Thank you woot!
Posts by tempestsea
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and not working again... I've tried diff browsers and hard refreshes - not sure what's happening.
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When I try to accept a gift it sends me to the login page - which doesn't log me in. I am logged in on the game page, and on the forums, just not when I try to take a gift. I have tried in chrome and firefox, only seems to be a problem when I'm following a game link.
Edit don't know what happened but it's working now...
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Is there a problem with registrations currently? Someone in the drag cave forum said she tried to register and got an internal error. Name is rekha, she is going to try again when her internet is back up, but thought I'd check in the meantime.
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well now lucky clovers arent breeding and there are none in the garden...
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bred the adult I have a few days ago - not thinking I didnt have a place for it - the other is a seed still...
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Drat I was hoping I'd just been unlucky finding em - I'd really like to get a few more - have only the one from the pixie and one someone gifted me...
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Presents are always nice
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his post on twitter said it might take days...
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kinda like a pixie or a dwarf - depending on where you get it lol
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Thats correct lol I dont have a question mark on the Stars lol seems I missed the same months you did.
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Love lies bleeding isn't done yet - here's the whole corrected text all at once lol.
In South America love-lies-bleeding is known as Kiwicha, a word from
one of the Inca languages, the Quecha. The Aztecs called it huautli.
Other modern common names are foxtail, pigweed, tassel flower, velvet
flower, quilete and amaranth. The name amaranth is Greek and means:
„amárantos“ unfading, „ánthos“ flower. Love-lies-bleeding's young
leaves can be prepared like spinach or used as cooking spice. They are
best picked before the plant starts to bloom. The seedlings can be eaten as well, so
can the taproot, but the latter tends to get woody and needs to be ground. Fairies love
to use dried blossoms for decoration, for they retain their color a long time. The
fresh plants are used to dye their fabrics. -
Thank you that's what I was referring to lol. Also found an awkward paragraph in the chive sprout.
It is not clear, if it originated in Central Europe, Central Asia, or in the Mediterranean, but it is practically at home everywhere in the temperate zone of the northern hemisphere. The little folk hang a bouquet of blossoms into their windows to avert misfortune, but parents have to look out, because the blossoms are tasty and a cheekily rascal might nibble them up. When a kobold got a cold, he rubs the juice on his chest to loosen the mucus.
Should be
It is not clear if it originated in Central Europe, Central Asia, or in the Mediterranean, but it is practically at home everywhere in the temperate zone of the northern hemisphere. The little folk hang a bouquet of blossoms in their windows to avert misfortune, but parents have to look out, because the blossoms are tasty and a cheeky rascal might nibble them up. When a kobold gets a cold, he rubs the juice on his chest to loosen the mucus. -
Wild chives seed text hasn't changed yet...
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Well guess I was out when they arrived
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where are the firecrackers?
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a word from one of the Inka languages, the Quecha.
a word from one of the Inca languages, the Quecha.
but the latter tends to lignify and has to be ground then.
How about
but the latter tends to get woody and needs to be ground.
for clarity.