Types of Trees
Cakes!
Bugs
Cars from the 50's and 60's
Outlaws
100

produce acorns that squirrels love to eat

Oak tree

100

at the center of all bundt cakes

a hole

100

can grow from the size of a grain of rice to the size of a marble

a tick

100

car debuted in 1953 with a waterfall front grille and whitewall tires

Buick Skylark

100

Violent bank and train robber of the old west (father was a Baptist minister)

Jesse James

200

the tallest tree in the world

Sequoia

200

cheese used in a Tiramisu

marscarpone

200

can lift and carry more than fifty times their own weight

ant

200

Most people consider this car the biggest failure in automotive history

Ford Edsel

200

Cattle rustlers, bank robber and leader of the Wild Bunch in the old west

Butch Cassidy

300

Where you find the oldest living tree (hint-it is in the US)

California

300

popular southern cake named after a type of fabric

red velvet

300

True of False: It takes about one hundred Monarch Butterflies to weigh an ounce

True

300

Many cars had tailfins in the '50s but this car arguably had the most extreme ones

Cadillac Eldorado

300

"Bandit Queen" who married three outlaws- Jim Reed in 1866, Bruce Younger in 1878; and Sam Starr, a Cherokee, in 1880

Belle Starr

400

type of gas trees and other plants produce that is helpful to humans

OXYGEN

400

the actress who popped out of a cake in the movie "Singing In The Rain

Debbie Reynolds

400

this bug has 30,000 lenses in each eye

dragonfly

400

The name is Bond, James Bond. And this is the first car he made famous

Aston Martin DB5

400

Nickname for this outlaw with a sizable schnoz, who dabbled in horse theft, cattle rustling, and railroad robberies.

Who is Big Nose George?

500

the fastest growing tree

Bamboo

500

brioche style cake has become a popular part of Mardi Gras celebrations in New Orleans

King Cake

500

oldest group of insects, dating back 300 million years

cockroaches

500

Royals, film stars and world leaders have used this vehicle as their transport. True British luxury at its finest

Rolls-Royce

500

had a few run-ins with the law before deciding to become the law

Wyatt Earp