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Post by SENTINEL on Jun 20, 2010 1:10:04 GMT
SPRING - Herbs and other miscellaneous green plants are plentiful.
- Most fruit is not yet ripe, but berries are fairly easy to come by. No nuts.
- Insects are plentiful; most gather at dawn and dusk.
- Small prey (such as vole or mouse) is beginning to increase in quantity.
- Fish are easy to catch; the winter ice has thawed, and they are still sluggish from the cold.
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Post by SENTINEL on Jun 20, 2010 1:12:12 GMT
SUMMER - Herbs and other miscellaneous green plants are plentiful.
- Larger fruits are ripe. Berries are less abundant, but still available. No nuts.
- Insects are everywhere; most gather at dawn and dusk.
- Small prey (such as vole or mouse) is readily available and easy to catch.
- Fish are very plentiful but it takes skill to catch them; they are easiest to catch on warm afternoons.
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Post by SENTINEL on Jun 20, 2010 1:15:19 GMT
AUTUMN - Herbs and other miscellaneous green plants are beginning to die but are available.
- Fruit is scarce and usually past ripe. There are no berries. Nuts are extremely plentiful.
- Insects are beginning to thin out.
- Small prey (such as vole or mouse) is fairly readily available, but in this season they are busy preparing for the winter and are more focused, therefore harder to catch.
- Fish are less plentiful than in late spring and most of summer, but they are slowing down again as the cold sets in.
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Post by SENTINEL on Jun 20, 2010 1:19:57 GMT
WINTER - No herbs. Most other green plants are withered or buried under ice and snow, but they are still available if you know how to uncover them.
- No fruit. No berries. Some nuts left over, but slim pickings.
Insects are rare; most have died off or retreated into hibernation for the winter.
- Small prey (such as vole or mouse) is hard to find but definitely available. Those who memorised where mammals' nests were made are likely to reap the rewards. Some small prey does not hibernate at all.
- Freshwater fish are inaccessible due to the lake ice; it would be a huge risk of drowning beneath the ice even if one did find a way through. Sea fish are still available, however.
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