories for primary schoolchildren

Stories by Georgy Skrebitsky about the life of birds, animals and fish. Stories for reading in elementary school. Stories for extracurricular reading and family reading.

Georgy Skrebitsky. Long-tailed bandits

It was at the very beginning of spring.

There was still snow under the trees in the forest, but in the open places the first thawed patches were already darkening.

The tree buds began to inflate, and this made the branches of bushes and trees seem not as bare as in winter, but a little shaggy. All around, in the tops of the trees, buntings and tits were singing in different voices, and somewhere in the distance a forest drummer, a woodpecker, was beating a drum.

My son and I walked along the path, listening to the voices of the spring forest. Suddenly we heard magpies chirping ahead of us, as if they had noticed something alarmingly.

We came out from behind the bushes onto the lawn. We look and we can’t understand anything what’s happening there. A hare is darting back and forth across the meadow, and near him are two magpies; They will either take off or land on the ground. The hare just jumps on them. As soon as one flies close, he jumps! - straight towards her, trying to hit her with his front paws.

A magpie flies off, and the second one flies up from behind. The hare will turn around and rush at her. We look and can’t figure out who is attacking whom.

They began to come closer. A hare noticed us and galloped into the forest. The magpies also flew away. They fly, but they chirp: apparently, they really don’t want to fly away.

We approached the place where the magpies and the hare were fighting. Suddenly we see a small gray lump lying in a hole right under our feet.

Yes, it's a bunny! Very tiny, just born.

Then we understood why the hare attacked the magpie. It was the hare who so bravely defended her cub. This means that it is incorrect to say that the hare is a coward.

We took the little hare, carried it to the nearest bushes, where the hare had just galloped off, and planted it right under the bush.

His mother will certainly find him there. Animals constantly return in their own wake. The hare will run back and bump into him. But magpies will never find a little hare in the bushes.

We went back out onto the lawn. We look - the magpies are spinning around in the same place again. They jump, look at the ground, look for the little hare. That's what they are! Robbers, and that's all.

****

Georgy Skrebitsky. River wolf

There is one interesting way of catching predatory fish: pike, perch, pike perch... This is fishing with mugs.

The circle is made of dry wood or cork. It is painted red on top and white on the bottom. A stick is inserted in the middle of the mug. A strong fishing line wound around a circle is thrown over it, and at the end a sinker and a treble hook on a thin wire are tied so that any predatory fish that comes across cannot bite the fishing line.

Fishing with mugs is very exciting, especially where there are a lot of large fish. Therefore, when I went on my summer trip to Karelia, I took with me, among other fishing supplies, a dozen mugs.

I had heard a lot about the fish wealth of the Karelian lakes, and I couldn’t wait to catch fish there myself.

And now I'm finally there.

After spending the night in a small village on the very shore of the lake, early in the morning I went fishing.

The old owner with whom I spent the night lent me his boat. I put mugs, a landing net, and a bucket of pre-caught live bait in it, then I took the oars and sailed away from the shore.

The morning was warm and gray. A light breeze blew, twitching the surface of the lake with silvery ripples. And at the very shores the water was completely calm, and gloomy rocks, in places overgrown with moss, and stunted, half-withered pines were reflected in it.

Gray gulls flew over the lake. Sometimes they fell into the water, grabbed small fish and took off again with their prey, dropping frequent drops of water into the lake.

I swam not far from the shore, looking for the place that the owner of the boat told me about.

Here is the bay. In this place, the rocks and forest recede from the lake, and a narrow strip of water juts far into the shore, and reeds bristle along the sides like a thick green brush.

I took a depth gauge out of my bag - a weight on a long string - and measured the depth: eight and a half meters. I swam a little and measured it a few more times. So I felt the edges of the underwater hole. Then I swam in such a way that the wind would blow my mugs through the hole, put bait on the hooks and began to catch.

The wind blew along the shore, and my mugs, like a flock of red birds, swam past the green thickets of reeds.

The beginning of fishing is a good time for the fisherman. Will this morning give you anything?

Steering the boat slightly with the oars, I slowly swam after the mugs. It was completely quiet, only the seagulls flying over the lake occasionally shouted.

Suddenly, somewhere not far from me, I heard a strong splash of water, then a desperate duck cry, and a wild duck jumped out of the reeds, flapping its wings, followed by a whole brood of ducklings. They, like dark fluffy balls, rolled through the water after their mother.

Having emerged into clear water, the old duck swam along the bay, looking around in fear and calling the ducklings to her with alarming cries.

I sat motionless so as not to scare the duck family until it again disappeared into the reed thickets on the other side of the bay.

I really wanted to know what scared the mother duck. Probably some animal got close to the ducklings. But who exactly? The fox could not get so deep into the water, and it would have been heard if she made her way among the reeds. Maybe an otter?

I waited a little longer to see if anyone would come clean. But no one showed up, and I went back to my mugs.

Suddenly one of them, right before my eyes, turned over with its white side up and, like a top, spun in the water. This means that the fish grabbed the bait and dragged it into the depths, quickly unwinding the fishing line.

Trying not to splash the oars so as not to scare away the fish, I steered the boat towards the overturned circle. And he, now leaning to one side, now plunging into the water, walked away from me. The fish pulled the tackle away from the shore. But now I’m already catching up with the circle running on the water. He's already right next to the boat. I drop the oars, quickly lean over the side, grab the circle, then the fishing line. I jerk sharply to hook the fish, and I feel like someone invisible in the depths is snatching it out of my hands.

I grabbed the line more comfortably and began to pull it slightly. But the fish did not give in. She pulled so hard that the line cut her hand. “Wow, he’s even dragging a boat! So it’s a good one!” I could hardly catch my breath from excitement, straining all my strength so as not to miss the large prey.

The tightly stretched line dug into the water and drew its end along it. The fish either pulled away from the shore or turned towards the reeds. I tried not to let her drag the line under the boat, otherwise it would get caught on the bottom and immediately break off.

Gradually the fish began to get tired. I started to pull her towards the boat. And then, no more than two or three meters from the side, something large and dark appeared from the depths, as if I was lifting a sunken log from the bottom. "Pike! How huge! Can you pull this one off? »

Right at the edge the fish had definitely come to its senses. She jumped so hard that the boat rocked. I barely had time to let the fishing line go.

Having released the pike about twenty meters, I began to hold it again and, stopping it, again dragged it towards the boat. At least an hour of intense struggle passed.

Finally, having pulled the prey to the very board, I lowered a sharp hook into the water and brought it to the fish.

A jerk - and the hook pierced the pike right under the gills. She thrashed desperately, dousing me from head to toe with water. I pulled the hook with all my might and barely managed to drag the heavy fish into the boat. The fight is over. The caught pike lay on the bottom of the boat, occasionally opening its terrible toothy mouth. What a fish! The foot of my boot fits freely into her mouth. And the teeth, what huge teeth! Like a good yard dog. And sharp as an awl. This “fish” probably weighs at least twenty kilograms. How old could she be - half a century or more? She was all dark bronze, with a greenish tint. A real water monster is a thunderstorm and a scourge of all living things that swim in the water.

After such luck, I no longer wanted to fish that morning. It’s better to return to the village as soon as possible, show everyone your prey, photograph it, tell how you caught it, and at the same time, although to a weak degree, once again mentally relive all the exciting moments of a rare hunt.

Arriving home, the first thing I did was weigh the caught pike on the collective farm scales. It turned out to be twenty-two kilograms.

Then I told everything in order, as it happened, to the assembled fishing friends.

“We need to gut it, otherwise it’s hot, no matter how bad it gets,” said my owner. “Let’s see what’s in her stomach, what she had for breakfast today.”

He began to gut the pike, took out the stomach and cut it open.

- Ba-ba-ba, but she didn’t eat fish today! - he said, taking out from the fish’s stomach something covered with either sticky wool or fluff. - Duckling... And here’s another one... Ah, the robber! This means she was catching ducklings on the water.

Then I remembered the splash of water in the reeds and the wild duck that jumped out with its family. So, that's who was hunting for ducklings!

I looked at the pike, at its huge mouth. Yes, with such a mouth you can grab not only a duckling, but also an adult duck. How many living things will this voracious aquatic predator catch! It’s not for nothing that the pike is called the “river wolf.”

Grigory Skrebitsky. House in the forest

It was already starting to get dark. Barely dragging my feet from fatigue and fighting off a myriad of mosquitoes, I climbed to a hill and looked around. In the half-darkness of the passing day, forests and forests were visible everywhere, and only very far ahead from behind the trees something was glimmering blue - either water, or a haze of fog over a forest swamp.

Where should we go?

The area was completely unfamiliar. But the Karelian taiga is no joke. You can walk along it for tens of kilometers without meeting a soul. You can get into such forest swamps that you can’t get out again. And, as luck would have it, this time I didn’t take any food or matches with me and, most importantly, I didn’t take a compass.

In the morning I went out to wander a little outside the village in the forest, but I didn’t notice how lost I was.

I scolded myself for being so careless, but what should I do now? Walk through the taiga among windbreaks and terrible swamps, go to no one knows where, or spend the night right in the forest, without fire, without food, in this mosquito hell? No, it is impossible to spend the night here.

“I’ll go as long as I have enough strength,” I decided. “I’ll go where the water or fog is blue.” Maybe there’s a lake there and I’ll get out to some housing.”

Having descended from the hill again and trying not to lose the direction I had taken, I went forward.

There was a swampy pine forest all around. My feet sank in a thick layer of moss, as if in deep snow, and constantly bumped into hummocks and the remains of rotten trees. Every minute it became darker and darker. There was a whiff of evening dampness, and there was a stronger smell of wild rosemary and other marsh herbs. The dead taiga night was approaching. The usual sounds of the day were replaced by the mysterious rustles of the night.

I am an old hunter, I have spent the night in the forest more than once, and most importantly, I have a reliable companion with me - a gun. What is there to be afraid of? But, I admit, this time I became more and more creepy. It’s one thing to spend the night by a fire in a familiar forest, but another thing is to spend the night in the remote taiga, without fire, without food... and that nagging feeling that you’re lost.

I walked at random, now stumbling over roots, now again silently stepping on the soft moss cover. It was completely quiet all around. Not a single sound disturbed the peace of the endless forest expanses.

This deathly silence made it even more sad and alarming. It seemed as if someone terrible was hiding in the swampy swamps and was about to jump out of them with a wild, ominous cry.

Alert at the slightest rustle and holding my gun at the ready, I entered the outskirts of the swamp.

Suddenly there was a loud crash of dead wood. I involuntarily raised my gun. Someone big and heavy rushed quickly away from me. You could hear the dry branches breaking under him with a crash.

I took a breath and lowered the gun. Yes, this is an elk, a harmless giant of the taiga forests! Now he is already rushing somewhere far away, you can barely hear him. And again everything falls silent, plunges into silence.

In the darkness, I completely lost the direction I had initially followed. I lost all hope of getting anywhere. He walked with only one thought: at any cost to get out of this gloomy, swampy lowland to some hill, and then lie down under a tree, wrap his head in a mosquito jacket and wait for dawn.

I didn't even want to eat because I was so tired. Just to lie down as quickly as possible, rest, not go anywhere else and not think about anything.

But something darkens ahead - it must be a forest hill. Gathering the rest of my strength, I climbed onto it and almost screamed with joy. Below, behind the hill, a light shone brightly.

Forgetting about fatigue, I almost ran down the hill and, making my way through the thorny juniper bushes, came out into the clearing.

At the edge of it, under the old pine trees, a small house could be seen - probably a fishing hut or a forester's lodge. And in front of the house a fire burned brightly. As soon as I appeared in the clearing, a tall figure of a man rose from the fire.

I approached the fire:

- Hello! Can I spend the night at your place?

“Of course you can,” answered a tall man in some strange wide-brimmed hat.

He looked at me carefully:

- Are you a hunter, perhaps?

- Yes, a hunter from Zaonezhye. Got a little lost. - I named my village.

- Wow, you’ve been brought so far! It will be about thirty kilometers from here. Exhausted? Do you want to eat? Now the soup and tea will be ripe. Rest for now.

I thanked him and sank completely exhausted next to the fire.

A lot of pine cones were thrown into it, and their acrid smoke drove away the mosquitoes.

That's when I finally took a deep breath! How beautiful is a fire in the forest when you get to it after long, tedious wanderings... How much warmth and life in these flickering golden lights! ways.

My new acquaintance walked away from the fire and disappeared into the house.

I looked around. The fire made it difficult to see what was beyond the clearing. On one side, right behind the house, the forest was faintly visible, and on the other side, the clearing seemed to end somewhere in the darkness, and from there a light, monotonous splash of waves could be heard. There was probably a lake or river there.

The owner came out of the house, carrying a wooden bowl, spoons and bread.

“Well, let’s have a bite,” he invited, pouring steaming soup from the pot into a bowl.

It seems that I have never in my life eaten such wonderful fish soup or drunk such fragrant tea with raspberries.

“Eat, eat, don’t be shy, we have a growing abyss of these berries in the fires,” the owner told me, pushing a box filled to the top with large ripe berries. “You’re very lucky that you wandered here, otherwise you could have gotten lost in these forests.” You're not from here, right?

I said that I came here for the summer from Moscow.

-Are you from here? Is this your house? - I asked him in turn.

— No, I’m also from Moscow. “I’m an artist, my name is Pavel Sergeevich,” my interlocutor introduced himself. “I never thought I’d meet a Muscovite here in the taiga!” - he laughed. — This is not my first year in Karelia, this is my third summer. So, you know, I liked this region, as if I had lived here for a century. I have my own boat in Petrozavodsk. When I arrive from Moscow, I now put all my belongings in the boat and set off. First along the lake, and then along this bay. It goes straight to Onega. The first time I swam here was by accident. I had a tent with me and lived in it. And then I came across that hut and settled in it.

- What kind of hut is this?

- Who knows! It’s true that there was once a forest guardhouse or a fisherman’s hut. But no one ever comes here. Maybe hunters come in in winter. But in the summer I live here, write sketches and catch fish.

- Aren’t you a hunter? - I asked him.

“No, not a hunter,” answered Pavel Sergeevich. “On the contrary, I try to lure all kinds of living creatures here.” And mind you, the first condition: don’t shoot near this house, otherwise we’ll immediately quarrel.

- What are you talking about, why am I going to shoot here! The forest is large, there is enough space.

- Well, that means we agreed. “Now let’s go to bed,” the owner invited me.

We entered the house. Pavel Sergeevich lit an electric flashlight and directed it into the corner. There I saw wide bunks covered with a mosquito curtain.

We climbed under the canopy, undressed and lay down on a soft bed made of a thick layer of moss, covered with a clean sheet. The pillows were also stuffed with moss. This bed and the entire hut smelled surprisingly good of forest freshness. The window and door were wide open. It was cool under the canopy and there were no mosquito bites at all. They rushed around us with an ominous howl, but they could not reach us, no matter how hard they tried.

“Look at what’s happening,” said Pavel Sergeevich, turning on the flashlight again and pointing it at the canopy.

I looked at the illuminated circle of transparent matter, and I felt terrified: it all seemed alive from the solid mass of mosquitoes clinging to it outside. “Without the canopy, we would have been completely eaten overnight. What a blessing that I came across this forest hut!”

“Well, now let’s listen to what Moscow says, and go to sleep,” said Pavel Sergeevich, taking out a small detector receiver and headphones from the corner of the canopy.

- What, do you have a radio? - I was surprised.

- Why not! There are no newspapers here - you need to know what is going on in the world. And it’s good to listen to good music. Somehow the other day they broadcast Tchaikovsky’s violin concerto. I put the headphones next to me on the pillow and listened all evening. Wonderful! Just imagine: the taiga is all around, the pine trees are rustling, the lake is splashing - and then a violin sings... You know, I’m listening, and it seems to me that it’s not a violin at all, but the wind - the taiga itself is singing... It’s so good - I could listen all night without stopping ! — Pavel Sergeevich took out a cigarette and lit a cigarette. “And next year I’ll definitely bring a small speaker here, install it on the stream and run electricity into my house.” Then you can stay here longer in the fall, until the freeze-up. I will paint the taiga in autumn attire.

Pavel Sergeevich tuned the radio and put the headphones between us on the pillow. I could hear perfectly, but I was so tired that I couldn’t listen to anything anymore. I turned to the wall and fell asleep like the dead.

I woke up because someone was gently shaking my shoulder.

“Stand up quietly,” Pavel Sergeevich whispered. - Look at my guests.

The edge of the canopy was raised and I looked out from behind it.

It's already quite dawn. Through the wide open door a clearing was visible and behind it a narrow forest backwater. A tied boat was rocking close to the shore.

But what is it? On the shore near the boat, as if at home, a family of bears was walking: a female bear and two already grown-up cubs. They picked something from the ground and ate.

I looked at them, afraid to move, afraid to frighten off these sensitive forest animals with a careless movement, who so trustingly approached the very dwelling of a person.

And the bears continued their morning breakfast. Then, apparently having eaten, the cubs began to fuss. They tumbled and wrestled with each other. Suddenly one of the cubs ran to the shore and instantly climbed into the boat. The second one immediately followed suit. The cubs fit into the boat and began to rock it. And the old bear sat down right there on the bank and watched the cubs.

The cubs started fighting in the boat too. They fumbled until they fell into the water. Snorting and shaking themselves, both jumped out onto the shore and continued their game.

I don’t know how long this extraordinary spectacle lasted—maybe an hour, maybe more. Finally, the bear family retreated back into the forest.

- Well, have you seen my guests? Are you good? - Pavel Sergeevich asked cheerfully.

- Very good. Is this not the first time they have come here?

- No, very often, almost every morning. As soon as I cook the fish soup, I strain off the broth, and leave all the boiled fish for storage. This is a treat for them. The first time the bear came to visit me at the beginning of summer - apparently she smelled the fish. Since then he has been visiting. I lured the cubs into the boat with fish. I started putting them there, and they got into the habit of climbing. And what sketches I made of this bear family! Would you like to take a look?

I happily agreed.

We quickly got dressed and got out from under the canopy.

The house consisted of one room. Under the window there was a cleanly planed table, littered with pieces of canvas, brushes, paints and various fishing equipment. In the corner one could see fishing rods, a spinning rod, and a landing net. In general, you immediately felt that a fisherman and an artist lived in this house.

“Well, here are the fruits of my labors,” Pavel Sergeevich said jokingly, approaching the table and began to show me his work. These were small, unfinished sketches.

Pavel Sergeevich carefully and lovingly took them one by one and placed them against the wall. And the life of the forest inhabitants of the Karelian taiga began to unfold before me. There were bear cubs familiar to me - in a sunlit clearing, and a moose cow with a calf wandering through a moss swamp, and a fox family at their hole, and hares, and many different birds - black grouse, wood grouse, hazel grouse... Animals and birds, as if alive, Now, sensitively wary, they looked at me, now they walked peacefully among the green bushes.

And what wonderful corners of nature! Here is a mountain stream rushing among gray granite rocks and suddenly spills into a small reservoir...

“I always catch trout here,” says Pavel Sergeevich. — And this is Lake Onega, when you swim out of the bay. - And he shows a small sketch: water, sun, wooded banks, and near the shore near the reeds - two loons.

How alive and how familiar it all is! It was as if he himself was wandering through the remote taiga, and then got out into the wide expanse of water in Onega.

I reviewed all the sketches. Each of them was good in its own way, and each had something new, something of its own, and most importantly, you could feel the soul of the artist himself, who passionately loved this harsh forest region.

- Very very good! - I said when we reviewed everything. - Lucky, you don’t have to hunt. All the same, you will take home such trophies that we, hunters, never dream of.

Pavel Sergeevich smiled:

- Yes, a pencil and a brush completely replace a gun for me. And it seems that neither I nor the game are at a loss from this.

We left the house. It was morning. The sun had just risen, and a light night fog floated like a pink cloud over the taiga.

Having lit a fire, we drank tea, and Pavel Sergeevich explained to me in detail the way back to the house.

- Come again! - he said goodbye when I was already climbing the hill.

I turned around. The whole house was clearly visible, and in front of it was a clearing, a bay and then a forest, a forest to the very horizon.

- I'll definitely come! - I answered and went down the hill into the forest.

Georgy Skrebitsky. Mitya's friends

In winter, in the December cold, a moose cow and her calf spent the night in a dense aspen forest. It's starting to get light. The sky turned pink, and the forest, covered with snow, stood all white, silent. Fine shiny frost settled on the branches and on the backs of the moose. The moose were dozing.

Suddenly, somewhere very close, the crunch of snow was heard. The moose became wary. Something gray flashed among the snow-covered trees. One moment - and the moose were already rushing away, breaking the icy crust of the crust and getting stuck knee-deep in deep snow. The wolves were chasing them. They were lighter than moose and galloped across the crust without falling through. With every second the animals are getting closer and closer.

The moose could no longer run. The elk calf stayed close to its mother. A little more - and the gray robbers will catch up and tear them both apart.

Ahead is a clearing, a fence near the forest guardhouse, and a wide open gate.

The moose stopped: where to go? But behind, very close, the crunch of snow was heard - the wolves were overtaking. Then the moose cow, having gathered the rest of her strength, rushed straight into the gate, the elk calf followed her.

The forester's son Mitya was shoveling snow in the yard. He barely jumped to the side - the moose almost knocked him down.

Moose!.. What's wrong with them, where are they from?

Mitya ran up to the gate and involuntarily stepped back: there were wolves at the very gate.

A shiver ran down the boy’s back, but he immediately swung his shovel and shouted:

- Here I am!

The animals scurried away.

“Atu, atu!” Mitya shouted after them, jumping out of the gate.

Having driven away the wolves, the boy looked into the yard. A moose cow and a calf stood huddled in the far corner of the barn.

“Look, they were so scared, they’re all trembling...” Mitya said affectionately. - Do not be afraid. Now it won't be touched.

And he, carefully moving away from the gate, ran home to tell what guests had rushed into their yard.

And the moose stood in the yard, recovered from their fright and went back into the forest. Since then, they stayed in the forest near the lodge all winter.

In the morning, walking on the way to school, Mitya often saw moose from afar on the forest edge.

Having noticed the boy, they did not rush away, but only watched him carefully, pricking up their huge ears.

Mitya cheerfully nodded his head at them, like old friends, and ran further into the village.

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