Glassback wrote:Are they Multrees in those pictures?
Guess the State...?
- AcousticHippie
- 4769 posts since 12 Mar, 2003
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- KVRAF
- 4960 posts since 21 Oct, 2003 from UK
'Branching out' are you Mully?
You mean you wood if you cud.
You mean you wood if you cud.
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- KVRian
- 1191 posts since 8 Jul, 2005 from NY, US
New Hampsire?
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- KVRian
- 1191 posts since 8 Jul, 2005 from NY, US
A place like that could be anywhere in the states...in the spring/summertime that is. It kinda looks like the base of the mountain near my father's house in new hampsire.
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- Skunk Mod
- 21249 posts since 10 Jun, 2004 from Pony Pasture
It's not Croatan. We don't have many trees, and they're all either pines (usually stunted and twisted by storms) or yaupon.
I'll guess Dashhowuz Welayat so as to give everyone else a better chance of winning. (Dashhowuz is inhabited mostly by Yomuds, which you can't say about Cape May, New Jersey. Not if you want to be correct, anyway.)
I'll guess Dashhowuz Welayat so as to give everyone else a better chance of winning. (Dashhowuz is inhabited mostly by Yomuds, which you can't say about Cape May, New Jersey. Not if you want to be correct, anyway.)
- KVRAF
- 9064 posts since 1 Aug, 2003
the Old Woods, near the Shire?
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 1360 posts since 4 Aug, 2004 from Ain't tellin' ya...
I'll keep you guys guessing, but I'll let in a clue:
Behind the hills above a certain colored Point ".....Point", on the aspect that gets less sunlight. It's pretty dark down there, sun don't shine that much, and it's lush and green.
One of my friends swore it was in South Carolina. But it's not. There's an element of truth in my friend's guess, seeing as though these photos are on the east coast of an unnamed continent and the latitude I have indicates that it would be in South Carolina if we were talking about the USA. But we're not talking about the USA, we're talking about...erhmm, I leave it up to you to guess.
Cheers
Ben
Behind the hills above a certain colored Point ".....Point", on the aspect that gets less sunlight. It's pretty dark down there, sun don't shine that much, and it's lush and green.
One of my friends swore it was in South Carolina. But it's not. There's an element of truth in my friend's guess, seeing as though these photos are on the east coast of an unnamed continent and the latitude I have indicates that it would be in South Carolina if we were talking about the USA. But we're not talking about the USA, we're talking about...erhmm, I leave it up to you to guess.
Cheers
Ben
Little Black Dog - 2008-Present
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- KVRAF
- 2495 posts since 18 May, 2004 from ATL-USA
Yeah, coming from someone that has studied American plants and trees quite avidly, those smoothed barked trees are not something that you see anywhere in the eastern U.S. They almost look like eucalyptus trees?
So my next guess is...
Victoria
So my next guess is...
Victoria
Anti-aliasing is for "synthmonk%ys".
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- KVRist
- 198 posts since 3 Jan, 2004
could easily be any mid east/south eastern state since almost all of them are humid and green as hell. u said eastern seaboard tho, so that breaks it down. reminds me of kentucky.. could be virigina, w. virginia, northern florida, etc. this could end up being too long of a list.
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- KVRAF
- 2495 posts since 18 May, 2004 from ATL-USA
I agree it does look that way, with the exception of the exact flora, namely the smooth trees. I live in Georgia, and have for many years, and I've travelled all around the southeast. I've never seen a smooth tree like those pictured. Sure the southeast U.S. has some smoothed bark trees like ash, sycamore, and beech, but they look very different from those pictured. Perhaps I'm wrong and it's some freakish place I haven't ever seen, but I doubt it.mute wrote:could easily be any mid east/south eastern state since almost all of them are humid and green as hell. u said eastern seaboard tho, so that breaks it down. reminds me of kentucky.. could be virigina, w. virginia, northern florida, etc. this could end up being too long of a list.
The hints given point to southern Australia.
Anti-aliasing is for "synthmonk%ys".
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- KVRian
- Topic Starter
- 1360 posts since 4 Aug, 2004 from Ain't tellin' ya...
Time is up.
These pictures were taken behind the hills above Green Point (near Kincumber/Erina). If anyone is familiar with the Sid Pulsford walking trail you'll know what I mean. Both pictures were taken on one of the walking trails at the other side of these hills. The sun doesn't shine too much on this side.
If anyone thought Central Coast of NSW they were right.
The climate is "humid subtropical Australian maritime". You could call it "warm temperate" but technically it is subtropical because that climate occurs on the eastern seaboard, and the flora indicates this as well.
These pictures were taken behind the hills above Green Point (near Kincumber/Erina). If anyone is familiar with the Sid Pulsford walking trail you'll know what I mean. Both pictures were taken on one of the walking trails at the other side of these hills. The sun doesn't shine too much on this side.
If anyone thought Central Coast of NSW they were right.
The climate is "humid subtropical Australian maritime". You could call it "warm temperate" but technically it is subtropical because that climate occurs on the eastern seaboard, and the flora indicates this as well.
Little Black Dog - 2008-Present
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- KVRAF
- 2495 posts since 18 May, 2004 from ATL-USA
That was Teksoniks' first guess, New South Wales, but he definitly didn't guess the exact hill.benjamind wrote: If anyone thought Central Coast of NSW they were right.
Anti-aliasing is for "synthmonk%ys".
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- KVRAF
- 2083 posts since 8 Apr, 2004
