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Joining AreaA large meadow flanked by small ridges and forests, the area is in the far east and shadowed by the mountains that many of the newcomers travel over to get to the valley. The Meadow its self is a large, tall grass prairie, where you can find anything from scruffy little grasses, to tall blue sedge. At the borders edge, away from the view, Alphas, Betas, and Deltas patrol the meadow, watching for wolves seeking acceptance.
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Re:A long overdue...
Adolpha
04/15/06 06:42:35
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The Howling Cliff looms up from the center of the valley, a round and eroded remnant of the Avertis Mountain Ranges former position. Though the cliff is not high enough to have a real tree line, and thickly covered in deciduous trees, a large boulder protrudes from the near the peak, a perfect place to broadcast howls. Tucked behind the Howling Cliffs far side, the Sunlight Cave is used as the main meeting area. Its opening is small, but widens into a large area filtering shafts of sunlight from holes in the ceiling. Many stalactites stretch from the ceiling and stalagmites reach from the ground a large stone rests in the middle and is used by the speakers.
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Re:oceans of gree...
Unregistered(d)
12/31/04 14:00:00
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Made by a fire that ripped through the Old Spirit Pines in 1998, the Burned Pines are a strange and wonderful place. Although shrubs, saplings and small plants have grown back the charred pines still tower above casting eerie shadows. The ground is uneven, and turns paws black, but clubs of lush grass sprout up in the rich soil during spring. Not much fauna lives there but it is a wonderful place to explore. It is rumored that a cave was carved away from the fire, and it is haunted, though it is more likely that the fire simply charred the inside.
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Re:::.::F:L:A:S:H...
crestofkindness2001
05/03/06 19:39:06
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A deep blue in color, Tear Jewel Lake is the largest body of water in the valley. It stays shallow farther out than most lakes, perhaphs a few hundred feet before the drop off. The drop off itself is a plunge down 25 at the very edge, but it slopes down to the nearly eighty feet bottom. The only thing that breaks the deep water is Coneflower point named after the flowers that bloom there. The point reaches out into out into the dark blue water, making it look a natural diving board. The lake, though beautiful, has been a place of death for several wolves and it is said that the ghosts of these wolves haunt the fog that often coats the still surface of the water. To the north of the lake a waterfall falls from Juniper Ridge, a small hill edging Moss River. Behind the waterfall there is a crevice called Aurora Cave. In its winding tunnels, a powerful creature resides.
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Re:And.The.Snow.f...
Akeela Novi Sahn
03/09/05 08:38:51
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